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In what country is Lambertz Open by STAWAG?
|
[
"Germany",
"FRG",
"BRD",
"Bundesrepublik Deutschland",
"Federal Republic of Germany",
"de",
"Deutschland",
"GER",
"BR Deutschland",
"DE"
] |
country
|
Lambertz Open by STAWAG
| 2,262,065 | 75 |
[
{
"id": "16259879",
"title": "Lambertz Open by STAWAG",
"text": " The Lambertz Open by STAWAG is a tennis tournament held in Aachen, Germany since 1991. The event is part of the ''ATP challenger series and is played on indoor carpet courts.",
"score": "2.2037144"
},
{
"id": "7971882",
"title": "2010 Lambertz Open by STAWAG",
"text": " The 2010 Lambertz Open by STAWAG was a professional tennis tournament played on carpet. It was the 20th edition of the tournament which is part of the 2010 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Aachen, Germany between 8 and 14 November 2010.",
"score": "1.9872603"
},
{
"id": "7126567",
"title": "2009 Lambertz Open by STAWAG",
"text": " The 2009 Lambertz Open by STAWAG was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts. It was the nineteenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2009 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Aachen, Germany between 9 and 15 November 2009.",
"score": "1.9795702"
},
{
"id": "7126568",
"title": "2009 Lambertz Open by STAWAG",
"text": "Rankings are as of November 2, 2009. ",
"score": "1.9010072"
},
{
"id": "7971883",
"title": "2010 Lambertz Open by STAWAG",
"text": "Rankings are as of November 1, 2010. ",
"score": "1.886996"
},
{
"id": "7126570",
"title": "2009 Lambertz Open by STAWAG",
"text": " 🇺🇸 Rajeev Ram def. 🇯🇲 Dustin Brown, 7–6(2), 6–7(5), 7–6(2)",
"score": "1.7164997"
},
{
"id": "7126678",
"title": "2009 Lambertz Open by STAWAG – Singles",
"text": " • # 🇺🇸 Rajeev Ram (Champion) • # 🇦🇹 Stefan Koubek (First Round) • # 🇩🇪 Daniel Brands (Semifinals) • # Blaž Kavčič (Second Round) • # 🇧🇪 Steve Darcis (Quarterfinals) • # 🇩🇪 Denis Gremelmayr (Withdrew) • # 🇩🇪 Julian Reister (Second Round) • # 🇩🇪 Dieter Kindlmann (Second Round, retired)",
"score": "1.7095747"
},
{
"id": "7971885",
"title": "2010 Lambertz Open by STAWAG",
"text": " 🇩🇪 Dustin Brown def. Igor Sijsling, 6–3, 7–6(3)",
"score": "1.6858888"
},
{
"id": "7971899",
"title": "2010 Lambertz Open by STAWAG – Singles",
"text": " • # 🇩🇪 Dustin Brown (Champion) • # 🇧🇪 Steve Darcis (First Round) • # 🇸🇮 Blaž Kavčič (Quarterfinals) • # 🇧🇬 Grigor Dimitrov (First Round) • # 🇩🇪 Julian Reister (Second Round) • # 🇱🇹 Ričardas Berankis (First Round) • # Jesse Huta Galung (Quarterfinals) • # 🇩🇪 Denis Gremelmayr (Second Round)",
"score": "1.6692541"
},
{
"id": "7971886",
"title": "2010 Lambertz Open by STAWAG",
"text": " 🇧🇪 Ruben Bemelmans / Igor Sijsling def. 🇬🇧 Jamie Delgado / 🇬🇧 Jonathan Marray, 6–4, 3–6, [11–9]",
"score": "1.636729"
},
{
"id": "7126569",
"title": "2009 Lambertz Open by STAWAG",
"text": "🇩🇪 Dominik Schulz ; 🇩🇪 Nils Langer ; 🇺🇸 Rajeev Ram ; 🇩🇪 Sebastian Rieschick 🇮🇳 Rohan Bopanna ; 🇩🇪 Peter Gojowczyk ; Nikola Mektić ; 🇵🇱 Michał Przysiężny ; 🇮🇪 Louk Sorensen (LL) The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw: The following players received entry from the qualifying draw:",
"score": "1.6219691"
},
{
"id": "7126571",
"title": "2009 Lambertz Open by STAWAG",
"text": " 🇮🇳 Rohan Bopanna / 🇵🇰 Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi def. 🇩🇪 Philipp Marx / 🇸🇰 Igor Zelenay, 6–4, 7–6(6)",
"score": "1.59924"
},
{
"id": "7126677",
"title": "2009 Lambertz Open by STAWAG – Singles",
"text": " Evgeny Korolev, who was the defending champion, chose to not compete this year. Rajeev Ram won in the final match 7–6(2), 6–7(5), 7–6(2), against Dustin Brown.",
"score": "1.5945063"
},
{
"id": "7971949",
"title": "2010 Lambertz Open by STAWAG – Doubles",
"text": " • # 🇺🇸 Scott Lipsky / 🇺🇸 Rajeev Ram (Quarterfinals) • # 🇩🇪 Dustin Brown / Rogier Wassen (Quarterfinals) • # 🇸🇪 Johan Brunström / 🇬🇧 Dominic Inglot (Semifinals, retired) • # 🇺🇸 James Cerretani / 🇨🇿 David Škoch (Quarterfinals)",
"score": "1.591691"
},
{
"id": "7971898",
"title": "2010 Lambertz Open by STAWAG – Singles",
"text": " Rajeev Ram is the defending champion, but lost to Dustin Brown at the semifinals. Brown won the title, by defeating Igor Sijsling 6–3, 7–6(3) in the final.",
"score": "1.572151"
},
{
"id": "7971884",
"title": "2010 Lambertz Open by STAWAG",
"text": "🇩🇪 Leif Berger ; 🇷🇸 Marko Djokovic ; 🇩🇪 Gero Kretschmer ; 🇩🇪 Willi Peter 🇧🇪 Maxime Authom ; Adrien Bossel ; 🇫🇷 Baptiste Dupuy ; 🇫🇷 Pierre-Hugues Herbert The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw: The following players received entry from the qualifying draw:",
"score": "1.5555301"
},
{
"id": "7126626",
"title": "2009 Lambertz Open by STAWAG – Doubles",
"text": " • # 🇩🇪 Michael Kohlmann / 🇷🇴 Horia Tecău (Semifinals) • # 🇮🇳 Rohan Bopanna / 🇵🇰 Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi (Champions) • # 🇩🇪 Philipp Marx / 🇸🇰 Igor Zelenay (Final) • # 🇺🇸 James Cerretani / 🇦🇺 Rameez Junaid (First Round)",
"score": "1.5402299"
},
{
"id": "7126625",
"title": "2009 Lambertz Open by STAWAG – Doubles",
"text": " Michael Kohlmann and Alexander Waske didn't defend their title. Kohlmann participated with Horia Tecău, but lost to Philipp Marx and Igor Zelenay in the semifinals. Rohan Bopanna and Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi defeated Marx and Zelenay 6–4, 7–6(6) in the final.",
"score": "1.4757155"
},
{
"id": "7971948",
"title": "2010 Lambertz Open by STAWAG – Doubles",
"text": " Rohan Bopanna and Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi were the defending champions but chose to compete in the 2010 BNP Paribas Masters instead. Ruben Bemelmans and Igor Sijsling won the title, defeating Jamie Delgado and Jonathan Marray 6–4, 3–6, [11–9] in the final.",
"score": "1.4159623"
},
{
"id": "7061861",
"title": "Andre Stolz",
"text": " Andre Pierre Stolz (born 10 May 1970) is an Australian professional golfer. Stolz was born in Brisbane, Australia. He turned professional in 1992. He has played on the PGA Tour of Australasia, Japan Golf Tour (2001), Nationwide Tour (2003), and PGA Tour (2004–05). In 2003, he won the LaSalle Bank Open on the Nationwide Tour and finished 13th on the money list, earning his PGA Tour card for 2004. On the PGA Tour, he won the 2004 Michelin Championship at Las Vegas with a stroke victory over Tag Ridings, securing his card through 2006. However, an injury to his left wrist in 2005 halted his career. After taking three years off, Stolz went back to playing, competing in his native Australia, Asia, and the Nationwide Tour. In 2011, he led the OneAsia Tour's Order of Merit with two wins. Stolz also played two events on the PGA Tour, his first on the tour since 2005. In 2013, Andre and Zac became the first father-son duo since 1979 (Gary and Wayne Player) to compete at the Australian Open. In 2013, Zac started playing collegiately at Chattanooga.",
"score": "1.3732023"
}
] |
In what country is Goreme?
|
[
"Bulgaria",
"Republic of Bulgaria",
"bg",
"🇧🇬",
"BUL",
"BGR"
] |
country
|
Goreme, Bulgaria
| 2,038,373 | 23 |
[
{
"id": "10875859",
"title": "Göreme",
"text": " Göreme, located among the \"fairy chimney\" rock formations, is a town in Cappadocia, a historical region of Turkey. It is in the Nevşehir Province in Central Anatolia and has a population of around 2,000 people. Former names of the town have been Korama, Matiana, Maccan or Machan, and Avcilar. When Göreme Valley nearby was designated an important tourist destination, a \"center\" for all tourism in Cappadocia, the name of the town was changed to Göreme for practical reasons. Among Göreme's historically important sites are the Bezirhane, Durmus Kadir, Ortahane, and Yusuf Koç churches, in addition to the richly decorated Tokali Kilise, the Apple Church, and a number of homes and pigeon houses carved into the rock formations in the town.",
"score": "1.7892933"
},
{
"id": "29442065",
"title": "Churches of Göreme",
"text": " Göreme is a district of the Nevşehir Province in Turkey. After the eruption of Mount Erciyes about 2.6 million years ago, ash and lava formed soft rocks in the Cappadocia Region, covering a region of about 20000 km2. The softer rock was eroded by wind and water, leaving the hard cap rock on top of pillars, forming the present-day fairy chimneys. People of Göreme, at the heart of the Cappadocia Region, realized that these soft rocks could be easily carved out to form houses, churches, and monasteries. These Christian sanctuaries contain many examples of Byzantine art from the post-iconoclastic period. These frescos are a unique artistic achievement from this period. In the 4th century, small ",
"score": "1.7541668"
},
{
"id": "10875862",
"title": "Göreme",
"text": " In modern times, Göreme is most well known for tourism offerings such as Hot Air Balloon rides, ATV rentals and tours, and guided regional tour buses.",
"score": "1.7098206"
},
{
"id": "25455767",
"title": "Goreme, Bulgaria",
"text": " Goreme is a village in Strumyani Municipality, in Blagoevgrad Province, in southwestern Bulgaria.",
"score": "1.6677577"
},
{
"id": "10875861",
"title": "Göreme",
"text": " The Göreme National Park was added to the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1985.",
"score": "1.6605692"
},
{
"id": "10875860",
"title": "Göreme",
"text": " It is not known when Göreme was first inhabited, but it is known that there was a settlement there during the Hittite era, between 1800 and 1200 BC. For many centuries, the location was central between rival empires, such as the Hurri-Mitanni, Hittite Empire, Middle Assyrian Empire, Neo Assyrian Empire, Persian Achaemenid Empire and the Greek Seleucid Empire, leading the natives to tunnel into the rock to escape the political turmoil. During the Roman era, the area became home to Christians retreating from Rome. Christianity prevailed as the primary religion in the region, which is evident from many rock churches that can still be seen today.",
"score": "1.625663"
},
{
"id": "14985937",
"title": "Cappadocia",
"text": " very popular in Cappadocia and is available in Göreme. Trekking is enjoyed in Ihlara Valley, Monastery Valley (Guzelyurt), Ürgüp and Göreme. Sedimentary rocks formed in lakes and streams and ignimbrite deposits that erupted from ancient volcanoes approximately 9 to 3 million years ago, during the late Miocene to Pliocene epochs, underlie the Cappadocia region. The rocks of Cappadocia near Göreme eroded into hundreds of spectacular pillars and minaret-like forms. People of the villages at the heart of the Cappadocia Region carved out houses, churches and monasteries from the soft rocks of volcanic deposits. Göreme became a monastic centre in 300–1200 AD. ",
"score": "1.5908952"
},
{
"id": "14985938",
"title": "Cappadocia",
"text": " first period of settlement in Göreme goes back to the Roman period. The Yusuf Koç, Ortahane, Durmus Kadir and Bezirhane churches in Göreme, and houses and churches carved into rocks in the Uzundere, Bağıldere and Zemi Valleys, all illustrate history and can be seen today. The Göreme Open Air Museum is the most visited site of the monastic communities in Cappadocia (see Churches of Göreme, Turkey) and is one of the most famous sites in central Turkey. The complex contains more than 30 carved-from-rock churches and chapels, some having superb frescoes inside, dating from the 9th century to the 11th century.",
"score": "1.5817001"
},
{
"id": "29442067",
"title": "Churches of Göreme",
"text": " Tokalı Kilise (or the Church of the Buckle), is the largest church in Göreme. Restoration of the church was completed during the 1980s. The only surviving example of its architectural origins is the Church of Mar Yakub in the Tur Abdin region located around present day Mardin. One noted feature of the church is the main nave containing ninth century frescoes in \"provincial\" style, the more recent additions are three apses of the 11th-century frescos, which are rendered in \"metropolitan\" style. The church contains frescos of the twelve apostles, the saints and scenes from the life of Jesus. The church also has a crypt underneath the nave. Tokalı kilise is formed of four chambers: the Old Church, the larger ",
"score": "1.571779"
},
{
"id": "2349684",
"title": "Badlands",
"text": " Turkey has extensive badlands, including Göreme National Park.",
"score": "1.568367"
},
{
"id": "25012843",
"title": "Gore, Ethiopia",
"text": " Gore (Goree) is a town in south-western Ethiopia. Located south of Metu in the Illubabor Zone of the Oromia Region, this town has a latitude and longitude of 8.15°N, 35.51667°W and an elevation of 2085 meters. Gore is known for its honey. The map attached to C. W. Gwynn's account of his 1908/09 triangulation survey of southern Ethiopia shows that Gore had a telegraph station. During the 1960s experimental tea plantations were started around Gore, and a number of them thrived. The Gummaro plantation near Gore, with 800 hectares, is the largest tea plantation in Ethiopia. The town is served by Gore Airport. Captain Esme Nourse Erskine, the British Consul at Gore (1928-1936), developed the aerodrome and produced “Flying Directions Kurmuk to Gore (1932).",
"score": "1.5272462"
},
{
"id": "14498900",
"title": "Goreme Col",
"text": " Goreme Col is centred at -78.53333°N, -85.025°W, which is 2.94 km northeast of Mount Mohl, 8.15 km east of Marts Peak, 8.66 km southeast of Vanand Peak, 4.65 km southwest of Mount Tuck and 1.47 km west by north of Prosenik Peak. US mapping in 1961, updated in 1988.",
"score": "1.5184817"
},
{
"id": "4919390",
"title": "List of populated places in Giresun Province",
"text": "Görele ; Akharman, Görele ; Aralıkoz, Görele ; Ardıç, Görele ; Ataköy, Görele ; Aydınlar, Görele ; Bayazıt, Görele ; Beşirli, Görele ; Boğalı, Görele ; Çatak, Görele ; Çatakkırı, Görele ; Çavuşlu, Görele ; Çiftlikköy, Görele ; Dayılı, Görele ; Dedeli, Görele ; Dereboyu, Görele ; Derekuşçulu, Görele ; Dikmen, Görele ; Esenli, Görele ; Esenyurt, Görele ; Eserli, Görele ; Gölbaşı, Görele ; Gülpınar, Görele ; Gültepe, Görele ; Güneyköy, Görele ; Güvendik, Görele ; Haydarlı, Görele ; İnanca, Görele ; İsmailbeyli, Görele ; Karaburun, Görele ; Karadere, Görele ; Kırıklı, Görele ; Koyunhamza, Görele ; Köprübaşı, Görele ; Köprübaşı, Görele ; Kuşçulu, Görele ; Maksutlu, Görele ; Menteşe, Görele ; Ortaköy, Görele ; Recepli, Görele ; Sağlık, Görele ; Seferli, Görele ; Soğukpınar, Görele ; Şahinyuva, Görele ; Şalaklı, Görele ; Şenlik, Görele ; Tekgöz, Görele ; Tepeköy, Görele ; Terziali, Görele ; Türkelli, Görele ; Yalıköy, Görele ; Yeğenli, Görele ; Yeşildere, Görele ",
"score": "1.512529"
},
{
"id": "1319451",
"title": "Büyükçekmece",
"text": "🇩🇪 Gelsenkirchen, Germany (since 2004) ; 🇸🇮 Kranj, Slovenia (since 2014) ; Struga, North Macedonia (since 2015) ; 🇧🇬 Gorna Oryahovitsa, Bulgaria (since 2003) ; Mamuša, Kosovo (since 2008) ; 🇬🇷 Nea Propontida, Greece (since 2008) ; Cheonan, Republic of Korea (since 2013) ; İskele, Northern Cyprus (since 2003) ; Değirmenlik, Northern Cyprus (since 2003) ; Güzelyurt, Northern Cyprus (since 2003) ; Lapta, Northern Cyprus (since 2003) ",
"score": "1.5095913"
},
{
"id": "14498899",
"title": "Goreme Col",
"text": " Goreme Col (Горемска седловина, ‘Goremska Sedlovina’ \\go-'rem-ska se-dlo-vi-'na\\) is the col of elevation 2666 m linking Doyran Heights to the east to Mount Mohl on the northeast side of Craddock Massif in Sentinel Range, Ellsworth Mountains in Antarctica. It is part of the glacial divide between Dater Glacier to the north and Thomas Glacier to the south. The feature is named after the settlement of Goreme in Southwestern Bulgaria.",
"score": "1.5091827"
},
{
"id": "2795462",
"title": "Görentepe, Silvan",
"text": " Görentepe is a neighbourhood in the Silvan District of Diyarbakır Province in Turkey.",
"score": "1.4437412"
},
{
"id": "29442079",
"title": "Churches of Göreme",
"text": " depicts the later scenes. Located in the transept on the lower walls of the north bay multiple scenes from this local Cappadocian saint were painted in the New Church. The scenes include: The Dispute for the Church of Nicaea, Basil and the Emperor Valens, Prayer of the Arians, Prayer of the Orthodox, Meeting of St. Ephraim and St. Basil, Absolution of the Sinful Woman and Funeral of Basil. Accompanying each fresco is an inscription taken directly from the biographical writings of Pseudo-Amphilochio describing the scene. Unlike majority of the rock-cut churches the patronage of the New Church is surprisingly known. Located on the nave cornice a fragment of ",
"score": "1.4094794"
},
{
"id": "29442066",
"title": "Churches of Göreme",
"text": " communities began to form in the region, acting on the instruction of Saint Basil of Caesarea. They carved cells in the soft rock. During the iconoclastic period (725–842) the decoration of the many sanctuaries in the region was held to a minimum, usually symbols such as the depiction of the Christian cross. After this period, new churches were dug into the rocks, and they were richly decorated with colourful frescoes. When the Cappadocian Macedonian were expelled from Turkey in 1923 in the population exchange between Macedonia and Turkey the churches were abandoned, but at the same time they were kept hidden, as their owners were the only ones who knew how to find them.",
"score": "1.4042537"
},
{
"id": "25227301",
"title": "Saray, Tekirdağ",
"text": "The caves of Güneşkaya and Güngörmez - where stone age relics have been uncovered. ; Byzantine waterworks - the remains of a system of aqueducts built to take water from the River Ergene all the way to Istanbul. ; Ayas Pasha Mosque and Hammam- mosque and Turkish bath built in 1539. ; The countryside, especially the hills to the north, leading up to the Black Sea coast are popular places for trekking at weekends. ; Çamlıkoy, formerly known as Kastro, is a small village on the Black Sea coast, popular for walking and picnics. There is a forested area of national park here too. There are a small number of holiday homes. ",
"score": "1.4023674"
},
{
"id": "10103007",
"title": "Gülşehir",
"text": " Gülşehir, formerly Aravissos and Arapsun, ancient Zoropassos (Ancient Greek: Ζωρόπασος), is a town and district of Nevşehir Province in the Central Anatolia region of Turkey, in the vicinity of the Fairy Chimney valley of Göreme. According to 2010 census, population of the district is 24,503 of which 8,866 live in the town of Gülşehir, and the remainder in surrounding villages. The district covers an area of 956 km2, and the average elevation is 885 m.",
"score": "1.374376"
}
] |
In what country is Gawarzec Dolny?
|
[
"Poland",
"POL",
"Republic of Poland",
"PL",
"Polska"
] |
country
|
Gawarzec Dolny
| 1,604,691 | 34 |
[
{
"id": "4412637",
"title": "Gawarzec Dolny",
"text": " Gawarzec Dolny is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Czerwińsk nad Wisłą, within Płońsk County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 7 km north-west of Czerwińsk nad Wisłą, 25 km south of Płońsk, and 57 km north-west of Warsaw.",
"score": "1.9314455"
},
{
"id": "4412638",
"title": "Gawarzec Górny",
"text": " Gawarzec Górny is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Czerwińsk nad Wisłą, within Płońsk County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km north-west of Czerwińsk nad Wisłą, 26 km south of Płońsk, and 56 km north-west of Warsaw.",
"score": "1.7027471"
},
{
"id": "29846485",
"title": "Kazimierz Dolny",
"text": "🇵🇱 Szklarska Poręba (Poland) ; 🇭🇺 Hortobágy (Hungary) ; 🇩🇪 Staufen im Breisgau (Germany) ; 🇩🇪 Berlin-Steglitz (Germany) ; 🇳🇿 Pahiatua (New Zealand) Kazimierz Dolny is twinned with: ",
"score": "1.5253508"
},
{
"id": "27759406",
"title": "List of twin towns and sister cities in the Czech Republic",
"text": "🇵🇱 Buczkowice, Poland ; 🇵🇱 Mucharz, Poland ; 🇸🇰 Ochodnica, Slovakia 🇸🇮 Brežice, Slovenia ; 🇨🇿 Dobřany, Czech Republic ; 🇩🇪 Obertraubling, Germany 🇸🇰 Zábiedovo, Slovakia 🇺🇸 Manhattan, United States ; 🇫🇷 Villieu-Loyes-Mollon, France Geldrop-Mierlo, Netherlands ; 🇫🇷 Tonnerre, France Bellmund, Switzerland 🇭🇺 Ábrahámhegy, Hungary ; 🇸🇰 Hnúšťa, Slovakia ; 🇵🇱 Miejska Górka, Poland ; 🇵🇱 Piława Górna, Poland ; 🇵🇱 Radków, Poland ; 🇸🇰 Veľký Meder, Slovakia 🇵🇱 Bolków, Poland ; 🇩🇪 Oybin, Germany 🇮🇹 Ledro, Italy 🇸🇰 Kamenec pod Vtáčnikom, Slovakia 🇸🇰 Rajecké Teplice, Slovakia ; 🇵🇱 Wilamowice, Poland Kallnach, Switzerland 🇵🇱 Dzierżoniów, Poland ; 🇸🇰 Liptovská Teplička, Slovakia 🇮🇹 Rovereto, Italy 🇵🇱 Strumień, Poland 🇫🇷 Azay-le-Brûlé, France ; 🇮🇹 Caprese Michelangelo, Italy 🇵🇱 Godów, Poland ; 🇵🇱 Gorzyce, Poland 🇸🇰 Myjava, Slovakia 🇩🇪 Sebnitz, Germany 🇦🇹 Furth bei Göttweig, Austria ; 🇩🇪 Furth im Wald, Germany ; 🇫🇷 Ludres, France ; 🇺🇸 Two Rivers, United States Dobrá Dobřany Dobratice Dobřichovice Dobříš Dobronín Dobruška Doksy (Česká Lípa District) Doksy (Kladno District) Dolní Bečva Dolní Benešov Dolní Bukovsko Dolní Čermná Dolní Dobrouč Dolní Domaslavice Dolní Kounice Dolní Lutyně Dolní Němčí Dolní Poustevna Domažlice ",
"score": "1.5178626"
},
{
"id": "14687060",
"title": "Gawrony, Śrem County",
"text": " Gawrony is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dolsk, within Śrem County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km north of Dolsk, 6 km south of Śrem, and 42 km south of the regional capital Poznań. The village has a population of 70.",
"score": "1.4946902"
},
{
"id": "32857298",
"title": "Gałajny",
"text": " Gałajny (Gallehnen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Górowo Iławeckie, within Bartoszyce County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland, close to the border with the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia. It lies approximately 10 km north-east of Górowo Iławeckie, 18 km north-west of Bartoszyce, and 62 km north of the regional capital Olsztyn. The village has a population of 176.",
"score": "1.4852569"
},
{
"id": "778154",
"title": "Arłamów",
"text": " Arłamów (Арламів Arlamiv) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ustrzyki Dolne, within Bieszczady County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland, near the border with Ukraine. It lies approximately 18 km north of Ustrzyki Dolne and 69 km south-east of the regional capital Rzeszów. It lies in the Słonne Mountains Landscape Park. The village is most well-known for being the location of the recreational facility of the communist government, one of the few such places with its own airport and heliport. In 1989 after the fall of communism in Poland the facility was converted into a hotel and a sports complex, notably hosting the Polish national football team, including for Euro 2016 and Wisła Kraków in pre-season 2020.",
"score": "1.4779255"
},
{
"id": "32156253",
"title": "Garcz",
"text": " Garcz (Cashubian Gôrcz). It lies approximately 3 km north of Chmielno, 7 km west of Kartuzy, and 35 km west of the regional capital Gdańsk. For details of the history of the region, see History of Pomerania. The village has a population of 801.",
"score": "1.4715749"
},
{
"id": "31578616",
"title": "Glinik Dolny",
"text": " Glinik Dolny is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Frysztak, within Strzyżów County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 2 km south-west of Frysztak, 15 km south-west of Strzyżów, and 38 km south-west of the regional capital Rzeszów.",
"score": "1.4674208"
},
{
"id": "13465246",
"title": "Gać, Podkarpackie Voivodeship",
"text": " Gać is a village in Przeworsk County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Gać. It lies approximately 12 km south-west of Przeworsk and 26 km east of the regional capital Rzeszów. The village has a population of 1,550.",
"score": "1.4607232"
},
{
"id": "12522732",
"title": "Brzozowa Gać",
"text": " Brzozowa Gać is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kurów, within Puławy County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately 16 km east of Puławy and 32 km north-west of the regional capital Lublin. The village has a population of 580.",
"score": "1.451902"
},
{
"id": "13062248",
"title": "Stanisław Dolny",
"text": " Stanisław Dolny is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kalwaria Zebrzydowska, within Wadowice County, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, in southern Poland. It lies approximately 6 km north-west of Kalwaria Zebrzydowska, 10 km east of Wadowice, and 29 km south-west of the regional capital Kraków.",
"score": "1.4480791"
},
{
"id": "2449452",
"title": "Stary Garwarz",
"text": " Stary Garwarz is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Glinojeck, within Ciechanów County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.",
"score": "1.4475622"
},
{
"id": "4516534",
"title": "Jasieniec Iłżecki Dolny",
"text": " Jasieniec Iłżecki Dolny is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Iłża, within Radom County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 9 km south-west of Iłża, 33 km south of Radom, and 124 km south of Warsaw.",
"score": "1.4462998"
},
{
"id": "13061997",
"title": "Gliczarów Dolny",
"text": " Gliczarów Dolny is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Biały Dunajec, within Tatra County, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, in southern Poland. It lies approximately 10 km north-east of Zakopane and 78 km south of the regional capital Kraków. The village has a population of 480.",
"score": "1.4454247"
},
{
"id": "30783573",
"title": "Dolný Pial",
"text": " The village is approximately 95% Slovak and 4% Magyar and 1% Czech.",
"score": "1.4421861"
},
{
"id": "778158",
"title": "Dźwiniacz Dolny",
"text": " Dźwiniacz Dolny (Дзвиняч Долішній Dzvyniach Dolishniy) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ustrzyki Dolne, within Bieszczady County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It lies approximately five kilometers (three miles) north-west of Ustrzyki Dolne and seventy-five kilometers (forty-seven miles) south-east of the regional capital Rzeszów. The village has a population of about four hundred.",
"score": "1.4376352"
},
{
"id": "3249349",
"title": "Gać, Masovian Voivodeship",
"text": " Gać is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Leoncin, within Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 3 km south-east of Leoncin, 10 km south-west of Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki, and 35 km north-west of Warsaw.",
"score": "1.4313316"
},
{
"id": "30783574",
"title": "Dolný Pial",
"text": " The village has a public library, a gym, and a football pitch.",
"score": "1.4276764"
},
{
"id": "32156157",
"title": "Brodnica Dolna",
"text": " Brodnica Dolna (Cashubian Dólnô Brodnica), (Niederbrodnitz) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kartuzy, within Kartuzy County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 11 km south-west of Kartuzy and 37 km west of the regional capital Gdańsk. For details of the history of the region, see History of Pomerania. The village has a population of 359.",
"score": "1.4264399"
}
] |
In what country is Studzianka, Podlaskie Voivodeship?
|
[
"Poland",
"POL",
"Republic of Poland",
"PL",
"Polska"
] |
country
|
Studzianka, Podlaskie Voivodeship
| 2,637,398 | 76 |
[
{
"id": "32186382",
"title": "Studzianka, Podlaskie Voivodeship",
"text": " Studzianka is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Krynki, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus.",
"score": "1.9722549"
},
{
"id": "27350643",
"title": "Studzianka, Lublin Voivodeship",
"text": " Studzianka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Łomazy, within Biała Podlaska County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately 6 km north-east of Łomazy, 14 km south-east of Biała Podlaska, and 89 km north-east of the regional capital Lublin.",
"score": "1.8487363"
},
{
"id": "8913058",
"title": "Studzianka, Greater Poland Voivodeship",
"text": " Studzianka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Gizałki, within Pleszew County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland.",
"score": "1.7018123"
},
{
"id": "1329255",
"title": "Studzianka, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship",
"text": " Studzianka (Wonneberg) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Jeziorany, within Olsztyn County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 9 km west of Jeziorany and 20 km north of the regional capital Olsztyn. The village has a population of 400.",
"score": "1.6845655"
},
{
"id": "31405222",
"title": "Studzianki, Podlaskie Voivodeship",
"text": " Studzianki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wasilków, within Białystok County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 6 km north-east of Wasilków and 15 km north-east of the regional capitol Białystok. The village has a population of 900.",
"score": "1.6675301"
},
{
"id": "27350644",
"title": "Studzianka, Lublin Voivodeship",
"text": " Studzianka was established as a Tatar settlement as per the 1679 privileges granted by King John III Sobieski. The famous Colonel Aleksander Ułan (d.1740) lived here and the town derives its name from the formation of the light cavalry - Lancers. In 1817 a wooden mosque was built in the village but this was burned down by the Cossacks in 1915. By the nineteenth century only 20 Polish tatar families lived in the village and many left the region for economic reasons. The last Imam was Maciej Bajrulewicz. The village still maintains a Mizar (Muslim cemetery). In 2005 the first annual festival was held here to commemorate the village Tartar heritage.",
"score": "1.6446642"
},
{
"id": "28415071",
"title": "Studzionka",
"text": " The Voivodeship road 933 runs through the village, and the National road 81 runs nearby, west of the village.",
"score": "1.6031995"
},
{
"id": "10957987",
"title": "Studzianek, Łódź Voivodeship",
"text": " Studzianek is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Biała Rawska, within Rawa County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 9 km north-west of Biała Rawska, 13 km north-east of Rawa Mazowiecka, and 64 km east of the regional capital Łódź. The village has an approximate population of 280.",
"score": "1.5910524"
},
{
"id": "31210576",
"title": "Studzianki, Lublin Voivodeship",
"text": " Studzianki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Zakrzówek, within Kraśnik County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately 15 km east of Kraśnik and 42 km south of the regional capital Lublin.",
"score": "1.5324781"
},
{
"id": "3283244",
"title": "Studzianki, Masovian Voivodeship",
"text": " Studzianki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Nasielsk, within Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km south of Nasielsk, 15 km north-east of Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki, and 41 km north-west of Warsaw.",
"score": "1.5292866"
},
{
"id": "31981068",
"title": "Studziany Las",
"text": " Studziany Las, is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Giby, within Sejny County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the borders with Belarus and Lithuania. It lies approximately 13 km south-west of Sejny and 102 km north of the regional capital Białystok.",
"score": "1.5144062"
},
{
"id": "31210577",
"title": "Studzianki-Kolonia",
"text": " Studzianki-Kolonia is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Zakrzówek, within Kraśnik County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately 17 km east of Kraśnik and 42 km south of the regional capital Lublin.",
"score": "1.5137246"
},
{
"id": "32237690",
"title": "Studzienice, Starogard County",
"text": " Studzienice (Studzenitz) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kaliska, within Starogard County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 8 km west of Kaliska, 30 km west of Starogard Gdański, and 64 km south-west of the regional capital Gdańsk. For details of the history of the region, see History of Pomerania. The village has a population of 132.",
"score": "1.4975779"
},
{
"id": "1329066",
"title": "Studzianek, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship",
"text": " Studzianek (Kutzborn) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Barczewo, within Olsztyn County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland.",
"score": "1.4924538"
},
{
"id": "6813077",
"title": "Studzianna, Greater Poland Voivodeship",
"text": " Studzianna (Brunnental) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Borek Wielkopolski, within Gostyń County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 9 km north-west of Borek Wielkopolski, 12 km north-east of Gostyń, and 53 km south of the regional capital Poznań.",
"score": "1.4922003"
},
{
"id": "13393693",
"title": "Studzianki, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship",
"text": " Studzianki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lipnik, within Opatów County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 7 km north-east of Lipnik, 11 km south-east of Opatów, and 68 km east of the regional capital Kielce. The village has a population of 110.",
"score": "1.4659615"
},
{
"id": "14312924",
"title": "Studzianki Nowe railway station",
"text": " Studzianki Nowe railway station is a railway station in Studzianki, Nasielsk, Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki, Masovian, Poland. It is served by Koleje Mazowieckie.",
"score": "1.4617535"
},
{
"id": "32292777",
"title": "Rębiszewo-Studzianki",
"text": " Rębiszewo-Studzianki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wysokie Mazowieckie, within Wysokie Mazowieckie County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. The village has a population of 86.",
"score": "1.4507153"
},
{
"id": "32186219",
"title": "Studzieńczyna",
"text": " Studzieńczyna is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Janów, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland.",
"score": "1.4282577"
},
{
"id": "30065621",
"title": "Demographics of Podlaskie Voivodeship",
"text": " from Orthodox to Roman Catholic. At present, very few people in Podlaskie continue speaking Ruthenian (Ukrainian) and nearly all consider themselves Poles. The counties along the border with Belarus are populated by Belarusians. Podlaskie is also the cultural center of Poland's Tatar minority as well. After the annexation of eastern Poland into the Soviet Union following World War II, Poland was left with only 2 Tatar villages, Bohoniki and Kruszyniany. A significant number of the Tartars in the territories annexed to the USSR repatriated to Poland and clustered in cities, particularly Białystok. In 1925 the Muslim Religion Association - Muzułmański Związek Religijny was formed in ",
"score": "1.4256353"
}
] |
In what country is Gare de Rosporden?
|
[
"France",
"fr",
"FR",
"République française",
"La France",
"Republic of France",
"French Republic",
"FRA",
"the Hexagon"
] |
country
|
Rosporden station
| 2,106,548 | 49 |
[
{
"id": "14412602",
"title": "Rosporden",
"text": " Rosporden (Rosporden) is a commune in the Finistère department of Brittany in north-western France. The small city specializes in the manufacture of \"chouchen\", a version of mead native to Brittany, and is known as the Capital of Chouchen.",
"score": "1.6387494"
},
{
"id": "14412603",
"title": "Rosporden",
"text": " Inhabitants of Rosporden are called in French Rospordinois.",
"score": "1.6218362"
},
{
"id": "31174414",
"title": "De Poll",
"text": " After the death of Rost Onnes's wife, Meta Dorothea Ludmilla Koenig, he sold the 40-hectare estate in 1952 to the Noord-Nederlandse Golf & Country Club. This golf club was founded in 1950 and initially played at a field near Eelde Airport. These 60 hectares are bordered on the east by two nature reserves: 'Westerlanden' and 'Besloten Venen', and on the west by the Drentsche Aa and an old railway from 1871. The course, initially 9 holes, on the De Poll estate was designed by Sir Guy Campbell and opened in 1954. This took up 42 ha. The golf club subsequently converted the site into a golf course ",
"score": "1.4572723"
},
{
"id": "1232685",
"title": "De Karpendonkse Hoeve",
"text": " De Karpendonkse Hoeve is a restaurant located in Eindhoven in the Netherlands. It is a fine dining restaurant that has been awarded one Michelin star every year since 1979. Head chef is Peter Koehn. In 1980, Koehn took over from Peter Willems, who had earned the Michelin star in 1979. In September 2017, Koehn announced his upcoming retirement and that the second head chef Rob van der Veeken would take over. Present owner is Ingrid van Eeghem. In 2004 she took over the ownership of her father Leo van Eeghem, who had founded the restaurant in 1973. Van Eeghen regularly invites other chefs to show off their cooking qualities. Guest chefs include Paula DaSilva, runner up of Hell's Kitchen (U.S. season 5) and the Japanese chef Katsumasa Kitajima, known for kaiseki ryōri cuisine. In 2007, De Karpendonkse Hoeve celebrated their 30th Michelin star in a row and in 2014 their 35th.",
"score": "1.4554319"
},
{
"id": "5602464",
"title": "Gare du Nord (band)",
"text": " Dutch guitarist Ferdi Lancee (real name: Ferdy Dousenbach, born October 21, 1953 in Tilburg) and saxophone player Barend Fransen (born January 4, 1959 in Helmond) started working together in 2001, when they started writing lounge music in Belgium. They signed a record deal with Play It Again Sam Records in Brussels, and released the albums (In Search Of) Excellounge (2001) and Kind Of Cool (2002). Several songs are used in the soundtracks of the series Six Feet Under and the movie Ghost Rider (2007). In 2003, Gare du Nord toured the Netherlands and Russia with a newly formed band containing nine musicians. Their third album Club Gare du Nord (2005) was recorded in their own Cell4-Studio in the Netherlands. French Jazz trumpet player Erik Truffaz and the gospel singers of the American Imani Fellowship Choir contributed to the album. Around that date (2005), Barend Fransen left his job as president of Dutch record store chain \"Van Leest\" to spend more time on the band .",
"score": "1.4528575"
},
{
"id": "27542408",
"title": "Rosmalen Noord",
"text": "1) . 't Ven ; 2) . Rosmalen centrum ; 3) . Hondsberg ; 4) . Kruisstraat ; 5) . Bedrijventerrein Kruisstraat ; 6) . Overlaet ; 7) . A2-zone Rosmalen Noord ; 8) . Rosmalense polder ; 9) . Kattenbosch Rosmalen Noord is a borough in the municipality of 's-Hertogenbosch, the capital of North Brabant. It's located in the north of Rosmalen, north of railway track Tilburg - Nijmegen, south of De Groote Wielen, east of the Rijksweg 2, the highway from Maastricht to Amsterdam. Rosmalen Noord is 1503 hectare big and counts over 13.600 citizens. Rosmalen Noord is situated on several slopes, so the town of Rosmalen kept dry when the river Meuse flooded. In Rosmalen Noord can the following neighbourhoods be found: ",
"score": "1.4489814"
},
{
"id": "26104136",
"title": "Van Oord",
"text": " Projects undertaken by the company include the Oosterscheldekering between Schouwen-Duiveland and Noord-Beveland completed in 1986, the Palm Jumeirah in Dubai completed in 2003, the IJsselmeer pipeline in the Netherlands completed in 2006 and the World in Dubai completed in 2008. A US sales and support office was opened in Houston Texas in 2010. In December 2016, the company entered a consortium with partners Shell, Eneco, and Mitsubishi/DGE and was awarded the Borssele 3 and 4 project. It was obtained for the strike price of 54.50 euro cents per megawatt-hour, the Netherlands’ lowest-ever strike price at that time.",
"score": "1.4475002"
},
{
"id": "6700804",
"title": "Boerentoren",
"text": " The Boerentoren (\"Farmer's Tower\"; officially the KBC Tower, originally the Torengebouw van Antwerpen) is a historic tall building in Antwerp, Belgium. Constructed between 1929 and 1932 and originally 87.5 m high, it remained the tallest building and the second tallest structure of any kind in the city (after the gothic Cathedral of Our Lady) until 2019, when the Antwerp Tower surpassed it with a height of 100.7 m. At the time of construction it was the second tallest building in Europe by roof height (after Telefónica Building). Designed in Art-deco style, the Boerentoren is one of Europe's very first tall buildings. The Boerentoren remained the tallest in Belgium until 1960, and is currently ranked 21st tallest in the country. In 1954 the tower was extended with an antenna which reached to a total height of 112.5 m. In 1976, the roof of the tower was raised by 8.3 m, and the current roof height is therefore 95.8 m. The building was designed by Jan Van Hoenacker.",
"score": "1.445158"
},
{
"id": "13398658",
"title": "Gare, Luxembourg",
"text": " Gare (Garer Quartier) is a quarter in central Luxembourg City, in southern Luxembourg. The quarter has, since 1859, been the location of Luxembourg's principal railway station and terminus, Luxembourg station, around which it subsequently developed. The quarter's name translates into English, from the French Gare, to \"station\". Geographically, the quarter is situated on the Bourbon plateau, and is separated from the Ville Haute quarter, heart of Luxembourg's ancient fortifications, by a steep valley where the Pétrusse joins the Alzette river in the Grund quarter. The valley was first spanned by the Passerelle viaduct, opened in 1859. Following the 1867 Treaty of London, which ordered the dismantling of Luxembourg's fortifications, the quarter expanded rapidly, notably with the construction of the Adolphe Bridge, opened in 1903, and connected to the station by the grand Avenue de la Liberté. , the quarter has a population of 11,040 inhabitants.",
"score": "1.4429097"
},
{
"id": "29737186",
"title": "Rostrenen",
"text": " In French the inhabitants of Rostrenen are known as Rostrenois.",
"score": "1.4425048"
},
{
"id": "12749378",
"title": "Comte de Flandre/Graaf van Vlaanderen metro station",
"text": " Comte de Flandre (French) or Graaf van Vlaanderen (Dutch) is a Brussels metro station located in the municipality of Molenbeek-Saint-Jean, in the western part of Brussels (Belgium). It opened on 8 May 1981 as part of the Sainte-Catherine/Sint-Katelijne–Beekkant extension of former line 1. Following the reorganisation of the Brussels metro on 4 April 2009, it is served by lines 1 and 5, which cross Brussels from east to west. It takes its name from the nearby Rue du Comte de Flandre/Graaf van Vlaanderenstraat. ",
"score": "1.4378089"
},
{
"id": "11391972",
"title": "Rogier Koordes",
"text": " Source:",
"score": "1.4312954"
},
{
"id": "14119447",
"title": "De Ropta, Metslawier",
"text": " De Ropta is open to the public by appointment.",
"score": "1.430284"
},
{
"id": "1210711",
"title": "Beschermd erfgoed",
"text": " Journées du patrimoine in French, and Tag des offenen Denkmals in German, depending on the language of the locale. In Flanders, the government agencies \"Ruimte en Erfgoed\" and \"Vlaams Instituut voor het Onroerend Erfgoed (VIOE)\" joined together in 2011 to form Flemish organization for Immovable Heritage. They work as agencies of the Flemish Ministry of Spatial Planning, Housing Policy and Heritage sites (Dutch: Ministerie van Ruimtelijke Ordening, Woonbeleid en Onroerend Erfgoed (RWO)) from four locations in Antwerp, Leuven, Hasselt and Ghent. They maintain the administration of the Royal Commission for Monuments and Sites (Dutch: Koninklijke Commissie voor Monumenten en Landschappen (KCML)).",
"score": "1.4256219"
},
{
"id": "2186485",
"title": "Noord metro station",
"text": " in and around Amsterdam, which will be carved out in the floor tiles of the platform. Along with the construction of the metro station, the surrounding area will be revived. Next to the station site is the new Borough Council Office, which was opened in 1999. To the east of the station site is the shopping centre Boven 't IJ, which is renovated and expanded with apartments, sports facilities, a cultural centre, a movie theater, educational facilities and office space. The new streets in the immediate vicinity of the station were named after major train and subway stations in other European capitals: Gare du Nord, King's Cross and Termini.",
"score": "1.4245958"
},
{
"id": "6056397",
"title": "Place Charles Rogier",
"text": " The Place Charles Rogier (French) or Karel Rogierplein (Dutch), usually shortened to the Place Rogier, or Rogier by locals, is a major square in the Brussels municipality of Saint-Josse-ten-Noode, Belgium. It is named in honour of Charles Rogier (1800–1885), a former Prime Minister of Belgium who played a great political role during the Belgian Revolution of 1830. The square is located on the transition between Brussels' historic city centre (the Pentagon) and the Northern Quarter business district (also called Little Manhattan), an exponent of modern Brussels. It is an important communication node in the city both in terms of road network and public transport. Many hotels, offices and shops adjoin it. The Rue Neuve/Nieuwstraat, Belgium's second busiest shopping street, also ends there. It is served by the metro and premetro (underground tram) station Rogier on lines 2, 3, 4 and 6.",
"score": "1.4234905"
},
{
"id": "4987201",
"title": "Serious Request",
"text": " From 18–24 December 2013, radio 3FM broadcast from Leeuwarden in the province of Friesland with DJs Giel Beelen, Paul Rabbering and Coen Swijnenberg. The years campaign was against child death from diarrhea. Dutch gymnast and olympic champion Epke Zonderland symbolically locked the door, accompanied by a performance of Bastille. The theme song for the edition, Shoes of Lightning, was contributed by Dutch band Racoon. For eleven days before the official broadcasts, i.e. 7–17 December 2013, DJs and so-called \"rayonhoofden\" (\"district heads\") traveled throughout the country under the title \"Elfprovinciëntocht\" (\"Eleven provinces tour\", referring to the Elfstedentocht, a Frisian tradition). Each day a different province was being called at. The locations were, in order of visits: Utrecht, Drenthe, Zeeland, Overijssel, Limburg, South Holland, Groningen, Flevoland, North Holland, Gelderland and North Brabant.",
"score": "1.4203222"
},
{
"id": "13687314",
"title": "De Oude Rosmolen",
"text": " De Oude Rosmolen is a defunct restaurant located in Hoorn in the Netherlands. It was a fine dining restaurant that was awarded one Michelin stars in the period 1986-1989 and two Michelin stars is the period 1990–2000. The head chef was Constant Fonk. The restaurant was located in a 17th-century building that once contained a bakery with its own mill. The mill was driven by a horse, which gave the building its name \"Rosmolen\" (translation from Dutch: \"Horse mill\").",
"score": "1.4137201"
},
{
"id": "31024062",
"title": "Gare du Nord (Paris Métro)",
"text": " Gare du Nord is a station on Line 4 and Line 5 of the Paris Métro. It is the busiest station in the system (not including RER stations), with 48 million entrances a year. It is connected to the SNCF railway station Gare du Nord (literally, \"North Station\", until 1938 run by the well-known company Chemins de Fer du Nord), which is served by RER B, RER D and Transilien Nord commuter trains as well as interurban trains to northern France, Eurostar trains to London and Thalys trains to Brussels, Amsterdam and Cologne. The station is also connected to the La Chapelle Métro station on Line 2 and to the Magenta RER station on RER E.",
"score": "1.4120901"
},
{
"id": "29737185",
"title": "Rostrenen",
"text": " Rostrenen (Rostrenenn) is a commune in the Côtes-d'Armor department and Brittany region of northwestern France.",
"score": "1.4086471"
}
] |
In what country is Earl?
|
[
"United States of America",
"the United States of America",
"America",
"U.S.A.",
"USA",
"U.S.",
"US",
"the US",
"the USA",
"US of A",
"the United States",
"U. S. A.",
"U. S.",
"the States",
"the U.S.",
"'Merica",
"U.S",
"United States",
"'Murica"
] |
country
|
Earl, Wisconsin
| 3,972,968 | 83 |
[
{
"id": "6847090",
"title": "Ben Earl",
"text": " Ben Earl (born 7 January 1998 in Redhill, Surrey, England) is an England international rugby union player for Premiership Rugby side Saracens. Earl plays in the back-row. He gained his first England cap during the 2020 Six Nations, Calcutta Cup, match between Scotland and England at Murrayfield on 8 February 2020 in Edinburgh, Scotland.",
"score": "1.7438594"
},
{
"id": "27263187",
"title": "Clifford Earl",
"text": " Earl was born Kenneth Clifford Earl on 29 August 1933 in Romney Marsh, Kent, England. After leaving the military, he embarked on an acting career, and often found himself playing policemen and soldiers.",
"score": "1.62312"
},
{
"id": "6562060",
"title": "Earl (given name)",
"text": "\"Big\" Earl, fictional alien in the video game ToeJam & Earl and its sequels ; Earl, fictional character in the animated TV series Rocko's Modern Life ; Earl Abell (1892–1956), American football player ; Earl E. Anderson (1919–2015), American general ; Earl Anthony (1938–2001), American professional bowler ; Earl Armstrong (1900–1986), Canadian politician ; Earl I. Anzai (born 1941), American politician ; Earl Averill (1902–1983), professional baseball player ; Earl Edwin Austin, American criminal ; Earl Babbie (born 1938), American sociologist ; Earl Bakken (1924–2018), American inventor of the transistorized pacemaker ; Earl Balfour (1933–2018), Canadian professional ice hockey player ; Earl Balmer (1935–2019), ",
"score": "1.621382"
},
{
"id": "12026875",
"title": "Ken Earl",
"text": " Kenneth John Earl (10 November 1925 – 13 October 1986) was an English cricketer. Earl was a right-handed batsman who bowled right-arm fast-medium. He was born in Low Fell, Gateshead, County Durham. Earl was married to Barbara and had two sons, Alex (b1977) and James (b1982). Alex lives in Alberta, Canada, and James in Yorkshire, England.",
"score": "1.6020501"
},
{
"id": "6847092",
"title": "Ben Earl",
"text": " Earl started his playing career at Sevenoaks Rugby and came through the Saracens academy, and played for England at under-16, under-18 and under-20 level (where he also captained). He has said he prefers the freedom of playing flanker, but also plays Number 8. In May 2018 Earl was selected in England's 34 man squad for their tour to South Africa. In January 2019, Earl was included as part of the 35-man England squad for the 2019 Six Nations. He was called up again for the 2020 Six Nations Championship. He agreed a new contract with Saracens in 2020 which would see him spend one season on loan to Bristol Bears along with teammate Max Malins.",
"score": "1.6019459"
},
{
"id": "6562065",
"title": "Earl (given name)",
"text": " Earl Doherty (born 1941), Canadian author ; Earl Dotson (born 1970), American football player ; Earl Douglas (radio), radio talk show producer ; Earl Durand (1913–1939), American mountain man ; Earl Duvall (1898–1969), American animator ; Earl Eby (1894–1970), American athlete ; Earl Edwards (disambiguation), multiple people ; Earl Ehrhart (born 1959), American politician ; Earl Hancock Ellis (1880–1923), U.S. Marine Corps officer ; Earl Emerson (born 1948), American novelist ; Earl Everett (born 1984), American football player ; Earl Faison (1939–2016), American football player ; Earl Ferrell (born 1958), American football player ; Earl Gillespie (1922–2003), American sportscaster ; Earl Grant (1933–1970), ",
"score": "1.5974848"
},
{
"id": "6562067",
"title": "Earl (given name)",
"text": " American actor ; Earl Hilliard (born 1942), American politician ; Earl Hines (1903–1983), American jazz pianist ; Earl Gladstone Hunt Jr. (1918–2005), American Methodist pastor ; Earl Dewitt Hutto (1926–2020), American politician ; Earl Jones (born 1964), American track and field athlete ; Earl Keeley (born 1936), Canadian football player ; Earl Klugh (born 1953), American jazz guitarist ; Earl Floyd Kvamme (born 1938), American engineer ; Earl \"Curly\" Lambeau (1898–1965), founder of the Green Bay Packers ; Earl F. Landgrebe (1916–1986), American politician ; Earl C. Latourette (1889–1956), American judge ; Earl Levine (born 1968), American entrepreneur ; Earl Lovelace (born 1935), ",
"score": "1.58107"
},
{
"id": "10825322",
"title": "Benjamin Earl (Dominican friar)",
"text": " Earl was born and raised in Canterbury, in the United Kingdom. He read Mathematics, followed by an MSc in Computation, at St John's College, University of Oxford before entering the Dominican order, whose English motherhouse is located in Oxford, as a novice in 1997. As a novice, Earl studied Philosophy and Theology for ordination, before moving to the Dominican Friary of Santa Sabina in Rome to pursue a degree in Canon Law and to work alongside the Procurator General of the order. In 2006, Earl returned to Oxford, serving as Bursar and as a lecturer on Canon Law at Blackfriars Hall –the English Dominican motherhouse, and later as Bursar for the Province of England, Scotland and Wales —all the while ",
"score": "1.5772728"
},
{
"id": "26904852",
"title": "Robin Earl",
"text": " Robin Danial Earl (born March 18, 1955) is a former professional American football player, who played as a full back and tight end in the National Football League (NFL). He played seven seasons for the Chicago Bears (1977–1983) and two for the Birmingham Stallions (1984–85) of the United States Football League (USFL).",
"score": "1.5658535"
},
{
"id": "27984874",
"title": "Andy Earl (rugby union)",
"text": " Andrew Thomas Earl (born 12 September 1961) is a New Zealand rugby union player who played as a forward. Born in Christchurch, he played 45 times for the All Blacks.",
"score": "1.5639443"
},
{
"id": "4404942",
"title": "Earl Calloway",
"text": " Earl Genard Calloway (born September 30, 1983) is an American-born naturalized Bulgarian professional basketball player for the Ottawa Blackjacks of the Canadian Elite Basketball League (CEBL).",
"score": "1.5545496"
},
{
"id": "10404357",
"title": "Brian Earl",
"text": " Earl grew up in Medford Lakes, New Jersey and attended Shawnee High School in Medford where he was the 1995 The Philadelphia Inquirer player of the year. He is the younger brother of former All-Big Ten player Dan Earl. Dan became VMI head coach the year before Brian became a head coach. Shawnee never lost a home game during Earl's first three seasons as a starter. Earl was two classes behind his brother at Shawnee and had hoped to join him at Penn State, but Penn State did not recruit him. Most major programs lost interest in Earl when his play was limited by injury as a junior. His only offers were from Princeton and Penn.",
"score": "1.5478704"
},
{
"id": "9116168",
"title": "Earl (recording artist)",
"text": " Chris Earl Mathewson (born October 29, 1983), known professionally as Earl is an American recording artist who is best known for his single “Fire the Fuse” and is listed as a MTV Artist To Watch.",
"score": "1.5478296"
},
{
"id": "13985745",
"title": "Kelvin Earl",
"text": " Kel Earl's birth was registered in Littleborough, Lancashire, England.",
"score": "1.5447747"
},
{
"id": "31783200",
"title": "Earl Richmond",
"text": " Earl Richmond (Real name John Dienn), was a broadcaster born in Highgate, London in 1928, he died in May 2001. Earl first worked in radio on British Forces Radio in Trieste. He was also heard in Cyprus before moving to America to study Television. His first job in Television was as Transmission Controller for Rediffusion in the 1950s. He then moved back into radio when Radio London started in 1964 to present the 9:00 A.M - 12:00 P.M slot, he was also the administrator on board the MV Galaxy radio ship that the station broadcast from. Earl stayed with the ",
"score": "1.5421531"
},
{
"id": "3918387",
"title": "Earl Va'a",
"text": " Earl Va'a (born 1 May 1972) is a former rugby union and rugby league footballer who played internationally for Samoa. He has played as a fly-half in union and as a and in league.",
"score": "1.5415039"
},
{
"id": "12338227",
"title": "Ronnie Earl",
"text": " 1979–1988",
"score": "1.5411415"
},
{
"id": "10816336",
"title": "Joe Earl",
"text": " Athol John \"Joe\" Earl (born 1 October 1952) is a former New Zealand rower who won two Olympic medals. Earl was born in 1952 in Christchurch and grew up on a farm in Hawarden in North Canterbury. He received his education at St. Andrew's College, where he started rowing under Fred Strachan. As Strachan was one of the national rowing selectors, Earl was picked ahead of more experienced oarsmen (according to his own statement) for the New Zealand eight that was to contest the 1971 European Rowing Championships. The eight won gold, to the surprise of everybody, at the regatta in Copenhagen. At ",
"score": "1.537947"
},
{
"id": "6562061",
"title": "Earl (given name)",
"text": " NASCAR Cup Series driver ; Earl Banks (1924–1993), American football coach ; Earl Barish (born 1943), Canadian businessman ; Earl Barrett (born 1967), English former footballer ; Earl Barron (born 1981), American professional basketball player ; Earl Bassett, fictional character in the film Tremors ; Earl Battey (1935–2003), American professional baseball player ; Earl Beecham (born 1965), American football player ; Earl Bell (born 1955), American retired pole vaulter ; Earl Bennett (born 1987), American football player ; Earl Best (born 1947), American community organizer known as the 'Street Doctor' ; Earl Derr Biggers (1884–1933), American novelist and playwright ; Earl Billings (born 1945), ",
"score": "1.5357723"
},
{
"id": "8395444",
"title": "Jack Earl",
"text": " Jack Earl (born August 2, 1934 in Uniopolis, Ohio) is an American ceramic artist and former teacher, known for drawing inspiration from his home state of Ohio to create rural pieces “with meticulous craftsmanship and astute details… to where you could smell the air, hear the silence and swat the flies.” Although his works hint at highly personal, intellectual, and narrative themes in an almost unsettling manner, Earl is “a self-described anti-intellectual who shuns the art world.\" He is known particularly for using his trademark format, the dos-a-dos (translated “back to back”): “This art form is like a book with two stories… the two seemingly incongruent images prompt ",
"score": "1.5348117"
}
] |
In what country is Donji Matejevac?
|
[
"Serbia",
"🇷🇸",
"Republic of Serbia",
"Republika Srbija",
"rs",
"Srbija",
"SRB",
"RS"
] |
country
|
Donji Matejevac
| 2,100,090 | 78 |
[
{
"id": "27666713",
"title": "Donji Milanovac",
"text": " Donji Milanovac is a town in eastern Serbia. It is situated in the Majdanpek municipality, in the Bor District. It is located on the right bank of Lake Đerdap on the Danube. The population of the town is 2,410 people (2011 census). Its name means \"Lower Milanovac\" (there is an Upper Milanovac, as well). The management office of Đerdap national park is located in the town. It has been nicknamed a \"town of 100,000 roses\".",
"score": "1.4674723"
},
{
"id": "12260550",
"title": "Mateja Matejić",
"text": " Matejić was born in Smederevo in what was then the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (today Serbia) and educated there. As a seminarian at Bitola during the Axis occupation of Yugoslavia, he left the country and completed his seminary education in a displaced persons camp in Eboli, Italy. In 1949, at another camp in West Germany, he married Ljubica Nebrigić of Srem (who preceded him in death on 17 April 2016). He was ordained as a Serbian Orthodox priest in a camp in 1951. He and his young family emigrated to the United States in 1956. As a priest, he founded two parishes and encouraged and physically contributed to the building of two places of worship, the Church of St. George in Monroe, Michigan (where he served from 1956 to 1967), and the Church of St. Stevan of Dečani in Columbus, Ohio (where he served from 1967 until ",
"score": "1.449196"
},
{
"id": "28765460",
"title": "Donji Banjevac",
"text": " Donji Banjevac (Cyrillic: Доњи Бањевац) is a village in the municipality of Kakanj, Bosnia and Herzegovina.",
"score": "1.4271901"
},
{
"id": "10476299",
"title": "Dragutin Mate",
"text": " Mate was born in Čakovec, Croatia, (then part of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia) to Croatian parents. He spent his childhood in the city of Maribor in eastern Slovenia, where his parents moved for professional reasons. He graduated from the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Ljubljana. In 1989 he started working as a high school teacher at the Poljane Grammar School in Ljubljana. In 1990, after the victory of the Democratic Opposition of Slovenia in the first free elections in Slovenia, he got employed at the Slovenian Ministry of Defence. He became head of the department of Civil Protection at the ministry, later moving to the counter-intelligence section. He participated in the Slovenian Independence War of June 1991. In 1992, he became ",
"score": "1.4088771"
},
{
"id": "5778805",
"title": "Ilija Matejić",
"text": " Matejić was born in Kovačica, Vojvodina, in what was then the Republic of Serbia in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. He holds a Bachelor of Laws degree from the University of Belgrade Faculty of Law and is a lawyer by profession. He lives in the village of Crepaja in Kovačica.",
"score": "1.4079082"
},
{
"id": "11008248",
"title": "Donji Višnjani",
"text": " Donji Višnjani is a village in the municipality of Prozor-Rama, Bosnia and Herzegovina.",
"score": "1.3960416"
},
{
"id": "27666716",
"title": "Donji Milanovac",
"text": " Donji Milanovac lies on remains of an 8000-year-old Mesolithic settlement of the Lepenski Vir, and of the Roman town of Taliata. Since the founding of the first settlement, Donji Milanovac was moved three times. It was originally established as a settlement called Banja which was moved some 10 km upstream, on the island of Poreč (which also became the name of the settlement), during the 17th century. In 1830, due to frequent flooding, ruling prince Miloš Obrenović ordered the town be moved to the nearest, right bank, so it was resettled 2 km downstream, at the mouth of river Oreškovica into the Danube. It became the first town in Serbia built by architectural planning. The relocation was finished by 1832 and the town became the seat of the Poreč nahiyah. From 1929 to 1941, Donji Milanovac was part of the Morava Banovina of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. After construction of the \"Đerdap I\" hydroelectric power station in 1970, the town was moved again to its present location, another 6 km downstream, and the old site was completely flooded by the Lake Đerdap in 1971.",
"score": "1.3940277"
},
{
"id": "31644997",
"title": "Doljani, Donji Lapac",
"text": " Doljani is a village in Croatia.",
"score": "1.375376"
},
{
"id": "30303104",
"title": "Donji Meljani",
"text": " Donji Meljani is a village in Croatia. It is connected by the D2 highway.",
"score": "1.3736501"
},
{
"id": "10476298",
"title": "Dragutin Mate",
"text": " Dragutin Mate (born 2 May 1963) is a Slovenian diplomat and politician of Croat origins. He was a member of the Slovenian Democratic Party (2008-2016). Between 2004 and 2008 he served as Minister of Interior in the centre-right government led by Janez Janša and between 2011 and 2014, he was a deputy in the National Assembly.",
"score": "1.3711878"
},
{
"id": "29075441",
"title": "Predrag Matejin",
"text": " Predrag Matejin (13 April 1963) is a politician in Serbia. He was a member of the Assembly of Vojvodina from 2012 to 2020, serving as a member of the Serbian Progressive Party.",
"score": "1.3679757"
},
{
"id": "30366498",
"title": "Donje Sinkovce",
"text": " Donje Sinkovce (Serbian Cyrillic: Доње Синковце) is a town in Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the town has a population of 1661 people. Located on the edge of an old landslide. In the middle of 20th century, Donja Sinkovce was 3 kilometers away from Leskovac. Now Leskovac has expanded to Donje Sinkovce, so they have merged into one settlement. None of the settlement near Leskovac has grown into such a prominent settlement, as Donje Sinkovce.",
"score": "1.3641088"
},
{
"id": "30303245",
"title": "Donji Žirovac",
"text": " Donji Žirovac is a village in Croatia. It is connected by the D6 highway. The village has 53 residents according to 2001 census, most of whom are of the Serbian ethnicity.",
"score": "1.3618505"
},
{
"id": "28632166",
"title": "Osječani Donji",
"text": " Osječani Donji is a village in the municipality of Doboj, Bosnia and Herzegovina.",
"score": "1.3599818"
},
{
"id": "282768",
"title": "Matejče",
"text": " Matejče (Матејче; ) is a village in the municipality of Lipkovo, North Macedonia. The village is known for the Serbian Orthodox Monastery of the Most Holy Mother of God, in the Skopska Crna Gora, at a height of 1005 metres, which was built in the 14th century.",
"score": "1.3583027"
},
{
"id": "12903820",
"title": "Gornji Milanovac",
"text": " water purification in Serbia and previously in Yugoslavia. Also, Gornji Milanovac is a great antagonist of GM food why it has adopted declaration and municipality statute about prohibition of this type of food. Tourists from around the world visit this municipality for its clean air, small and quiet places, inner and family vacations. Gornji Milanovac every other year is the host of International Biennial of miniature Art, founded in 1989. In village Takovo is the host of the World Music Festival, every May, June or July. Known trip places are: Takovo, Grabovica (peak of Ždreban), Savinac and Rudnik. These places are popular during the celebration of the May 1st or world-known International Workers' Day as a collegial picnic in union organization. Other significant ",
"score": "1.3574426"
},
{
"id": "15587858",
"title": "Lužnica (region)",
"text": " Although the region is not administratively marked, it is divided into two parts, Upper Lužnica (Gornja Lužnica) and Lower Lužnica (Donja Lužnica). Villages located in the region include Babušnica, Bogdanovac, Bratiševac, Brestov Dol, Vojnici, Gornje Krnjino, Gornji Striževac, Gorčinci, Grnčar, Dol, Donje Krnjino, Donji Striževac, Dučevac, Draginac, Izvor, Kaluđerevo, Kambelevci, Kijevac, Linovo, Ljuberađa, Modra Stena, Provaljenik, Radoševac, Resnik, Stol, Suračevo (in Babušnica), Bežište and Šljivovik (in Bela Palanka). The 2011 census recorded the largest population decline in the country in this region.",
"score": "1.3572996"
},
{
"id": "16583713",
"title": "Donji Orašac",
"text": " Donji Orašac is a village in the municipality of Dobretići, Central Bosnia Canton, Bosnia and Herzegovina.",
"score": "1.349628"
},
{
"id": "28532149",
"title": "Branešci Donji",
"text": " Branešci Donji is a village in the municipality of Čelinac, Republika Srpska, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Is also known for being the city of peace, love and brotherhood.",
"score": "1.3455237"
},
{
"id": "27666718",
"title": "Donji Milanovac",
"text": " The Church of St. Nicholas is located in the centre of Donji Milanovac. It was built in 1840 thanks to captain Miša Anastasijević. Captain Miša's konak and Tenka's house have been proclaimed cultural heritage of Serbia. There is a monument to the 1912–1918 wars (Balkan Wars, First World War), and a mammoth sculpture. Another noted monument is the Roman Tabula Traiana.",
"score": "1.3446902"
}
] |
In what country is Rozsochatec?
|
[
"Czech Republic",
"CZR",
"cz",
"Česko",
"Česká republika",
"ČR",
"cze",
"CZE",
"Czechia"
] |
country
|
Rozsochatec
| 2,025,404 | 53 |
[
{
"id": "773254",
"title": "David Rozgonyi",
"text": " Rozgonyi has visited over fifty countries, including most recently India, Cambodia, Thailand, Myanmar, Hungary, The Czech Republic, Slovakia, Croatia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Germany (2006–2007); and Russia, Ukraine, Albania, Macedonia, Serbia (2008), Romania, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Greece, Kosovo (2009). He prefers backpacking, walking, motorcycling, or his vintage Volkswagen bus for transport, and has lived locally among the residents of many countries during his visits.",
"score": "1.4963784"
},
{
"id": "12661802",
"title": "Rozbrat",
"text": " Rozbrat is a long-running anarchist social centre in Jeżyce in Poznań, Poland.",
"score": "1.4800987"
},
{
"id": "5173771",
"title": "Rožňava",
"text": "🇷🇸 Bačka Topola, Serbia ; 🇨🇿 Český Těšín, Czech Republic ; 🇵🇱 Cieszyn, Poland ; 🇭🇺 Lipótváros (Budapest), Hungary ; 🇭🇺 Szerencs, Hungary Rožňava is twinned with:",
"score": "1.4794608"
},
{
"id": "778421",
"title": "Rosochate, Podkarpackie Voivodeship",
"text": " Rosochate (Розсохате, Rozsokhate) is a former village in the administrative district of Gmina Czarna, within Bieszczady County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland, close to the border with Ukraine. It lies approximately 7 km south-west of Czarna, 18 km south of Ustrzyki Dolne, and 95 km south-east of the regional capital Rzeszów.",
"score": "1.4739494"
},
{
"id": "7728479",
"title": "Rožnov pod Radhoštěm",
"text": "🇩🇪 Bergen, Germany ; 🇭🇺 Körmend, Hungary ; 🇸🇰 Považská Bystrica, Slovakia ; 🇵🇱 Śrem, Poland Rožnov pod Radhoštěm is twinned with:",
"score": "1.4639344"
},
{
"id": "13278749",
"title": "Rozstajne",
"text": " Rozstajne (Розстайне, Rozstaine) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Krempna, within Jasło County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland, close to the border with Slovakia. It lies approximately 8 km west of Krempna, 29 km south of Jasło, and 73 km south-west of the regional capital Rzeszów.",
"score": "1.4629791"
},
{
"id": "27892472",
"title": "Rosochata",
"text": " Rosochata ( Seifersdorf) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kunice, within Legnica County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. Prior to 1945 it was in Germany. It lies approximately 11 km east of Legnica, and 52 km west of the regional capital Wrocław.",
"score": "1.4549332"
},
{
"id": "7839984",
"title": "Rosocha, Koło County",
"text": " Rosocha is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Osiek Mały, within Koło County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km south-east of Osiek Mały, 8 km north of Koło, and 118 km east of the regional capital Poznań.",
"score": "1.4352621"
},
{
"id": "13205712",
"title": "Roźwienica",
"text": " Roźwienica (Рожвениця, Rozhvenytsia) is a village in Jarosław County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Roźwienica. It lies approximately 10 km south-west of Jarosław and 43 km east of the regional capital Rzeszów. The village has a population of 720.",
"score": "1.4352036"
},
{
"id": "455430",
"title": "Rosochackie",
"text": " Rosochackie (Albrechtsfelde; until 1927: Rosochatzken) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Olecko, within Olecko County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 4 km west of Olecko and 131 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn.",
"score": "1.4314101"
},
{
"id": "2542697",
"title": "Rosocha, Masovian Voivodeship",
"text": " Rosocha is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Nowe Miasto nad Pilicą, within Grójec County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km north of Nowe Miasto nad Pilicą, 31 km south-west of Grójec, and 68 km south-west of Warsaw.",
"score": "1.4295957"
},
{
"id": "27951771",
"title": "List of twin towns and sister cities in Slovakia",
"text": " ; 🇨🇿 Rožnov pod Radhoštěm, Czech Republic ; 🇷🇺 Sovetsk, Russia ; 🇱🇹 Tauragė, Lithuania ; 🇧🇾 Zhodzina, Belarus ; 🇨🇿 Zubří, Czech Republic 🇧🇬 Gabrovo, Bulgaria ; Keratsini, Greece ; 🇺🇦 Mukachevo, Ukraine ; 🇵🇱 Nowy Sącz, Poland ; 🇭🇺 Nyíregyháza, Hungary ; 🇺🇸 Pittsburgh, United States ; 🇨🇿 Prague 10 (Prague), Czech Republic ; 🇩🇪 Remscheid, Germany ; 🇮🇱 Rishon LeZion, Israel 🇨🇿 Ropice, Czech Republic 🇩🇪 Ibbenbüren, Germany ; 🇵🇱 Jastrzębie-Zdrój, Poland ; 🇮🇹 Luserna San Giovanni, Italy ; 🇨🇿 Šumperk, Czech Republic ; Valjevo, Serbia ; 🇸🇮 Velenje, Slovenia 🇧🇾 Babruysk, Belarus ; 🇺🇦 Bila Tserkva, Ukraine ; 🇨🇿 Hlinsko, Czech Republic ; 🇷🇺 Omsk, Russia ; 🇷🇸 Stara Pazova, Serbia 🇷🇴 Nădlac, Romania Palárikovo Papradno Partizánske Pezinok Piešťany Plešivec Podolínec Poprad Považská Bystrica Prešov Pribylina Prievidza Púchov Pukanec",
"score": "1.4254173"
},
{
"id": "16169431",
"title": "Prostitution in the Czech Republic",
"text": "\"Rozkoš bez rizika\" (R-R, Bliss Without Risk) is a small non-governmental organization, founded in 1992 and funded mainly by the state and municipalities. It is dedicated to HIV/AIDS and STD diagnosis and prevention among female sex-workers by educating prostitutes on safer sex techniques, health and self-defense. R-R operates help centres in Prague and Brno. ; \"La Strada\" is a small civic association active in area of combating human trafficking, founded in 1995. It operates a center in Prague and a phone helpline. ; \"Projekt šance\" (Project Chance) is a small organisation helping mainly young homosexual prostitutes. Founded in 1995 by László Sümegh it concentrates on streetwork activity and operates a center in Prague. ; Other organisations providing these services are \"Katolická charita\" (Catholic charity, countrywide), \"PREV Centrum\" in Cheb (prevention among children), \" Time for Life in the Streets\" in Cheb (help for prostitutes), \"KARO / Marita P\" in Cheb (help for prostitutes) and specialised institutions in civil service and police. ",
"score": "1.424382"
},
{
"id": "4992624",
"title": "Rosocha, West Pomeranian Voivodeship",
"text": " Rosocha (formerly German Rotzog) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Polanów, within Koszalin County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland. It lies approximately 6 km west of Polanów, 30 km east of Koszalin, and 154 km north-east of the regional capital Szczecin. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany. For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania. The village has a population of 100.",
"score": "1.4224896"
},
{
"id": "15768479",
"title": "Rosina, Slovakia",
"text": " Church of Saint Katherine of Alexandria is a parish church in Rosina (small village near Žilina, Slovakia), built in 1776 in baroque style, and it is sacred to Saint Catherine of Alexandria. The church has one nave, it also has a sacristan and citadel with a roof in an onion-like shape. Its facade is articulated with allette. Inside is the main altar in the baroque style from the second half of the eighteenth century with a picture of Saint Katherine. Paintings inside are by Jozef Hanulla. After 1970, a new liturgical device was made. The old pulpit was removed as well as some of aisle small altars. The church is adorned with several sculptures, for example Saint Karol Boromejský ",
"score": "1.4189389"
},
{
"id": "5173764",
"title": "Rožňava",
"text": " Rožňava (Rozsnyó, Rosenau, Latin: Rosnavia) is a town in Slovakia, approximately 71 km by road from Košice in the Košice Region, and has a population of 19,182. The town is an economic and tourist centre of the Gemer. Rožňava is now a popular tourist attraction with a beautiful historic town centre. The town is an episcopal seat. It has above all food, textile and remnants of mining industries.",
"score": "1.413277"
},
{
"id": "2767820",
"title": "Rozstání (Světlá pod Ještědem)",
"text": " Rozstání is a town in the Liberec Region, Czech Republic.",
"score": "1.4087541"
},
{
"id": "2627606",
"title": "Rososza",
"text": " Rososza is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sędziejowice, within Łask County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north-east of Sędziejowice, 6 km south-west of Łask, and 38 km south-west of the regional capital Łódź.",
"score": "1.4073489"
},
{
"id": "11160346",
"title": "St. Josaphat Roman Catholic Church in Philadelphia",
"text": " After more than a century of service to Roman Catholics of Polish descent in the Manayunk, Roxborough, and Wissahickon areas of the greater Philadelphia area, St. Josaphat's Parish was merged with St. John the Baptist and St. Mary of the Assumption in 2012.",
"score": "1.4068632"
},
{
"id": "31487930",
"title": "Rozpucie",
"text": " Rozpucie (Розпуття, Rozputtia) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Tyrawa Wołoska, within Sanok County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 4 km north-east of Tyrawa Wołoska, 15 km north-east of Sanok, and 56 km south-east of the regional capital Rzeszów. The village has a population of 460.",
"score": "1.4038808"
}
] |
Who was the producer of Benjamin Franklin, Jr.?
|
[
"Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer",
"MGM"
] |
producer
|
Benjamin Franklin, Jr.
| 3,476,414 | 96 |
[
{
"id": "2422672",
"title": "Benjamin Franklin, Jr.",
"text": " Benjamin Franklin, Jr. is a 1943 Our Gang short comedy film directed by Herbert Glazer. It was the 211th Our Gang short (212th episode, 123rd talking short, 124th talking episode, and 43rd MGM produced episode) that was released.",
"score": "1.686275"
},
{
"id": "7039439",
"title": "Benjamin Franklin (2002 TV series)",
"text": " Benjamin Franklin is a 2002 American documentary television series which premiered November 19–20, 2002 and reairs on August 22–September 5, 2005. The series was produced by Twin Cities Public Television of Minneapolis-St. Paul. Benjamin Franklin won an Emmy for Outstanding Nonfiction Special (Traditional) in 2003. Executive producers Catherine Allan and Jerry Richman accepted the award.",
"score": "1.5540488"
},
{
"id": "9030093",
"title": "Rex Everhart",
"text": " role on the original Broadway cast recording (Da Silva was finally able to record the role when 1776 was filmed in 1972). When 1776 was revived on Broadway in 1997, Everhart again served as the understudy for the role of Benjamin Franklin. In 1978, Everhart was nominated for a Featured Actor Tony Award for his role in the musical, Working. The actor's television career, which started back in days of live broadcasting, included series, plays, films, soap operas and commercials. Appearing in 16 feature films, Everhart gave his last film performance as the voice of Belle's father, Maurice in the Disney movie Beauty and the Beast.",
"score": "1.5339918"
},
{
"id": "14791566",
"title": "Larry Mendte",
"text": " Mendte appeared in three movies in cameo roles: Primary Colors, Shadow of Doubt, and \"Snipes\", a film starring Zoe Saldana. He wrote and directed four short documentaries. Ben Franklin: Stealing Lightning from the Sky aired across the country on Benjamin Franklin's birthday in 2006. The documentary questioned whether Franklin really did conduct his famous kite experiment. Later that year Mendte wrote and directed Alex Scott: A Stand for Hope, a short documentary about Alex Scott, founder of Alex's Lemonade Stand. Alex Scott: A Stand for Hope won the award for Best Documentary at the Reno, Oxford, Danville, West Chester, Lake Arrowhead and Reel Award film Festivals. Mendte was named best Pennsylvania Filmmaker for 2006 at the West Chester Film Festival.",
"score": "1.527985"
},
{
"id": "28616112",
"title": "Benjamin Franklin (miniseries)",
"text": " The Lives of Benjamin Franklin is a 1974 American television miniseries that chronicles the life of Benjamin Franklin. The series was broadcast by CBS and won five Emmy Awards, including the award for Outstanding Limited Series. Howard Fast won the Emmy for Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series for the first installment (The Ambassador). Glenn Jordan was also nominated for Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series for The Ambassador episode, and Loring Mandel was nominated for Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series for The Whirlwind episode. The four 90-minute episodes debuted on November 21 and December 17, 1974, and January 9 and 28, 1975.",
"score": "1.512187"
},
{
"id": "26740392",
"title": "Burton Benjamin",
"text": " Burton Richard Benjamin (October 9, 1917 – September 18, 1988) was a vice president and director of CBS News. He worked at CBS for 29 years, as a writer, producer, and executive. In that time, he was director of CBS News from 1978 to 1981 and executive producer of CBS Evening News from 1975 to 1978. He was a senior executive producer from 1968 to 1975 and from 1981 to 1985. At CBS, Benjamin often produced programs with Walter Cronkite. He wrote Fair Play: CBS, General Westmoreland, and How a Television Documentary Went Wrong about the Benjamin Report, his report on The Uncounted Enemy and its related lawsuit.",
"score": "1.5112462"
},
{
"id": "26740394",
"title": "Burton Benjamin",
"text": " joined CBS in 1957 and became executive producer of The 20th Century that year, followed by The 21st Century in 1967. He also served as executive producer for CBS programs World War II, The Rockefellers, and CBS Reports. He was executive producer of CBS Evening News from 1975 to 1978. He subsequently served as vice president, director of news, and supervisor of development of CBS Sunday Morning from 1978 to 1981. Before his retirement from CBS in 1985, the company charged him with producing what became known as the Benjamin Report, a document investigating one of CBS's documentaries. The documentary, ",
"score": "1.4932466"
},
{
"id": "7039440",
"title": "Benjamin Franklin (2002 TV series)",
"text": " Let the Experiment Be Made. His first 47 years, a period that saw the birth of the Enlightenment. Franklin took this intellectual revolution to heart, writing aphorisms based on it for the publication he founded, “Poor Richard's Almanack,” and making significant contributions to his fellow Philadelphians, contributions which included the ideas of public libraries and a volunteer fire department. Richard Easton plays Franklin; Colm Feore narrates.",
"score": "1.4901323"
},
{
"id": "7039443",
"title": "Benjamin Franklin (2002 TV series)",
"text": "Richard Easton - Benjamin Franklin ; Matthew Bentley - Benjamin Franklin as a child ; Dylan Baker - Benjamin Franklin as a young man ; Colm Feore - Narrator ; Gerry Bamman - Paul Wentworth ; Blair Brown - Jane Franklin ; Kathleen Chalfant - Silence Dogood ; Anthony Cochrane - George III ; John Curless - William Strahan ; Peter Donaldson - John Adams ; Jennifer Dundas - Catherine Ray ; Peter Gerety - Joseph Galloway ; Daniel Gerrol - Joseph Priestley ; Ronald Guttman - Le Comte de Vergennes ; Anthony Heald - Jonathan Austin ; John Christopher Jones - Ephraim Eliot ; Simon Jones - Thomas Penn ; Eddie Korbich - Jared Ruggles ; Roberta Maxwell - Deborah Read Franklin ; Jefferson Mays - Elkanah Watson ; Martin Rayner - Robert Whittington ; Sebastian Roché - Vicomte ; Natacha Roi - Madame Brillon de Joy ; Andrew Seear - British government official ; Josef Sommer - Cotton Mather ; Jim True-Frost - William Franklin ; Laurent St. Pierre - Count de Segur ",
"score": "1.4874818"
},
{
"id": "4063602",
"title": "Craven Street: Ben Franklin in London",
"text": " Craven Street: Ben Franklin in London is a five-part radio play dramatizing Benjamin Franklin's career as a colonial lobbyist in London before the American Revolution. It starred Elizabeth Montgomery, George Grizzard and Sir Nigel Hawthorne. It was written, produced and directed by Yuri Rasovsky, under the aegis of Robert Foxworth's American Dialogues Foundation. Syndicated to public radio stations in 1993, it was later released as an audiobook.",
"score": "1.4782598"
},
{
"id": "7039441",
"title": "Benjamin Franklin (2002 TV series)",
"text": " The Making of a Revolutionary. Beginning in 1757, his years in London, sent from Pennsylvania on a mission to allow the colony to tax the Penn family's lands. Franklin arrived as an ardent admirer of the empire as well as a lover of the American colonies (“There's nothing I want more than the prosperity of both,” he says). Seventeen years later, he left—a revolutionary.",
"score": "1.4697856"
},
{
"id": "28056697",
"title": "Sam Kressen",
"text": " Sam Kressen (October 5, 1918 - December 27, 1991) was an American actor known for his portrayal of Benjamin Franklin.",
"score": "1.4641542"
},
{
"id": "11961921",
"title": "Robert Litz",
"text": "2007 - Alta California - Writer (Pre-production). ; 2006 - Ten Tricks - Producer. ; 2004 - A&E Biography: George Washington, Founding Father - Writer. (TV) ; 2004 - A&E Biography: Benjamin Franklin, Citizen of the World - Writer. (TV) ; 2003 - A&E Biography: Andrew Jackson, A Man for the People - Writer. (TV) ; 2000 - A&E Biography: John Travolta - Writer. (TV) ; 2000 - Maxine's Christmas Carol - Co-writer. (TV) ; 2000 - Sinbad: Beyond the Veil of Mists - Producer. ; 1998 - A&E: In Pursuit of Space - Writer. (TV) ; 1998 - World War II: The race to rule the skies - Writer. (TV) ; 1996 - America's Flying Aces: The Blue Angels 50th Anniversary - Writer. (TV) ; 1993 - House of Cards - Writer. ; 1989 - Medium Straight - Writer. ; 1985 - Rappin' - Writer. ",
"score": "1.4614751"
},
{
"id": "3074245",
"title": "Benjamin Franklin Jones (industrialist)",
"text": " He was born on August 8, 1824 in Claysville, Pennsylvania. He married Mary McMasters and had a son, Benjamin Franklin Jones, Jr. From 1884 to 1888 he was chairman of the Republican National Committee. He died on May 19, 1903 in Allegheny City, Pennsylvania.",
"score": "1.461237"
},
{
"id": "16506567",
"title": "Fredd Wayne",
"text": " on ABC-TV. Wayne’s Benjamin Franklin, Citizen also had a long run in Hollywood’s Ivar Theatre which led to a well received U.S. State Department tour of Europe and subsequent college tours throughout America during the Bicentennial era and beyond. His work as Franklin on Bob Hope's America is 200 Years Old...And There's Still Hope! recorded on May 4, 1976, led to appearances in multiple roles on four subsequent Bob Hope Television Specials including an appearance as Brandon Tartikoff opposite Brandon Tartikoff. Fredd Wayne has also appeared frequently as Franklin at IBM, GE, and other industrial conventions. His recording of The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin (Audio Partners) was selected as one of the top audiotapes of 1997.",
"score": "1.455557"
},
{
"id": "28616113",
"title": "Benjamin Franklin (miniseries)",
"text": "Willie Aames as Franklin at age 12 ; Beau Bridges as Franklin the young man ; Eddie Albert as Franklin the diplomat ; Richard Widmark as Franklin the rebel ; Melvyn Douglas as Franklin the elder statesman ",
"score": "1.4486537"
},
{
"id": "7039444",
"title": "Benjamin Franklin (2002 TV series)",
"text": " Benjamin Franklin is on VHS & DVD.",
"score": "1.4426887"
},
{
"id": "31827288",
"title": "Benjamin Franklin in popular culture",
"text": " Franklin, played by Paul Vogt, sends Samuel Adams, played by Josh Meyers, to the future in a time machine he made from a rolltop desk. Franklin wanted to know if the American Revolution was a success, but gets frustrated when Adams only comes back to tell him that Samuel Adams Beer is a success. The time machine also brings back a man named Jerry, played by Ike Barinholtz, who is little help to Franklin. ; A Saul of the Mole Men episode titled \"Poor Clancy's Almanack\" uses Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson to explain the true mainstream conflict while revealing Clancy Burrows' past. Both ",
"score": "1.4383793"
},
{
"id": "8813786",
"title": "Benjamin Franklin (clergyman)",
"text": " Benjamin Franklin (February 1, 1812 – October 22, 1878) was an important conservative figure in the American Restoration Movement, especially as the leading antebellum conservative in the northern United States branch of the movement. He is notable as the early and lifelong mentor of Daniel Sommer, whose support of the 1889 Sand Creek Declaration set in motion events which led to the formal division of the Churches of Christ from the Disciples of Christ in 1906. According to contemporary biographies \"His early religious training was according to the Methodist faith, though he never belonged to any church until he united with the Disciples.\"",
"score": "1.4361622"
},
{
"id": "1690943",
"title": "Harold B. Franklin",
"text": " Harold B. Franklin (4 May 1889 – 21 April 1941) was an American cinema chain executive who later moved into production of stage shows and films. He co-produced the musical comedy Revenge with Music (1934). He produced the 1940 melodrama parody film The Villain Still Pursued Her.",
"score": "1.4349053"
}
] |
Who was the producer of O skliros andras?
|
[
"Finos Film"
] |
producer
|
O skliros andras
| 5,321,559 | 57 |
[
{
"id": "32383289",
"title": "O skliros andras",
"text": " O skliros andras (Ο σκληρός άνδρας) is a 1961 Greek comedy film produced by Finos Films and was directed by Giannis Dalianidis and starred Kostas Hatzichristos, Martha Vourtsi, Martha Karagianni and Kostas Voutsas. It is a cinematographic representation of the play by Georgios Roussos. In its first week of screening in Athens and Piraeus, the movie sold 38,764 tickets placing it 14th in the 68 Greek films in 1961–62.",
"score": "2.0695202"
},
{
"id": "4386723",
"title": "Yorgos Lanthimos",
"text": "Attenberg (2010) Producer",
"score": "1.6197739"
},
{
"id": "27979911",
"title": "Takis Christoforidis",
"text": "O thisavros tou makariti (1959) ; To exypno pouli (1961) ..... Filotas ; O skliros andras (1961) ..... police officer ; A Matter of Earnestness (1965) ..... Efstathiou ; Ah! Kai na 'moun antras (1966) ..... Stella's boss ; Voitheia! O Vengos faneros praktor 000 (1967) ..... armaments director ; Thema syneidiseos (1973) Selected filmography:",
"score": "1.5883577"
},
{
"id": "13634016",
"title": "Mavra Mesanychta",
"text": " Mavra Mesanychta (Μαύρα Μεσάνυχτα; \"Black Midnight\") is a Greek black comedy series, originally broadcast on Mega Channel under the executive production of Frenzy Films. It was written by actor and writer Vasilis Risvas (Βασίλης Ρίσβας), who also had one of main roles in the comedy, and writer Dimitra Sakalis (Δήμητρα Σακαλή). The director of the series was Panos Kokkinopoulos (Πάνος Κοκκινόπουλος), the music producer was Marios Strofalis (Μάριος Στρόφαλης) and the producer Bessie Voudouris (Μπέσυ Βουδούρη). Kokkinopoulos, after several years of cooperation with Alpha TV, chose to include in the series actors who had worked with him in the past, like Stelios Mainas (Στέλιος Μάινας), Panagiota Vlanti (Παναγιώτα Βλαντή), Bessy Malfa (Μπέσυ Μάλφα), Gerasimos Skiadaresis (Γεράσιμος Σκιαδαρέσης). The theme music was composed by Kyriakos Papadopoulos (musician) (Κυριάκος Παπαδόπουλος), with lyrics by pop star Thirio (Θηρίο), who also performs the song alongside singer Maria Iakovou (Μαρία Ιακώβου), having a small part in the series. The production manager was Dimitrios Katsaros (Δημήτρης Κατσαρός), the head of stage design Giannis Doumas (Γιάννης Δούμας), the head of costume design Iliostalachti Vavouli (Ηλιοστάλαχτη Βαβούλη), the director of photography Kostas Palmas (Κώστας Πάλμας), the montage responsible Giannis Maris (Γιάννης Μαρής).",
"score": "1.5743896"
},
{
"id": "32383290",
"title": "O skliros andras",
"text": "Kostas Hatzichristos ..... Iraklis Leontopoulos ; Martha Vourtsi ..... Aleka Palli ; Martha Karagianni ..... Foula Davari ; Kostas Voutsas ..... Patatas ; Joly Garbi ..... Andromachi ; Vangelis Protopapas ..... Kalogirou ; Takis Hristoforidis ..... police officer ; Kostas Papachristos ..... Mistos Davaris ; Sperantza Vrana ..... Loula ; Margarita Athanasiou ...... Marika ; Kostas Naos ..... Berketis ; Giorgos Tsitsopoulos ..... Takis ; Nassos Kedrakas ..... Thanasis ; Stavros Paravas ..... police officer ; Golfo Bini ..... maid ",
"score": "1.5738282"
},
{
"id": "9991129",
"title": "George Tzavellas",
"text": " George Tzavellas, also rendered Giorgos Tzavellas, Yiorgos Tzavellas, or Yorgos Javellas (Γιώργος Τζαβέλλας, 1916, Athens – October 18, 1976), was a Greek film director, screenwriter, and playwright. His filmmaking was particularly influential, with critic Georges Sadoul considering him \"one of the three major postwar Greek directors\" (along with Michael Cacoyannis and Nikos Koundouros). Tzavellas wrote at least 26 plays, in addition to writing the scripts for all of his films. Among his notable films are Marinos Kontaras (1948), the drama O methystakas (1950), and Antigone (1961), a cinematic adaptation of the Sophocles tragedy. His adaptation of Antigone reimagined it in the language of realist cinema, omitting stylized elements of Greek stageplay such as the chorus, and attempting to convey the same information via setting and dialogue. In 1964 he was a member of the jury at the 14th Berlin International Film Festival. His masterpiece, however, is the 1955 film The Counterfeit Coin (I kálpiki líra), a film in four parts, linking the stories of several people through their transactions of a single counterfeit gold coin.",
"score": "1.5235186"
},
{
"id": "14209133",
"title": "Ena Exypno Exypno Moutro",
"text": " Ena Exypno Exypno Moutro (Ένα Έξυπνο Έξυπνο Μούτρο), also known as O Achtypitos (Ο Αχτύπητος) is a 1965 Greek black and white comedy film made by Finos Films and based on a theatrical play by Tsiforos O Tilemahos Triposse (Ο Τηλέμαχος Τρύπωσε). It was directed by Andreas Andreakis, written by Giannis Dalianidis and Nikos Tsiforos. The movie premiered on February 18, 1965 and made about 300,000 tickets in its first run.",
"score": "1.5232844"
},
{
"id": "33106654",
"title": "Kai Se Thelo",
"text": " Dimitris Kontopoulos was the composer of the song along with lyricist Vicky Gerothodorou. The duo had previously produced Rouvas' massive 2007 hit \"Ola Gyro Sou Gyrizoun\" as well as \"Stous 31 Dromous\". Rouvas' last album release was in late 2006, and with the exception of \"Stous 31 Dromous\", the theme of the show of the same name, and the recordings for the Alter Ego he had not produced any new album material since the release of Iparhi Agapi Edo. This was due to Rouvas' work on both his début film and the filming of a new English-language psychological thriller that was ",
"score": "1.5192173"
},
{
"id": "15379697",
"title": "Chronis Exarhakos",
"text": " He was born in 1932 in Ermoupoli on Syros. He studied at Pelos Katselis's school. He entered in 1963 and performed his first theatrical play Vila ton orgion with the Rigopoulos-Analiti company. A year later he made his debut in the cinema with the movie Diazygio ala ellinika by Odisea Kosteletou. He appeared in 20 other films and played in 60 reviews. Most of these were the best movies including I kori mou i sosialistria (1966), Gorgones ke Manges (1968), I Pariziana (The Parisian) (1969), Marijuana Stop! (1971), Mia Elinida sto haremi (1971) and others.",
"score": "1.5189693"
},
{
"id": "25334395",
"title": "Cinema of Cyprus",
"text": " In the late 1960s and early 1970s, George Filis produced and directed Gregoris Afxentiou, Etsi Prodothike i Kypros, and The Mega Document. In 1994, Cypriot film production received a boost with the establishment of the Cinema Advisory Committee. In 2000, the annual amount set aside for filmmaking in the national budget was CYP£500,000 (about €850,000). In addition to government grants, Cypriot co-productions are eligible for funding from the Council of Europe's Eurimages Fund, which finances European film co-productions. To date, four feature films on which a Cypriot was an executive producer have received funding from Eurimages. The first was I Sphagi tou Kokora (1996), followed by Hellados (unreleased), To Tama (1999), and O Dromos gia tin Ithaki (2000). In 2018, Marios Piperides received critical reviews at Sarajevo Film Festival and Tribeca Film Festival, with Smuggling Hendrix. Also well-received in that year was Pause, by debut director Tonia Mishiali. The most renowned Cypriot director to date is Michael Cacoyannis with the renowned Zorba the Greek.",
"score": "1.5168658"
},
{
"id": "28287415",
"title": "András Kepes",
"text": " András Kepes (born October 11, 1948) is a Hungarian author, television host, documentary filmmaker and academic. He is Professor of film and media and Chair of the Council of Arts of the Budapest Metropolitan University (METU).",
"score": "1.5143338"
},
{
"id": "1205172",
"title": "Dinos Iliopoulos",
"text": " & kopana no 3 (1984) - Arhimidis ; O adexios erastis (1984) - Agis ; Kai klaaama... sta sholeia (1984) - Headmaster ; Ta touvla (1985) - Headmaster ; O ippotis tis lakouvas (1985) - Iraklis Keler ; Mia gynaikara sta bouzoukia (1985) - Periklis ; Koritsia gia tsibima (1985) ; The Beekeeper (1986) - Spyros' Friend, owner of Ciné Pantheon ; Pontios eimai, oti thelo kano (1986) - Dinos ; Kataskopoi tis symforas (1987) - Agapon ; Yper epeigon (1989) - Commander ; Oi teleutaioi pasokratores (1989) ; Tapi kai psyhraimoi (1994) ; Radio Mosha (1995) - Receptionist ; Karagioz Dream (1996) ; Ntaiana i prigipissa tou laou (1999) - (final film role) ",
"score": "1.5124032"
},
{
"id": "4303254",
"title": "Cyprus",
"text": " The most worldwide known Cypriot director, to have worked abroad, is Michael Cacoyannis. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, George Filis produced and directed Gregoris Afxentiou, Etsi Prodothike i Kypros, and The Mega Document. In 1994, Cypriot film production received a boost with the establishment of the Cinema Advisory Committee. In 2000, the annual amount set aside for filmmaking in the national budget was CYP£500,000 (about €850,000). In addition to government grants, Cypriot co-productions are eligible for funding from the Council of Europe's Eurimages Fund, which finances European film co-productions. To date, four feature films on which a Cypriot was an executive producer have received funding from Eurimages. The first was I Sphagi tou Kokora (1996), followed by Hellados (unreleased), To Tama (1999), and O Dromos gia tin Ithaki (2000). Only a small number of foreign films have been made in Cyprus. This includes Incense for the Damned (1970), The Beloved (1970), and Ghost in the Noonday Sun (1973). Parts of the John Wayne film The Longest Day (1962) were also filmed in Cyprus.",
"score": "1.5120966"
},
{
"id": "10142005",
"title": "Vasilis Tsivilikas",
"text": "Pos na klepsete tous klironomous sas (TV Movie) 2007 ; Ohi tora agapoula (TV Movie) 2006 ; Baby Style (TV Series) 2001 ; Oute gata oute zimia (TV Movie) 2001 ; Aroma gynaikas (TV Series) 2000 ; Pyrotehnimata sto tsepaki sou (TV Movie) 1999 ; Oti peite upourge mou (TV Movie) 1998 ; Hi Rock (TV Series) 1992 ; O kyrios synigoros (TV Series) 1990 ; Vradya epitheorisis (TV Series) 1984 ; Theoi ston Olympo (TV Series) 1978 ; Antipetherini (TV Movie) 1978 ; Istories horis dakrya (TV Series) 1977 ; Thomas epi... Kolono (TV Series) 1977 ; Hilia hronia prin – Vyzantio: I giorti ton Kalendon (TV Movie) 1977 ; Atsides... (TV Series) 1976 ; Viva Katerina (TV Series) 1973 ; En touto nika (TV Series) 1973 ; Axiomatikos ypiresias (TV Series short) 1972 ; To theatro tis Defteras (TV Series) 1970 ",
"score": "1.5085971"
},
{
"id": "13691435",
"title": "Thanos Leivaditis",
"text": " festivals at Théâtre des Nations (Paris) in 1962 and at the World Theatre Season (London) in 1966. He wrote 30 screenplays and played in 24 Greek film productions or movies. In these movies, he played with the unforgettable actress Mema Stathopoulou. The next phase of his career involved television, beginning in 1974 when he starred in Oi Dikaoi (which lasted three seasons). He also starred in Oi Axiopistoi in 1981, Oi Ierosili in 1983, I Vendeta in 1987, I Ekti Entoli in 1990 and I Diki in 1991. He was a screenwriter and a playwright for his roles as the judge Angelos Karnezis and the journalist Aris Martelis. He was awarded with the Corfiot Scenario Awards in 1984 for the serial Oi Ierosili. He died on 1 September 2005 in Athens at the age of 71.",
"score": "1.5066025"
},
{
"id": "16338871",
"title": "Ah! Kai na 'moun antras",
"text": " 'Ah! Kai na moun antras' (Αχ! Και να 'μουν άντρας) is a 1966 Greek black and white comedy film directed and written by Stefanos Fotiadis and starring Maro Kontou, Dionyssis Papayannopoulos, Nikos Rizos and Giorgos Moutsios.",
"score": "1.503274"
},
{
"id": "973268",
"title": "O atsidas",
"text": "The movie is based on a theatrical play by Dimitris Psathas Exohikon Kendron o Eros (Εξοχικόν Κέντρον Ο Έρως) ; Thanassis Vengos made his second role, he unfolded his comical talents and became popular. ; The movie was filmed in Thessaloniki ; It was annually ranked fifth in tickets (69,414) for that year. ",
"score": "1.5004693"
},
{
"id": "6142994",
"title": "Yorgos Avgeropoulos",
"text": " Yorgos Avgeropoulos (Γιώργος Αυγερόπουλος; born 1971) is a Greek journalist and documentary filmmaker. He is the creator of the Greek awarded documentary series \"Exandas\". He was born in Athens in 1971. He has worked for Greek television stations covering news stories in Greece and major events around the world. He has also worked as a war correspondent in the wars in Bosnia, Croatia, Iraq, Afghanistan, Kosovo and Palestine. In 2000, he created the documentary series \"Exandas\" (meaning sextant) which has won many awards in film festivals and documentary festivals in Greece and around the world and is currently broadcast on Greek public television. His documentary Agora deals with the Greek financial crisis. Political actors and everyday people are interviewed on the social effects of austerity.",
"score": "1.4959983"
},
{
"id": "8700915",
"title": "Dimitris Poulikakos",
"text": " ; 1983: Revanche ; 1984: Loufa kai parallagi (a.k.a. Loaf and Camouflage) ; 1984: To kanoun kathe mera ; 1985: Meteoro kai skia (a.k.a. Meteor and Shadow) ; 1985: Kai pali oraioi eimaste ; 1986: Periptosi aftodikias ; 1986: Melissokomos, O (a.k.a. The Beekeeper) ; 1987: Sweet Country (a.k.a. Glykeia patrida) with Jane Alexander, Randy Quaid) ; 1987: Made in Greece ; 1987: Tile-kannivaloi (a.k.a. Telecannibals) ; 1987: Terirem ; 1987: Patris, listeia, oikogeneia ; 1987: Paidia tis Helidonas, Ta (a.k.a. The Children of the Swallow) ; 1987: Bios + politeia (a.k.a. Living Dangerously) ; 1987: ... kai dyo avga Tourkias (a.k.a. Two Turkish Eggs) ; 1988: Fakellos ",
"score": "1.4944252"
},
{
"id": "13545514",
"title": "Nikos Tsiforos",
"text": " of Dimitris Horn and Mairi Aroni staged a play of his at the Akropol theatre. The play was \"Η Πινακοθήκη των Ηλιθίων\" (The portrait gallery of dolts). In 1948-1949, he scripted and directed his first film Τελευταία αποστολή (Last Mission). He went on to work as a reporter for the Athens press: newspapers (Φιλελεύθερος; Βήμα; Ελεύθερος Κόσμος), and magazines (Τραστ, Ρομάντσο, Ταχυδρόμος, Πάνθεον), all the while writing over 40 theatrical plays and over 80 film scripts. He collaborated extensively with Polyvios Vassiliadis on numerous hit film scripts, earning exceptional renown for their scintillating wit and hilarious humor. His deft use of the Greek contemporary vernacular is considered peerless by several leading literary critics.",
"score": "1.4900417"
}
] |
Who was the producer of The Hunt?
|
[
"Manoel de Oliveira",
"Manoel Cândido Pinto de Oliveira"
] |
producer
|
The Hunt (1963 film)
| 5,933,116 | 87 |
[
{
"id": "6634932",
"title": "The Hunt (2012 film)",
"text": " The film was produced by Zentropa for 20 million Danish kroner. It received co-production support from Sweden's Film i Väst and Zentropa International Sweden. Further support came from the Danish Film Institute, DR, Eurimages, Nordisk Film & TV Fond, the Swedish Film Institute, Sveriges Television, and the MEDIA Programme.",
"score": "1.6283115"
},
{
"id": "996008",
"title": "The Hunt (2020 film)",
"text": " The Hunt is a 2020 American horror thriller film directed by Craig Zobel and written by Nick Cuse and Damon Lindelof. The film stars Ike Barinholtz, Betty Gilpin, Emma Roberts, and Hilary Swank. Jason Blum was a producer under his Blumhouse Productions banner, along with Lindelof. Zobel and Lindelof have said that the film is intended as a satire on the profound political divide between the American left and right. The film was first announced in March 2018, and the cast signed on a year later. Filming took place in New Orleans. The film was originally scheduled for release on September 27, 2019. However, as a result of ",
"score": "1.5758736"
},
{
"id": "26125777",
"title": "William Bemister",
"text": " As an independent television journalist, Bemister's first film was The Confessions of Ronald Biggs, a documentary about the fugitive British train robber Ronald Biggs, who was then living in Brazil. Bemister's co-produced 90-minute film The Hunter and the Hunted, about Nazi war criminals, their whereabouts, and the Nazi hunters who sought their arrest and prosecution, was commissioned by the Australian Seven Network and filmed on location in South America, France, Germany, Israel and the UK. Included in the film were scenes identifying the then home in La Paz, Bolivia, of Klaus Barbie, former head of the Gestapo in Lyon, France, and the first confirmation by ",
"score": "1.5443351"
},
{
"id": "10687817",
"title": "Joe Hamilton (producer)",
"text": "Sea Hunt (1960) - Season 2, Episode 5 ",
"score": "1.5440555"
},
{
"id": "9987890",
"title": "The Hunt (2015 TV series)",
"text": " The Hunt accompanies the TV series and was released in hardcover format on 2 November 2015. It is written by Alastair Fothergill and Huw Cordey, with a foreword by David Attenborough. It was published by BBC Books (ISBN: 9781849907224). In the US, the book was released on 14 June 2016 and published by the Yale University Press (ISBN: 9780300218060).",
"score": "1.5397642"
},
{
"id": "26928500",
"title": "The Other Side of the Wind",
"text": " Gaffer, and was described by Gary Graver's son as \"the strangest, weirdest guy you've ever met.\" Kodar had approached him to see if he could broker a deal, guiding him as to who controlled the rights and suggesting what kind of deal they would accept. Together with his producing partner Sanford Horowitz, Hunt formed a company, \"Horowitz Hunt LLC\", and within three months had a signed deal with Mehdi Boushehri, with an option to acquire his rights of the movie. On August 6, 2007 Horowitz Hunt LLC filed with the US Copyright office Mehdi Boushehri's signed agreement to transfer the ",
"score": "1.5296276"
},
{
"id": "6248927",
"title": "John Peverall",
"text": " John Peverall (1931 – 3 October 2009) was a British film producer and director. He has served as a producer on films such as The Man Who Fell to Earth and The Deer Hunter and television programmes such as Arthur of the Britons and The Far Pavilions. In 1979, he won an Oscar at the 51st Academy Awards for Best Picture as one of the producers of The Deer Hunter alongside Barry Spikings, Michael Deeley, and the film's director Michael Cimino.",
"score": "1.5270418"
},
{
"id": "6634936",
"title": "The Hunt (2012 film)",
"text": "Thomas Vinterberg & Tobias Lindholm, Original Screenplay ; David Farr, Adaptation ; Rupert Goold, Director ; Es Devlin, Designer ; Evie Gurney, Costume Designer ; Neil Austin, Lighting Designer ; Adam Cork, Sound Designer and Composer ; Botis Seva, Movement Director ; Amy Ball CDG, Casting ; Verity Naughton, Children's Casting ; Bret Yount, Fight Director ; Michele Austin, Stuart Campbell, Adrian Der Gregorian, Keith Higham, Harrison Houghton, Danny Kirrane, Tobias Menzies, Poppy Miller, Abbiegail Mills, George Nearn Stuart, Itoya Osagiede, Justin Salinger, Jethro Skinner, Taya Tower, Howard Ward & Florence White, Cast The Hunt was adapted for the stage in 2019 by David Farr, and produced at the Almeida Theatre in London. The production was directed by Rupert Goold and starred Tobias Menzies as Lucas. The full creative team was as follows: The production ran between 19 June - 3 August 2019.",
"score": "1.5265826"
},
{
"id": "11386315",
"title": "The Hunt (2007 film)",
"text": " The Hunt is a 2007 film directed by Fritz Kiersch. It stars Joe Michael Burke and Cliff De Young and is about two hunters and a boy who, while on a hunting trip, discover aliens.",
"score": "1.5254706"
},
{
"id": "28889328",
"title": "Barry Spikings",
"text": " Barry Spikings (born 23 November 1939) is a British film producer who worked in Hollywood. Spikings is best known as a producer of the film, The Deer Hunter (1978), which won five Academy Awards.",
"score": "1.502912"
},
{
"id": "5383680",
"title": "The Hunted (2015 film)",
"text": " The film received financial support in June 2011 via a Kickstarter campaign. The film was shot in Hollywood, California in 2012 and is co-produced by New Deal Studios, the Academy Award-winning effects studio behind numerous blockbuster films, including Interstellar and Inception. Post-production was completed in March 2015. Most of the cast are stunt people.",
"score": "1.5000777"
},
{
"id": "9987886",
"title": "The Hunt (2015 TV series)",
"text": " The Hunt is a 2015 British nature documentary series made for BBC Television, first shown in the UK on BBC One and BBC One HD on 1 November 2015. The series is narrated by David Attenborough. The Hunt takes a detailed, audio-visual study of predator-prey relations—as well as the importance of respective ecosystems within a world facing greater environmental challenges brought about by the impact of the human race. Rather than simply concentrating on 'the blood and guts' of predatory behaviours typical of past documentary series, The Hunt focuses more upon the diverse strategies predators use to catch their food, and also the various evasive techniques prospective prey use to escape death by predator. Each episode is based in one or more of the planet's key habitats—each of which presents the predators and their prey with often critical seasonal, climatic, and ecological-environmental challenges. To conclude, the seventh episode examines the state of the planet from the perspective of the top predators and their ever increasingly difficult struggle to survive—and also considers the scientists and conservationists who are determined in their collective fight to protect them.",
"score": "1.4982394"
},
{
"id": "4816444",
"title": "The Hunt with John Walsh",
"text": " The Hunt with John Walsh is an American investigation/documentary series that debuted on CNN on July 13, 2014. The series is hosted by John Walsh. The second season premiered on July 12, 2015, and the third season premiered on June 19, 2016. The fourth season premiered on CNN's sister station, HLN, on July 23, 2017. A successor to the show, In Pursuit with John Walsh was announced in early 2018. It premiered in January 2019 on Investigation Discovery.",
"score": "1.495012"
},
{
"id": "13544338",
"title": "The Woman Hunter",
"text": " The Woman Hunter is a 1972 American made-for-television mystery film that premiered as the CBS Movie of the Week on September 19, 1972. The teleplay was written by Brian Clemens and Tony Williamson (the former's first and the latter's only American TV work), from a story by Clemens about a socialite's involvement with an international thief. The film, directed by Bernard L. Kowalski and starring Barbara Eden, Stuart Whitman and Robert Vaughn, was shot in Acapulco, Mexico and produced by Bing Crosby Productions. Larry Storch and his wife Norma appear at the beginning of the film.",
"score": "1.4931858"
},
{
"id": "31834201",
"title": "Ross Hunter",
"text": " In 1953, Universal-International hired Hunter as staff producer on the strength of his previous credits as a theatrical producer and director. Hunter's first film as sole producer was All I Desire (1953), a melodrama directed by Sirk starring Barbara Stanwyck. It was made for $460,000 and earned over $2 million. He followed it with two Westerns, Tumbleweed (1953) with Audie Murphy, and Taza, Son of Cochise (1954) with Rock Hudson, directed by Sirk.",
"score": "1.4913929"
},
{
"id": "16032998",
"title": "The Hunt (1963 film)",
"text": " The Hunt (Portuguese: A Caça) is a 1963 short Portuguese film directed by Manoel de Oliveira. The film is a grim, surrealistic short narrative film that contrasted with the positive tones of Oliveira's previous film. Due to censorship issues, Oliveira was forced to add a \"happy ending\" to the initial release of the film and was unable to restore his original ending until 1988. Because of this film and anti- Salazar regime comments Oliveira made after a screening of his previous film O Acto de Primavera, he was arrested by the PIDE in 1963. He spent 10 days in jail and was interrogated until finally being released with the help of his friend Manuel Meneres.",
"score": "1.4868783"
},
{
"id": "10921519",
"title": "Bill Gunn (writer)",
"text": "Johnnas (1972), National Broadcasting Company (NBC). ; The Alberta Hunter Story (1982), co-writer w. Chris Albertson-never completed – Southern Pictures (UK). ",
"score": "1.4853394"
},
{
"id": "9987887",
"title": "The Hunt (2015 TV series)",
"text": " The Hunt debuted on British television on 1 November 2015, broadcast on BBC One and BBC One HD, which consisted of total seven episodes.",
"score": "1.4810679"
},
{
"id": "5463594",
"title": "Michael Deeley",
"text": " Michael Deeley (born 6 August 1932) is an Academy Award-winning British film producer known for such motion pictures as The Italian Job (1969), The Deer Hunter (1978), and Blade Runner (1982). He is also a founding member and Honorary President of British Screen Forum.",
"score": "1.479449"
},
{
"id": "31943041",
"title": "The Last Hunt",
"text": " The Last Hunt is a 1956 American Western film directed by Richard Brooks and produced by Dore Schary. The screenplay was by Richard Brooks from the novel The Last Hunt, by Milton Lott. The music score was by Daniele Amfitheatrof and the cinematography by Russell Harlan. The film stars Robert Taylor and Stewart Granger, with Lloyd Nolan, Debra Paget and Russ Tamblyn.",
"score": "1.4791842"
}
] |
Who was the producer of The Accused?
|
[
"Mario Soffici"
] |
producer
|
The Accused (1960 film)
| 5,907,056 | 56 |
[
{
"id": "28096444",
"title": "Accused (1958 TV series)",
"text": " The show was produced by Selig J. Seligman, a former U.S. Army lawyer who served at the Nuremberg Trials. He later became an ABC Vice President as well as executive producer of Combat! and Garrison's Gorillas.",
"score": "1.8079314"
},
{
"id": "13692940",
"title": "Accused (1936 film)",
"text": " Accused is a 1936 British mystery film directed by Thornton Freeland and starring Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Dolores del Río and Florence Desmond. It was made at Isleworth Studios by the independent Criterion Films, which Fairbanks was a co-owner of. The film's sets were designed by Edward Carrick.",
"score": "1.7582544"
},
{
"id": "2056640",
"title": "Accused (2010 TV series)",
"text": " Accused is a British television anthology series created by Jimmy McGovern. The drama series first aired on 15 November 2010 on BBC One and has run for two series. Each episode follows a different character as they await their verdict in court, and tells the story behind how they find themselves accused. The series has featured actors and actresses such as Christopher Eccleston, Benjamin Smith, Juliet Stevenson, Andy Serkis, Marc Warren, Naomie Harris, Sean Bean and Anne-Marie Duff as the accused in each episode. The series follows previous drama series by McGovern, including anthology series The Street and Moving On. After the cancellation of The Street in 2009 by Granada Television, McGovern formed RSJ Films to produce independent drama programmes and subsequently devised the Accused anthology series. Accused was written by McGovern, Danny Brocklehurst and Alice Nutter and was filmed in Manchester. In 2011 it won an International Emmy for best drama series.",
"score": "1.7286257"
},
{
"id": "28096443",
"title": "Accused (1958 TV series)",
"text": "Edgar Allan Jones, Jr. as the Judge ; William Gwinn as the Substitute Judge ; Jim Hodson as the Clerk ; Tim Farrell as the Bailiff ; Violet Gillmore as the Court Reporter (and Announcer) Similar to other courtroom dramas of the time, the defendants and witnesses were actors (including, for example, Pamela Mason and Robert Culp). However, the defense and prosecution attorneys were real-life lawyers. The court was presided over by Edgar Allan Jones, Jr. Jones had a law degree from the University of Virginia, was a member of the UCLA law faculty and a labor arbitrator. ",
"score": "1.6901493"
},
{
"id": "2056649",
"title": "Accused (2010 TV series)",
"text": " In May 2021, it was announced that Fox had given a straight-to-order to an American adaptation of the series. The series will be co-produced between Sony Pictures Television and Fox Entertainment and scheduled for premiere in the 2022–23 television season with Howard Gordon, Alex Gansa and David Shore will be executive producing.",
"score": "1.6766822"
},
{
"id": "2056641",
"title": "Accused (2010 TV series)",
"text": " The series was commissioned by Jay Hunt and Ben Stephenson, controllers of BBC One and Drama Commissioning respectively, and announced in May 2010. Each episode revolves around a different character as they make their way to the dock in court to hear whether they've been found guilty of a crime. As they walk, the events that led up to them being accused of the crime play out and leave the viewers questioning whether each of the people are really guilty or not. McGovern said of the series: \"In the time it takes to climb the steps to the court we tell the story of how the accused came ",
"score": "1.664494"
},
{
"id": "27505870",
"title": "Accused (1996 TV series)",
"text": " Accused is a British television legal drama series, starring Nicholas R. Bailey, that first broadcast on 3 November 1996. Each episode follows a single case in a busy magistrates' court. A single run of eight episodes aired throughout November and December 1996 on BBC1, airing in a late night slot on Sundays, before moving to Mondays midway through the series. The series was produced by Diana Kyle, and co-starred Davyd Harries, Marlene Sidaway, Lloyd Johnston and David Telfer.",
"score": "1.6574509"
},
{
"id": "427160",
"title": "The Accused (1960 film)",
"text": " The Accused (Los Acusados) is a 1960 Argentine crime drama directed and written by Antonio Cunill Jr.. The film was based on a screen play by Marco Denevi. The film starred Mario Soffici and Silvia Legrand.",
"score": "1.6490068"
},
{
"id": "2056644",
"title": "Accused (2010 TV series)",
"text": " On 24 February 2011, BBC Drama Controller Ben Stephenson announced that Accused has been renewed for a second series of four episodes, to be broadcast sometime in 2012. Despite the relatively low viewing figures from the first series, the second was commissioned in the hopes that it would have the potential to find a broader audience. Filming for the first two episodes of the second series began around November 2011. The new cast members confirmed to appear in these episodes included Anne-Marie Duff, Olivia Colman, Robert Sheehan, Joe Dempsie, Sheridan Smith, Paul Popplewell and comedian John Bishop. The first episode, starring Colman and Duff, would be written by McGovern and Carol Cullington, while writing credits on the second episode (starring Sheehan, Bishop and Smith) would again be shared by Daniel Brocklehurst and McGovern. In January 2012 it was confirmed that Anna Maxwell Martin would join Sheehan ",
"score": "1.642944"
},
{
"id": "31283321",
"title": "Accused (1964 film)",
"text": " Accused (Czech: Obžalovaný) is a 1964 film directed by Ján Kadár and Elmar Klos. The film has won a Crystal Globe at 1964 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival.",
"score": "1.634439"
},
{
"id": "28096441",
"title": "Accused (1958 TV series)",
"text": " Accused is a 1958 dramatized court show consisting of filmed reenactments of actual court cases. The show was cancelled at the end of its first season.",
"score": "1.6279428"
},
{
"id": "8651339",
"title": "Accused of Murder",
"text": " Accused of Murder is a 1956 American Trucolor film noir crime film directed by Joseph Kane and starring David Brian and Vera Ralston, Sidney Blackmer.",
"score": "1.6147286"
},
{
"id": "27825235",
"title": "The Woman Accused",
"text": " The Woman Accused is a 1933 American pre-Code drama film directed by Paul Sloane and starring Nancy Carroll and Cary Grant as a young engaged couple on a sea cruise, with the woman being implicated in the death of her former lover. The supporting cast includes Jack La Rue in a sequence opposite Grant in which the latter violently whips him.",
"score": "1.6145322"
},
{
"id": "2056642",
"title": "Accused (2010 TV series)",
"text": " be here. We see the crime and we see the punishment. Nothing else. No police procedure, thanks very much, no coppers striding along corridors with coats flapping. Just crime and punishment – the two things that matter most in any crime drama.\" McGovern was the lead writer for the series, with co-writers Alice Nutter, Danny Brocklehurst and Esther Wilson for episodes three, four and five respectively. The series was directed by David Blair (episodes 1, 2, 5 and 6) and Richard Laxton (episodes 3 and 4), and produced by RSJ Films, a company founded by Jimmy McGovern, Sita Williams and Roxy Spencer. RSJ Films is also known ",
"score": "1.6075077"
},
{
"id": "4931195",
"title": "Bobby Herbeck",
"text": " In 1998 Herbeck was listed as a co-producer on the Warner Brothers movie Wrongfully Accused.",
"score": "1.606216"
},
{
"id": "13582564",
"title": "I Stand Accused",
"text": " I Stand Accused is a 1938 American drama film directed by John H. Auer and written by Gordon Kahn and Alex Gottlieb. The film stars Robert Cummings, Helen Mack, Lyle Talbot, Thomas Beck, Gordon Jones and Robert Paige. The film was released by Republic Pictures.",
"score": "1.6028638"
},
{
"id": "13692942",
"title": "Accused (1936 film)",
"text": "Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. as Tony Seymour ; Dolores del Río as Gaby Seymour ; Florence Desmond as Yvette Delange ; Edward Rigby as Alphonse de la Riveire ; Basil Sydney as Eugene Roget ; Googie Withers as Ninette Duval ; J.H. Roberts as President of Court ; Cecil Humphreys as Prosecuting Counsel ; Esme Percy as Morel ; Moore Marriott as Dubec ; Cyril Raymond as Guy Henry ; Roland Culver as Henry Capelle ; Leo Genn as Man ",
"score": "1.5992328"
},
{
"id": "427163",
"title": "The Accused (1960 film)",
"text": " The film was released on 10 March 1960.",
"score": "1.5824814"
},
{
"id": "6129436",
"title": "Wrongfully Accused",
"text": " Wrongfully Accused is a 1998 satirical comedy film written, produced and directed by Pat Proft and starring Leslie Nielsen as a man who has been framed for murder and desperately attempts to expose the true culprits. The film is a parody of the 1993 film The Fugitive, and also parodies numerous other films.",
"score": "1.5799029"
},
{
"id": "30690905",
"title": "The Guilty (2000 film)",
"text": " The Guilty is a 2000 American crime film directed by Anthony Waller and starring Bill Pullman, Devon Sawa, Gabrielle Anwar, Angela Featherstone and Joanne Whalley. The film is a remake of the 1992 UK TV two-part telemovie of the same name and identical plot starring Michael Kitchen, Sean Gallagher, Caroline Catz and Carol Starks.",
"score": "1.5714931"
}
] |
Who was the producer of Just Like Us?
|
[
"Ahmed Ahmed"
] |
producer
|
Just Like Us (film)
| 4,783,337 | 98 |
[
{
"id": "9620752",
"title": "Just Like Us!",
"text": " Just Like Us! is the fourth studio album by American pop rock group Paul Revere & the Raiders. Produced by Terry Melcher and released on January 3, 1966, by Columbia Records, it featured the U.S. hit single \"Just Like Me\". Unlike their later albums, on which Mark Lindsay was the primary lead singer, the lead vocal duties on Just Like Us! were split among him and the other band members, guitarist Drake Levin, bassist Phil Volk, and drummer Mike Smith. This was their last album of cover songs, their next album Midnight Ride was mostly self-penned material.",
"score": "1.6710563"
},
{
"id": "9620753",
"title": "Just Like Us!",
"text": " Just Like Us! was the band's first album to be released after they had started appearing regularly on the 1960s television variety show Where the Action Is. The LP peaked at number five on the Billboard 200 albums chart. It was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on January 6, 1967. The cover art was taken from a Guy Webster photo session at Clark Gable's ranch in Encino, California. This album was remastered and rereleased May 19, 1998 by Sundazed Records with extra tracks.",
"score": "1.5854917"
},
{
"id": "28444582",
"title": "Just Like Us (film)",
"text": " Just Like Us features an original score by Omar Fadel, as well as licensed tracks from, Fredwreck, MC Rai, and Tom Morello's Street Sweeper Social Club.",
"score": "1.5819588"
},
{
"id": "28444576",
"title": "Just Like Us (film)",
"text": " Just Like Us is a 2010 documentary about a comedy tour of international comedians throughout the middle east. Directed by Egyptian-American actor/comedian, Ahmed Ahmed, the film premiered at the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival.",
"score": "1.5596907"
},
{
"id": "4264230",
"title": "Just Like Real Life",
"text": "Executive producer: Jon Phelps ; Producer and engineer: Gary Platt ; Assistant engineer: Steve Moller ; Mastering: Mike Fuller ",
"score": "1.5591147"
},
{
"id": "9620755",
"title": "Just Like Us!",
"text": "1) \"Just Like Me\" (Richard Dey, Roger Hart) — 2:23 ; 2) \"Catch the Wind\" (Donovan Leitch) — 2:00 ; 3) \"(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction\" (Mick Jagger, Keith Richards) — 3:18 ; 4) \"I'm Crying\" (Alan Price, Eric Burdon)— 3:05 ; 5) \"New Orleans\" (Frank Guida, Joseph Royster)— 2:57 ; 6) \"Action\" (Steve Venet, Tommy Boyce) — 1:28 ",
"score": "1.541277"
},
{
"id": "28444581",
"title": "Just Like Us (film)",
"text": " Just Like Us premiered at the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival. Its theatrical premiere was on June 6, 2011 in Los Angeles.",
"score": "1.5358846"
},
{
"id": "25983693",
"title": "Like Me (musical)",
"text": " Licensing and performance rights for Like me are currently being held by L&S Productions, the production arm of writers Garry Lake and Jon Smith.",
"score": "1.4952142"
},
{
"id": "28444580",
"title": "Just Like Us (film)",
"text": " Just Like Us was filmed in Los Angeles, New York, Arkansas, Cairo, Dubai, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Beirut.",
"score": "1.4880867"
},
{
"id": "28444579",
"title": "Just Like Us (film)",
"text": "Ahmed Ahmed ; Whitney Cummings ; Omid Djalili ; Erik Griffin ; Maz Jobrani ; Tom Papa ; Ted Alexandro ; Sebastian Maniscalco ; Angelo Tsarouchas ; Tommy Davidson ",
"score": "1.4871798"
},
{
"id": "14892308",
"title": "Just Like Me (Jamie Foxx song)",
"text": " \"Just Like Me\" is the first single from Jamie Foxx's third studio album Intuition. It features rapper T.I., who co-wrote the song with its producers, Tricky Stewart & The-Dream. This is the second collaboration between the two after \"Live in the Sky\" off T.I.'s fourth studio album King.",
"score": "1.4800055"
},
{
"id": "16569030",
"title": "Just Like Me (Paul Revere & the Raiders song)",
"text": " \"Just Like Me\" is a 1965 single by Paul Revere & the Raiders featuring Mark Lindsay as vocalist. It was released on Columbia Records and marked the beginning of a string of garage rock classics. As their second major national hit, \"Just Like Me\" reached #11 on the US charts and was one of the first rock records, due to guitarist Drake Levin, to feature a distinctive, double-tracked guitar solo. The tune was written by Rick Dey and Rich Brown of the Longview-based band, The Wilde Knights. Raiders manager Roger Hart paid them $5,000 for the use of the song.",
"score": "1.4743099"
},
{
"id": "6963025",
"title": "Ryan Leslie production discography",
"text": "00. \"Us Like We\" ",
"score": "1.471025"
},
{
"id": "10299878",
"title": "Like Us",
"text": " Like Us is the fifth full-length studio album by American singer-songwriter Jon McLaughlin. The album was released on October 9, 2015 in the United States. It was preceded by the singles \"Before You\" and \"I Want You Anyway\".",
"score": "1.4571749"
},
{
"id": "29323328",
"title": "Like Me (film)",
"text": " Like Me is a 2017 American film written and directed by Robert Mockler. The film stars Addison Timlin as a loner on a crime spree that she broadcasts on social media. The film had its world premiere at the South by Southwest Film Festival on March 10, 2017. It holds a 69% approval rating on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes based on 29 reviews, with an average rating of 6.6/10.",
"score": "1.4568974"
},
{
"id": "12770218",
"title": "Just Us (film)",
"text": " Just Us is a 1986 television film, based on a true story and the autobiography by Gabrielle Carey, of the same name. Set in Sydney, Australia, but filmed mainly in Melbourne, it starred Scott Burgess and Catherine McClements. It was written by Ted Roberts and directed by Gordon Glenn.",
"score": "1.4532456"
},
{
"id": "3337622",
"title": "Just like You (Keyshia Cole album)",
"text": " Just like You is the second studio album by American singer Keyshia Cole. It was released by Geffen Records on September 25, 2007 in the United States. Cole started work on the project shortly after the release of her debut album, The Way It Is (2005). She consulted a variety of producers and songwriters to work with her on the album, including Missy Elliott, Bryan-Michael Cox, Scott Storch, Rodney Jerkins, The Runners, J. Wells, Pete Rock, and Soulshock. Guest vocalists include Elliott, Lil' Kim, Too $hort, Amina Harris, Anthony Hamilton, Young Dro, T.I., Chink Santana, and Piper. Upon release, Just like You received ",
"score": "1.4518387"
},
{
"id": "27164204",
"title": "Paul Revere & the Raiders",
"text": " a cover of \"Louie Louie\", the band was signed to Columbia Records, under the tutelage of producer Terry Melcher. In January 1966 the single \"Just Like Me\" — propelled by exposure on Dick Clark's shows such as Where The Action Is — reached no. 11 on the Hot 100, followed by the consecutive Top Tens \"Kicks\" and \"Hungry\", thus establishing the band as national stars. Clark's TV shows showcased Lindsay as a teen idol and Revere as the \"madman\" of the group, and between 1966 and '69 they reached the top 30 with 12 hits. Bolstered by the success of the singles, the three 1966 albums Just Like Us, Midnight Ride and The Spirit of '67 ",
"score": "1.4517651"
},
{
"id": "8297438",
"title": "People Like Us (musician)",
"text": "1992: Another Kind of Humor Another Kind of Murder (split with Abraxas) World Serpent/GBCD1/GB1. ; 1994: Lowest Common Dominator Staalplaat/STCD079. ; 1994: Guide To Broadcasting Staalplaat/STMDCD2. ; 1996: ''Beware The Whim Reaper\" Staalplaat/STCD 101. ; 1997: Hate People Like You Staalplaat/STCD 119. ; 1999: People Like Us Meet The Jet Black Hair People In Concert Audioview 005. ; 1999: Hate People Like Us (remix of PLU by Coil, Negativland, Death in June, Barbed, Christoph Heemann, Bruce Gilbert, Stock, Hausen & Walkman, Rehberg & Bauer, Mika Vainio, Boyd Rice, Dummy Run, Farmer's Manual and Sons of Silence. 2CD features additionally Cyclobe, Req1, V/VM, Sniper, Mr Rotorvator, Felix Kubin, Xper, Xr, Venoz [TKS], Katy Brown and Dr P Li Khan. ",
"score": "1.4515737"
},
{
"id": "1818671",
"title": "People Like Us (mockumentary)",
"text": " People Like Us is a British radio and TV comedy programme, a spoof on-location documentary (or mockumentary) written by John Morton, and starring Chris Langham as Roy Mallard, an inept interviewer. Originally a radio show for BBC Radio 4 in three series from 1995 to 1997, it was made into two television series for BBC Two broadcast between September 1999 and June 2001.",
"score": "1.4489958"
}
] |
Who was the producer of Today?
|
[
"Carlos Santana",
"Carlos Augusto Alves Santana"
] |
producer
|
Today (EP)
| 6,002,810 | 75 |
[
{
"id": "31841972",
"title": "Dan Shea (producer)",
"text": "Tomorrow Today ",
"score": "1.8482513"
},
{
"id": "4702417",
"title": "Today (production duo)",
"text": " TODAY is a music production duo consisting of Vinay Vyas and Justin Davey. They are currently based in New York City and Lisbon. Today began their careers as understudies to Grammy nominated producer Kane Beatz, and closely collaborated with him throughout 2011. During the spring of 2012 they caught the interest of Mike Caren, then president of boutique publishing label Artist Publishing Group.",
"score": "1.6822677"
},
{
"id": "6515216",
"title": "Maestro (producer)",
"text": "[ Can You Come Today] ",
"score": "1.6261861"
},
{
"id": "28573100",
"title": "Jeff Zucker",
"text": " In 1989, he was a field producer for Today, and at 26 he became its executive producer in 1992. He introduced the program's trademark outdoor rock concert series and was in charge as Today moved to the \"window on the world\" Studio 1A in Rockefeller Plaza in 1994. He is credited with managing the show during its most successful years and launching it into its 16-years of ratings dominance.",
"score": "1.6260521"
},
{
"id": "27849007",
"title": "Tomorrow Today",
"text": "Paul Brown – producer (Tracks 1-9 & 11) ; Barry J. Eastmond – producer (Track 10) ; Bill Darlington – executive producer ; Bill Schnee – engineer, mixing ; Koji Egawa – assistant engineer ; Stephen Marcussen – mastering at A&M Mastering Studios (Hollywood, California). ; Hollis King – art direction, design ; Albert Sanchez – photography ",
"score": "1.5997809"
},
{
"id": "15889552",
"title": "Music of Today",
"text": "Roberto Magris and Peppo Spagnoli – executive producer and producer ; Thomas Krueger – engineering ; Peppo Spagnoli – design ",
"score": "1.5961764"
},
{
"id": "29530328",
"title": "Today (American TV program)",
"text": " In the summer of 1958, television manufacturer Philco complained to NBC that staging Today in a studio explicitly called the RCA Exhibition Hall was unfair (RCA owned NBC at the time). The network bowed to the pressure, and on July 7, 1958, Today moved across the street to Studio 3K in the RCA Building, where it remained through the early 1960s. On July 9, 1962, the program returned to a street-side studio in the space then occupied by the Florida Showcase. Each day, the Today production crew would have to move the Florida-related tourism merchandise off the floor and wheel in the Today news set, desks, chairs and cameras. When the show wrapped at 9:00 a.m. ",
"score": "1.5695868"
},
{
"id": "29530321",
"title": "Today (American TV program)",
"text": " The show's first broadcast aired on January 14, 1952 as the brainchild of television executive Sylvester Weaver, who was then vice president of NBC. Weaver was president of the company from 1953 to 1955, during which time Todays late-night companion The Tonight Show premiered. In pre-production, the show's proposed working title was The Rise and Shine Revue. The show was first supervised by Jerome Alan Danzig. Today was the first program of its genre when it premiered with original host Dave Garroway. The program blended national news headlines, interviews with newsmakers, lifestyle features, other light news and gimmicks (including the presence of the chimpanzee J. Fred Muggs who served as the show's mascot during the early years), and local news updates from the network's stations. It has spawned several other shows of a similar type, including ABC's Good Morning America, and CBS' now-defunct The Early Show. In other countries, the format was copied – most notably in the United Kingdom with the BBC's Breakfast Time and TV-am's Good Morning Britain, and in Canada with Canada AM on CTV Television Network.",
"score": "1.5511677"
},
{
"id": "3455361",
"title": "Robert Bendick",
"text": " Robert Bendick (February 8, 1917 - June 22, 2008) was the producer of the Today Show between the years of 1953-1955, and 1958-1960. Robert Bendick attended New York University, and the C.H. White school of Photography. Learning to use a camera Bendick worked for National Geographic and Time magazines. Eventually hired onto CBS in 1941 and one of the original three cameramen. Ultimately working his way up to producer, he produced the Today Show, and other major televised shows for both NBC and CBS during what is coined the golden years of television. One of Bendick's most famous productions come from a series ",
"score": "1.540545"
},
{
"id": "29530327",
"title": "Today (American TV program)",
"text": " The Today program first originated from the RCA Exhibition Hall on 49th Street in Manhattan in a space now occupied by the Christie's auction house, just down the block from the present-day studio. The first set placed a functional newsroom in the studio, which Garroway called \"the nerve center of the world.” The barrier between backstage and on-stage was virtually nonexistent. Garroway and the on-air staff often walked through the newsroom set. Glimpses of the camera crew and technicians were a frequent occurrence, as were off-screen voices conversing with Garroway. Gradually, machines and personnel were placed behind the scenes to assemble the news and weather reports, and the newsroom was gone by 1955.",
"score": "1.5214531"
},
{
"id": "11439726",
"title": "Tomorrow Hit Today",
"text": "Jim Dickinson - keyboards, producer. ",
"score": "1.495554"
},
{
"id": "27056688",
"title": "Craig B. Fisher",
"text": " Fisher created, produced, and wrote numerous NBC network news programs, from hard-news to special events. He was hired by NBC as Associate Producer of Today under Dave Garroway, where, over the years Fisher provided many unknown talents with a first network break, including Simon and Garfunkel’s first national TV appearance. He hired Barbara Walters for her first job in TV as a writer for Hugh Downs, when Downs was the star of Today. Later, Fisher promoted Walters to the on-air “Today Girl.”",
"score": "1.4953482"
},
{
"id": "5544000",
"title": "List of American television programs currently in production",
"text": "American Religious Townhall ; Today ",
"score": "1.4952753"
},
{
"id": "32216075",
"title": "Charles Curran (television executive)",
"text": " chairman of the Independent Television Authority under a Conservative government in 1963), Curran's arrival marked a return to a more cautious approach after the radicalism of Sir Hugh Carleton Greene. Curran also suffered criticism from Harold Wilson, at that time the Leader of the Opposition, who claimed that the documentary Yesterday's Men (1971) was biased against himself and the Labour Party, an assertion the BBC now accepts. A parallel documentary at the time on the Heath government passed without incident. Unlike Greene, Curran allowed himself to be influenced by Mary Whitehouse. Curran issued an apology to Whitehouse after she complained about the violence at the end of part three of The Deadly Assassin (1976), a Doctor Who serial. Philip Hinchcliffe, then series producer, was replaced after only three ",
"score": "1.4916174"
},
{
"id": "86445",
"title": "Today (Thames Television series)",
"text": " Today was Thames Television's first regional news magazine programme, shown in the London area from 1968 to 1977. It was hosted by Eamonn Andrews, Bill Grundy and others. For nine months, the programme featured Barbara Blake Hannah, the first Black reporter on British television, who was eventually driven off-air by racist complaints. John Lennon and Yoko Ono made an appearance on the show in 1969, sharing a bed with Eamonn Andrews. The show is now most commonly remembered for Bill Grundy's 1976 interview with the Sex Pistols, which caused public outrage at the time. Today was replaced in September 1977 by Thames at Six, a more conventional news magazine programme.",
"score": "1.4888511"
},
{
"id": "15979611",
"title": "Alexandra Wallace",
"text": " She was tasked with improving the show's loss of viewership to its rival ABC News show World News with Charles Gibson. In October 2012, Wallace transitioned from serving another stint as Capus's deputy to being executive producer for Rock Center with Brian Williams. In November 2012, Wallace was put in charge of Today to try and reverse a ratings decline after the dismissal of former anchor Ann Curry. She became the first woman executive to run Today. In 2014, Wallace took over running Meet the Press during a period of poor ratings with former anchor David Gregory. By the time ",
"score": "1.488095"
},
{
"id": "5953750",
"title": "World News Today",
"text": " World News Today is a current affairs news programme, produced by BBC News presented on Friday-Sundays with Philippa Thomas, Karin Giannone & Kasia Madera. Presenters alternate the weekend shifts. It was originally conceived as a morning television show aimed at American audiences, hosted by George Alagiah, but later expanded to six editions a day aimed at different markets. There is now one daily edition only, aimed as an evening news programme for the UK, Europe, Middle East and Africa part-simulcast on BBC Four, BBC News Channel and BBC World News.",
"score": "1.487355"
},
{
"id": "29530389",
"title": "Today (American TV program)",
"text": " the host chat at 9:30 a.m. was discontinued. On August 22, 2016, both Morales and Geist left Today's Take and former Access Hollywood host Billy Bush officially joined the set. Bush was later suspended and eventually fired from the segment as well as the program following Donald Trump Access Hollywood tape during U.S. Republican and presidential candidate Donald Trump's campaign in October 2016. On February 1, 2017, Hall left Today's Take. Weekend co-anchor Sheinelle Jones and weekend meteorologist Dylan Dreyer filled in as co-hosts alongside Roker until a new morning lineup began in the fall. Today's Take aired its final episode on September 22, 2017, and Megyn Kelly Today replaced it on September 25, 2017.",
"score": "1.485783"
},
{
"id": "2966444",
"title": "List of special editions of Today (American TV program)",
"text": " Host John Chancellor, along with Frank Blair, anchored the show from the 1962 World's Fair on Thursday, April 26, 1962. Blair demonstrated a machine that calculated satellite orbits. Chancellor toured a \"home of the future\" and tried out a computerized library card catalog. The trip marked Today's first broadcast from Seattle, Washington.",
"score": "1.4821768"
},
{
"id": "8739525",
"title": "Slipped into Tomorrow",
"text": "John Norum - producer ",
"score": "1.4773947"
}
] |
Who was the producer of The Pioneers?
|
[
"Franklyn Barrett",
"Walter Franklyn Barrett"
] |
producer
|
The Pioneers (1916 film)
| 5,947,997 | 83 |
[
{
"id": "8983799",
"title": "Pioneer Productions",
"text": " Founded in 1988, by Nigel Henbest, Heather Couper and Stuart Carter, Pioneer targeted science broadcasting in a period of global tele-media expansion, and sought relationships with US factual television broadcasters. In the 1990s it produced series entitled Raging Planet, and Extreme Machines. Later CGI films included Journey to the Edge of the Universe, The Unsinkable Titanic, Hindenburg: The Last Flight, Extraordinary Animals, In the Womb, and Catastrophe. In 2009 it helped produce the six-part series Christianity: A History for Channel 4.",
"score": "1.557363"
},
{
"id": "13168935",
"title": "The Pioneers (1926 film)",
"text": "Virginia Beresford ; William Thornton as David Cameron ; Robert Purdie as Donald Cameron ; Connie Martyn as Mary Cameron ; Augustus Neville ; George Chalmers ; W. Dummitt ; 'Big' Bill Wilson ; Sydney Hackett ; Phyllis Culbert ",
"score": "1.5231583"
},
{
"id": "7356598",
"title": "Young Pioneers (film)",
"text": " Young Pioneers is a 1976 American Western television film which aired in March 1976 on ABC. Elements of novels Let the Hurricane Roar and Free Land by Rose Wilder Lane (daughter of Laura Ingalls Wilder) were used as the basis for the movie, with Roger Kern and Linda Purl starring as the focal characters David and Molly Beaton. Although produced as a TV series pilot by ABC Circle Films and ranked #7 in the Nielsen ratings for the week it aired, the movie was not picked up by ABC as a series. A second pilot attempt was made in December 1976 with Young Pioneers' Christmas, but ranked lower at #37 in the Nielsen ratings and was not picked up by the studio for a series.",
"score": "1.5179334"
},
{
"id": "13227838",
"title": "The Pioneers (album)",
"text": " The Pioneers is the debut collaboration album by American rappers MC Eiht and Spice 1. The album was released June 29, 2004, on Real Talk Entertainment. It peaked at number 71 on the Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums. Spice 1 and MC Eiht also produced a second album together for Real Talk Entertainment, titled Keep It Gangsta, released in 2006.",
"score": "1.5112832"
},
{
"id": "28865520",
"title": "The Pioneers (1903 film)",
"text": " The Pioneers is an American silent film and one of the earliest Westerns, having been released by the American Mutoscope and Biograph Company in October 1903. It incorporates part of the footage from Kit Carson, another Western short also released by Biograph in October 1903. Both films were shot on location in the Adirondack Mountains of New York.",
"score": "1.5074794"
},
{
"id": "13168933",
"title": "The Pioneers (1926 film)",
"text": " The Pioneers is a 1926 Australian silent film directed by Raymond Longford. The script had been written by Lottie Lyell but she had died by the time filming started. It was considered a lost film but some surviving footage from it has recently emerged.",
"score": "1.4967141"
},
{
"id": "16332642",
"title": "The Pioneers (1916 film)",
"text": " The Pioneers is a 1916 Australian silent film directed by Franklyn Barrett. The film is based on the debut novel by Katharine Susannah Prichard which won £250 in a 1915 literary competition. It is considered a lost film. It was later filmed by Raymond Longford as The Pioneers (1926).",
"score": "1.4936879"
},
{
"id": "7356600",
"title": "Young Pioneers (film)",
"text": " The project was developed and produced by Ed Friendly for ABC Circle Films with the script written by Blanche Hanalis and directed by Michael O'Herlihy. Ed Friendly and Blanche Hanalis had previously produced and scripted the television series pilot for Little House on the Prairie based on the novels by Laura Ingalls Wilder, the mother Rose Wilder Lane. 400 actors and actresses were interviewed before Linda Purl and Roger Kern were offered the lead roles of Molly and David Beaton. Principal photography began November 28, 1975, in Southern Arizona with additional filming at the Old Tucson Studios in Tucson, Arizona. A scene with 180,000 grasshoppers was done on location in Nogales, Mexico. Sound stages at 20th-Century Fox in Los Angeles, California were used for the blizzard scenes.",
"score": "1.4851065"
},
{
"id": "8983798",
"title": "Pioneer Productions",
"text": " Pioneer Productions is a British television production company based in London, United Kingdom, specialising in scientific and other documentary productions.",
"score": "1.4802027"
},
{
"id": "13168936",
"title": "The Pioneers (1926 film)",
"text": " Katharine Susannah Prichard's novel had won a £1,000 prize in 1915 and had previously been filmed by Franklyn Barrett in 1916. It was directed by Raymond Longford who in September 1925 had accepted a position of director of productions at Australasian Films. He worked on several films for them but the association ended badly. The director complained that the cast of The Pioneers was forced upon him. Filming took place on location near Gosford and at Australasian's studios in Bondi Junction in early 1926. During the shooting of one sequence, William Thornton was thrown from his horse and was seriously injured. Because they were so far from a town, first aid was performed by Longford himself, who had had medical training. Longford sewed four stitches into Thornton's head.",
"score": "1.4511197"
},
{
"id": "16332644",
"title": "The Pioneers (1916 film)",
"text": "Winter Hall as Dan Farrel ; Alma Rock Phillips as Deidre ; Lily Rochefort as Mary Cameron ; Charles Knight as Donald Cameron ; Fred St Clair as Davey Cameron ; Irve Hayman as Thad McNab ; Martyn Keith as Steve ; Fred Neilson as Fighting Conal ; Nell Rose as Jessie ; George Willougbhy ; Charles Villiers ",
"score": "1.4472421"
},
{
"id": "5090870",
"title": "Jacob Weinberg",
"text": "The Pioneers (1924) ",
"score": "1.4456297"
},
{
"id": "4689129",
"title": "Pioneer One",
"text": " Pioneer One is a 2010 American web series produced by Josh Bernhard and Bracey Smith. It was funded purely through donations, and is the first series created for and released on BitTorrent networks.",
"score": "1.4382999"
},
{
"id": "13168939",
"title": "The Pioneers (1926 film)",
"text": " In 1932 Cinesound Productions announced plans to make a sound version of the novel but no film resulted.",
"score": "1.4374971"
},
{
"id": "14304359",
"title": "Pioneers (song)",
"text": " The music video was made by the company Mini Vegas and was directed by Aoife McArdle.",
"score": "1.429568"
},
{
"id": "1587987",
"title": "Sons of the Pioneers",
"text": " of the 1941 season, the Pioneers rejoined Rogers at Republic and were soon appearing as highly popular supporting players in the Rogers westerns. By this time the group was billed as \"Bob Nolan and the Sons of the Pioneers.\" Nolan was reluctant to be the \"leader\" of the group, which had been formed as a co-operative outfit with no formal leader, but he bowed to the demands of show business; agents, music publishers, and recording companies insisted that co-operative bands needed a name to promote them (as in Glen Gray and the Casa Loma Orchestra). Because Bob Nolan's featured appearances with Starrett had made ",
"score": "1.4259723"
},
{
"id": "33147682",
"title": "The Pioneers (band)",
"text": " In 1976, the Pioneers teamed up with Eddy Grant for an album for Mercury Records called Feel The Rhythm, which featured a nude female model on its cover. Grant preferred to produce them as a soul group and they released a number of singles in that idiom, including \"Broken Man\", \"Feel The Rhythm\" and \"My Good Friend James\" The change of style was a critical but not a commercial success and the band split up for a time in the late 1970s, with Crooks concentrating on production work and continuing with his brother in The Slickers, while Agard and Robinson continued to record, together on the album George & Jackie Sing, and separately.",
"score": "1.4254339"
},
{
"id": "16332645",
"title": "The Pioneers (1916 film)",
"text": " The film was shot in early 1915 near Gosford and in a studio owned by Franklyn Barrett. Rock Phillips of J. C. Williamson Ltd wrote that the film ushered a new level of professionalism in Australian filmmaking: \"The local productions, to date, with the exceptions of, say, half a dozen, have been absolutely ruined by - inferior acting, being badly cast and carelessly dressed. That is only what can be expected when those in charge of the financial part of the business, pay so little for services rendered, there being no inducement for the best class of 'pro' to enter this business. When they offer the capable artist a fair salary commensurate with his or her ability, then, and not till then, will Australian-made pictures hold their own with the best on the other side... The director of tho latest Australian venture in the Movie business has recognised the above, in filming... The Pioneers... Besides getting together a company of well-known players' he is paying them top salaries. Expense is a secondary consideration, the goal aimed at being an evenly and well acted story.\"",
"score": "1.4253705"
},
{
"id": "13168934",
"title": "The Pioneers (1926 film)",
"text": " The story of a Scottish settler and his wife, Donald and Mary Cameron, who live in the Gippsland bush, with their son David. They adopt the daughter of an ex-convict and raise him as their own. The daughter and David Cameron fall in love, but she marries another man.",
"score": "1.425097"
},
{
"id": "2282134",
"title": "Again Pioneers",
"text": " Again Pioneers (sometimes referred to as Again... Pioneers! ) is a 1950 American black-and-white short drama film produced by Paul F. Heard for the Protestant Film Commission. Directed by William Beaudine, it stars Colleen Townsend, Tom Powers, Sarah Padden, and Regis Toomey. The story is set in the fictional town of Fairview and depicts the friction between the middle-class residents and the impoverished migrants who live on the outskirts in a shantytown called \"The Patch\". The film explores the meaning of the American Dream for both types of residents, and the responsibility of the church to reinstill Christian values of human dignity and freedom into American life. The film was produced at the request of the Home Missions Council of North America. It was not released commercially, but was distributed to 30,000 Protestant denominational churches in the United States.",
"score": "1.4228091"
}
] |
Who was the producer of The Deal?
|
[
"Fernando Ayala"
] |
producer
|
The Deal (1983 film)
| 5,920,930 | 59 |
[
{
"id": "8746807",
"title": "The Deal (2008 film)",
"text": " Struggling Hollywood film producer Charlie Berns is on the verge of suicide when his aspiring screenwriter nephew Lionel arrives from New Jersey with a script about 19th century British statesman Benjamin Disraeli. Charlie agrees to make the film, but only when he converts the literate PBS-style script (that he didn't read) into an action adventure Middle Eastern espionage film, Ben Disraeli: Freedom Fighter. He casts power-star African American Bobby Mason, a recent convert to Judaism, in the title role and, after some creative wrangling with studio big-wigs and feisty project developer Deidre Hearn, whom he is instantly attracted to, he proceeds to ",
"score": "1.642669"
},
{
"id": "32413811",
"title": "The Deal (2003 film)",
"text": " The film was commissioned in 2002 by ITV's head of drama Nick Elliott, who encouraged Peter Morgan to put aside any other projects and start work on a script as soon as possible. Granada was initially sceptical of producing it; the company's executive chairman and chief executive—Charles Allen and Simon Shaps respectively—believed that Blair would be forced to resign as Prime Minister over the impending war in Iraq, consequently leaving the story outdated. The project was believed to be \"too cerebral\" and attempts were made to persuade Morgan to develop a television series to replace Cold Feet, another Granada production. ",
"score": "1.6285759"
},
{
"id": "32413822",
"title": "The Deal (2003 film)",
"text": " After John Yorke recommissioned the film for Channel 4, it was scheduled as part of a \"Tony Blair season\". The Deal aired on 28 September 2003, the day before the Labour Party Conference began in Bournemouth. Despite heavy media attention, the broadcast was seen by only 1.5 million viewers. The film received a screening at the San Francisco Film Festival on 5 May 2007, following an interview with Peter Morgan. International rights for North America and Australasia were purchased from Channel 4 International by The Weinstein Company in 2007, who sold it to American cable network HBO. HBO screened The Deal on 8 November 2007. Channel 4 released it on region 2 DVD on 19 May 2008 under its 4dvd brand. Genius Products, ",
"score": "1.6069186"
},
{
"id": "32413812",
"title": "The Deal (2003 film)",
"text": " Whiston and Andy Harries convinced Allen and Shaps otherwise, citing Granada's history of producing ground-breaking drama and film as reasons for why The Deal should be made. ITV's director of channels, David Liddiment, who supported the production, resigned in December 2002 and was replaced by Nigel Pickard, who shared the concerns of Allen and Shaps. Peter Morgan wrote his first script draft in the three weeks preceding Christmas 2002. Recent events such as the 2001 foot and mouth outbreak and the contention surrounding the September Dossier made him believe that the perceived adversity between Brown and Blair was no ",
"score": "1.6061475"
},
{
"id": "8746806",
"title": "The Deal (2008 film)",
"text": " The Deal is a 2008 American satirical comedy film directed by Steven Schachter. The screenplay by Schachter and William H. Macy is based on the 1991 novel of the same title by Peter Lefcourt. Macy and Meg Ryan co-star. The film was shot in Cape Town and other South African locations. It premiered at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival and was the opening night attraction at the Sarasota Film Festival. It also was shown at the Philadelphia Film Festival, the Maui Film Festival, and the Traverse City Film Festival, among others, but never was given a theatrical release in the United States. It was released on Region 1 DVD on January 20, 2009.",
"score": "1.6046629"
},
{
"id": "32413803",
"title": "The Deal (2003 film)",
"text": " stars David Morrissey and Michael Sheen as Brown and Blair. It was first proposed by Morgan in late 2002 and was taken on by Granada Television for ITV. After Frears agreed to direct, and the cast were signed on, ITV pulled out of it over fears that the political sensitivity could affect its corporate merger. Channel 4 picked up the production and filming was carried out for five weeks in May 2003. The film was broadcast on 28 September 2003, the weekend prior to the Labour Party's annual party conference. The film was critically praised. Morrissey received considerable praise, winning a Royal Television Society award for playing Brown, and Frears ",
"score": "1.578249"
},
{
"id": "30016338",
"title": "The Deal (2005 film)",
"text": " The Deal is a 2005 political thriller film directed by Harvey Kahn, starring Christian Slater, Selma Blair, Robert Loggia and Colm Feore. The movie was filmed in 2004 and based in Boston, Massachusetts. The film was released only in limited cinemas of USA and United Arab Emirates.",
"score": "1.5629416"
},
{
"id": "8746808",
"title": "The Deal (2008 film)",
"text": " up production in South Africa. Charlie then lies to the studio, saying Bobby insists Deidre, who has purposely avoided Charlie, be sent to South Africa to assist on the production. She arrives, and she and Charlie eventually 'hook-up'. After Bobby is kidnapped by terrorists during the shoot, and the film is shut down, Deidre hatches a scheme to produce Lionel's original script 'on the Q.T.'. Using financing that must stay in Prague, Charlie and Deidre manage to film Lionel's original movie there, which goes on to receive seven Golden Globe nominations, making Charlie and Deidre the newest power couple producers in Hollywood.",
"score": "1.561628"
},
{
"id": "16001257",
"title": "The Deal (magazine)",
"text": " began when The Daily Deal was launched in September 1999 by American Lawyer Media with strong support from dealmaker Bruce Wasserstein. In March 2000, ALM sold the assets of the Deal to U.S. Equity Partners, a private equity fund sponsored by Wasserstein & Co. In December 2000, Rustic Canyon Ventures, a venture capital firm based in Southern California, led a $30 million venture round of financing. In 2012, The Deal was acquired by TheStreet.com, who closed the magazine. After being acquired by The Street, all publications of The Deal became digital and are still available today. In 2018, TheStreet announced the sale of BoardEx and The Deal to Euromoney Institutional Investor.",
"score": "1.5576078"
},
{
"id": "32413802",
"title": "The Deal (2003 film)",
"text": " The Deal is a 2003 British television film that depicts the Blair-Brown deal—a well-documented pact that Tony Blair and Gordon Brown made whereby Brown would not stand in the 1994 Labour leadership election, so that Blair could have a clear run at becoming leader of the party and later as Prime Minister instead. The film begins in 1983, as Blair and Brown are first elected to Parliament, and ended in 1994 at the Granita restaurant—the location of the supposed agreement—with a brief epilogue following the leadership contest. The film was directed by Stephen Frears from a script by Peter Morgan, based in part upon The Rivals by James Naughtie. The ",
"score": "1.5572847"
},
{
"id": "1192399",
"title": "Carl Deal",
"text": " Carl Deal is an American documentary filmmaker and journalist. He is the producer and director of the films Trouble the Water and Citizen Koch, producer of Michael Moore's Where To Invade Next and Fahrenheit 11/9, and co-producer of Capitalism: A Love Story and Fahrenheit 9/11.",
"score": "1.5535371"
},
{
"id": "5615309",
"title": "Deal or No Deal (British game show)",
"text": " Deal or No Deal was produced by Endemol and supported by BBC Studios and Post Production, a commercial subsidiary of the BBC. The original studio set for the show was converted from an old paintworks factory and its associated warehouses in Bristol. Channel 4 initially commissioned a run of 66 episodes, with filming beginning in October 2005. The first episode was broadcast on 31 October that year. Channel 4 then commissioned a second filming period at the end of 2005. By May 2006, episodes were being filmed Monday to Friday at a rate of 15 episodes a week. Three episodes were recorded in a day in two sessions, one edition in the afternoon using one audience, and then two episodes filmed in the ",
"score": "1.5425215"
},
{
"id": "15601545",
"title": "David Morrissey",
"text": " Morgan's single drama The Deal (2003), about a pact made between Brown and Tony Blair (Michael Sheen) in 1994. Unlike his research for the fictional State of Play, Morrissey discovered that no politicians wanted to talk to him for this fact-based drama, so he turned to journalists Jon Snow and Simon Hoggart. He also travelled to Brown's hometown of Kirkcaldy and immersed himself in numerous biographies of the man, including Ross Wilson's documentary films on New Labour in the year surrounding the 1997 election. When speaking to many of Brown's friends to gain insight into his \"private persona\", Morrissey discovered that Brown ",
"score": "1.5353312"
},
{
"id": "892689",
"title": "The Deal (album)",
"text": " The Deal is the debut album by American post-metal band Sumac. It was released on digital and CD formats through Profound Lore Records and on vinyl LP via SIGE Records on February 17, 2015. The album was recorded at Aleph and Litho studios in Seattle, Washington between July and August 2014. The album was mixed at GodCity Studios in Salem, Massachusetts by Kurt Ballou. The artwork was a collaborative effort between Aaron Turner and Faith Coloccia.",
"score": "1.5333109"
},
{
"id": "10501531",
"title": "Deal (2008 film)",
"text": "Bret Harrison as Alex Stillman ; Burt Reynolds as Tommy Vinson ; Charles Durning as Charlie Adler ; Shannon Elizabeth as Michelle ; Jennifer Tilly as Karen 'Razor' Jones ; Maria Mason as Helen Vinson ; Gary Grubbs as Mr. Stillman ; Caroline McKinley as Mrs. Stillman ; Brandon Olive as Ben Thomas ; Jon Eyez as Mike 'Double Diamond' Jackson ; J. D. Evermore as Tex Button ; Billy Slaughter as Announcer ; Courtney Friel as Herself ; Phil Laak as Himself ; Antonio Esfandiari as Himself ; Vincent Van Patten as Himself ; Scott Lazar as Himself ; Chris Moneymaker as Himself ; Greg Raymer as Himself ; Isabelle Mercier as Herself ; Mike Sexton as Himself ",
"score": "1.5325024"
},
{
"id": "10937054",
"title": "Donald Trump's The Art of the Deal: The Movie",
"text": " The film was directed by Drunk History creator Jeremy Konner. The idea came from Funny or Die editor-in-chief Owen Burke, and was written by former editor of The Onion Joe Randazzo. The production was kept a secret for months. Burke said that they were able to do this by having \"a few people sign nondisclosures, but mostly we just begged people not to say anything.\" The film features an original song from Kenny Loggins, entitled \"The Art of the Deal\", written specifically for the film.",
"score": "1.5152199"
},
{
"id": "26086136",
"title": "Bill Nuss",
"text": "The Real Deal – Producer – Venetian, Las Vegas (2008) ; North Shore – Producer (21 eps) – Confidential/20th/Fox (2004–2005) ; Pacific Blue – Creator/Exec. Producer (101 eps) – North Hall Productions/USA Network (1995–2002) ; Renegade – Exec. Producer (44 eps) – Cannell/Synd. (1993–1995) ; Return of Hunter – Exec. Producer – MOW – Cannell/NBC (1994) ; Greyhounds – Exec. Producer – MOW – Cannell/CBS (1994) ; The Hat Squad – Exec. Producer (12 eps) – Cannell/CBS (1993) ; Raven – Co-Exec. Producer (7 eps) – Columbia/CBS (1992) ; NYPD Mounted – Exec. Producer – MOW – Orion (1991) ; Booker – Exec. Producer (18 eps) – Cannell/Fox (1989–1990) ; 21 Jump Street – Exec. Prod./Supv. Prod./Prod. (81 eps) – Cannell/Fox (1987–1990) ; The A-Team – Story Editor (28 eps) – Cannell/NBC (1985–1986) ",
"score": "1.5099465"
},
{
"id": "32413823",
"title": "The Deal (2003 film)",
"text": " imprint of The Weinstein Company, released The Deal on region 1 DVD on 29 July 2008. The region 1 edition features an audio commentary by Morgan and Langan, and an interview with Frears. The ending of the film was changed for the American release; a closing caption that had read \"Gordon is still waiting [for the leadership]\" was replaced by one that says that Brown became Prime Minister in 2007, thirteen years after the Granita meeting. Despite these changes, the copyright date on the film remains 2003. HBO promoted it as \"a new movie... from the makers of The Queen\" and the DVD was marketed as \"The Prequel to The Queen\", even though the film was made and originally released before The Queen.",
"score": "1.5030351"
},
{
"id": "29886901",
"title": "Let's Make a Deal",
"text": " series was produced by Catalena Productions and distributed in America by Rhodes Productions, Catalena's partner company. In the fall of 1984, the series returned for a third run in syndication as The All-New Let's Make a Deal. Running for two seasons until 1986, this series was distributed by Telepictures. NBC revived Let's Make a Deal twice in a 13-year span. The first was a daytime series in 1990 that was the first to not be produced or hosted by Monty Hall. Instead, the show was a production of Ron Greenberg and Dick Clark, and featured Bob Hilton (best known for announcing other game shows) as host ",
"score": "1.4984543"
},
{
"id": "2388325",
"title": "The Deal (Seinfeld)",
"text": " Series co-creator Larry David wrote the episode, which was directed by Tom Cherones. Since the start of the show, NBC executives, especially Warren Littlefield, had been pressuring the writing staff to get Jerry and Elaine back together. Larry David had been against this idea from the start. However, brainstorming for an episode idea, he remembered he had once made a deal with a woman to have a purely physical relationship, which he thought \"would make a really funny show, even if they had never [told us to get Jerry and Elaine back together]\". Though Jerry and Elaine are still in a relationship at the end of the episode, they are no longer together by ",
"score": "1.4961326"
}
] |
Who was the producer of On Tour?
|
[
"Yann Tiersen",
"Yann Pierre Tiersen"
] |
producer
|
On Tour (Yann Tiersen album)
| 2,548,111 | 82 |
[
{
"id": "15111836",
"title": "On Tour (2010 film)",
"text": " The idea for the film came from the 1913 book The Other Side of Music-Hall by Colette, a collection of texts written for a newspaper about her life during a music hall tour in the French provinces. The project started around the same time as the suicide of independent film producer Humbert Balsan, which also had made an impression on Amalric. \"I'm fascinated by producers. I always wonder how they manage to keep going and take such responsibility. ... So these different themes came together and I invented a story about a French TV producer and the women who were courageous enough to come ",
"score": "1.5017204"
},
{
"id": "11184074",
"title": "Marc Routh",
"text": " He served at the president of the League of Off-Broadway Theatres and Producers for eight years, from 1999 to 2007. He is one of the founders of On the Road, a theatrical booking agency, Showtix, a Broadway group sales company that was acquired by Hollywood Media and Broadway Inner Circle, a premium ticket agency. He is a member of The Broadway League, the Society of London Theatre, and the League of Off Broadway Theatres and Producers. From 2000 to 2005, he was the operator with partners of the Arts Theatre in London, presenting such productions as The Pet Shop Boys Musical Closer to Heaven. In 2012, ",
"score": "1.4820862"
},
{
"id": "15111833",
"title": "On Tour (2010 film)",
"text": " On Tour (Tournée) is a 2010 internationally co-produced comedy-drama film directed by Mathieu Amalric. It stars Amalric himself as a producer who brings an American Neo-Burlesque troupe to France, played by genuine performers Mimi Le Meaux, Kitten on the Keys, Dirty Martini, Julie Atlas Muz, Evie Lovelle and Roky Roulette. In a road movie narrative, the plot follows the troupe as they tour French port cities with their show, which was performed for actual audiences during the production. The inspiration for the film was a book by Colette about her experience from music halls in the early 20th century, and a part of Amalric's aim was to translate the sentiment of the book to a modern setting. The film premiered at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival where it won the FIPRESCI Award, the festival's main prize from film critics. Amalric also received the Best Director Award.",
"score": "1.4507585"
},
{
"id": "5346869",
"title": "'92 Tour EP",
"text": "Producer - Ed Stassium - producer (\"Going to Brazil\") ; Billy Sherwood - producer (\"Hellraiser\") ; Peter Solley - producer (\"Hellraiser\") ; Paul Hemingson - engineer (\"Going to Brazil\") ; Tom Fletcher - engineer (\"Hellraiser\") ; Casey McMackin - engineer (\"Hellraiser\") ; Steve Hall - mastering ",
"score": "1.4336536"
},
{
"id": "11813252",
"title": "Somewhere on Tour",
"text": " References",
"score": "1.4218639"
},
{
"id": "8058610",
"title": "On Tour (1990 film)",
"text": "Diego Abatantuono - Dario Nigri ; Fabrizio Bentivoglio - Federico Lolli ; Laura Morante - Vittoria ; Luigi Montini - Leonardo Pavia (credited as Gigi Montini) ; Barbara Scoppa - Olimpia ; Ugo Conti - Attilio ; Eva Vanicek - Ida Florio ; Leonardo Gajo - Mattia ; Giovanni Bosich - Gobetti ; Isabella Perricone - Margherita ; Nini Salerno - Peruzzi ; Claudio Bisio - Tank station man ; Piero Vivarelli - The American ",
"score": "1.3939952"
},
{
"id": "8058608",
"title": "On Tour (1990 film)",
"text": " On Tour (Turnè) is a 1990 Italian comedy-drama film directed by Gabriele Salvatores. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1990 Cannes Film Festival. It is the second installment of Salvatores' \"escape trilogy\", after Marrakech Express; like its predecessor, it is a road movie, and features Diego Abatantuono playing the protagonist.",
"score": "1.3924911"
},
{
"id": "15111841",
"title": "On Tour (2010 film)",
"text": " , the film holds an 85% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 20 reviews, with an average rating of 6.63/10. The immediate reception in Cannes was somewhat mixed. In Le Monde, Jacques Mandelbaum called it \"a joy for the eyes and the heart\", and argued that \"even in its randomness, its failure and imperfection, On Tour is a film that was desperately needed.\" Jonathan Romney of Screen wrote that \"this drama with comic touches doesn't live up to the brassiness misleadingly promised in the neon-styled opening credits\", and continued: \"On Tour doesn't suggest as strong a personality behind the camera as in front of it, and Amalric's appeal as a director – this ",
"score": "1.3837148"
},
{
"id": "15111838",
"title": "On Tour (2010 film)",
"text": " first time he saw a Neo-Burlesque show was in 2007, in Nantes. He says that he did not mention the film project to the performers, but spent the following three days in their company. Later on he went to the United States to see as many shows as possible and study the movement in detail. The film was produced by Les Films du Poisson for a budget of 3.52 million Euro, including co-production support from Arte France, German company Neue Mediopolis and an advance on receipts from the National Center of Cinematography and the moving image. The director originally envisioned Portuguese producer Paulo ",
"score": "1.382831"
},
{
"id": "15111834",
"title": "On Tour (2010 film)",
"text": " Formerly successful television producer Joachim Zand returns from America to his native France, where he previously has left everything behind, including friends, enemies and his own children. In his company is a burlesque striptease troupe whom he has promised a grand performance in Paris. Together they tour the French port cities, staying at cheap hotels and making success along the way. Old conflicts are, however, reignited upon the return to the French capital. Joachim is betrayed by people from his past, making him lose the venue where they were to perform, and the Paris finale comes to nothing.",
"score": "1.3814886"
},
{
"id": "25688211",
"title": "John Schneider (producer)",
"text": "On the Road with Tom Green (TV special) (2015) - Executive Producer ; Tom Green Live (2013) - Executive Producer ; Hitchcock (2012) - Co-producer ; Rob (TV series) (2012) - Executive Producer ; The Chosen One (2010) - Producer ; American Virgin (2009) - Executive Producer ; Big Stan (2007) - Producer ; Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo (2005) - Producer ; The Hot Chick (2002) - Producer ; The Animal (2001) - Co-producer ",
"score": "1.3744538"
},
{
"id": "8839726",
"title": "The Tour (album)",
"text": "Mary J. Blige - producer ; Lanar Brantley - producer ; Kirk Burrowes - Executive Producer ; Hank Shocklee - Executive Producer ; LaTonya Blige-DaCosta - Associate Executive Producer ; Lanar Brantley - mixing ; Larry Alexander - mixing ; Hank Shocklee - mixing ; Greg Pinto - Mixing Assistant ; Larry Alexander - sequencing ; Tom Coyne - mastering ; Chuck Orozco - engineering ; Larry Alexander - engineering ; John Protozko - engineering ; Booker T. Jones III - engineering ; Jeff Keese - engineering ; Scott Peets - engineering ",
"score": "1.370275"
},
{
"id": "27428541",
"title": "Michael Cohl",
"text": " Michael Cohl is a Canadian concert promoter, theatrical producer and touring impresario. He is the former Chairman of Live Nation. Cohl now runs S2BN Entertainment, with offices in New York and Toronto. Having been named the Howard Hughes of rock ‘n’ roll by Fortune magazine, Cohl is most famous for having overseen the tours and related ancillary businesses for more than 150 artists, including Frank Sinatra, Michael Jackson, The Rolling Stones, Prince, Stevie Wonder, Pink Floyd, Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young and U2. He has also been credited with developing the concept of \"package\" touring. Eliminating the middleman, Cohl worked directly with the artist to strategize and route the tour, promote the dates, and assist in the development and exploitation of the lucrative aftermarket – books, films, DVDs, television specials, and merchandising. He was the lead producer of Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark, ",
"score": "1.3649487"
},
{
"id": "27075954",
"title": "Harris: On The Edge",
"text": " Television rights for the tour was bought by Jaya TV, one of a major Tamil language satellite television channels based in Chennai, India.",
"score": "1.3605437"
},
{
"id": "28936682",
"title": "On Tour (Yann Tiersen album)",
"text": "Musicians ; Yann Tiersen – vocals, guitar, violin, toy piano ; Marc Sens – vocals, guitar, melodica, drill ; Grégoire Simon – vocals, horns ; Diam's – vocals ; Katel – vocals, guitar ; Elizabeth Fraser – vocals ; DD La Fleur – vocals ; Christine Ott – ondes Martenot ; Stéphane Bouvier – bass ; Ludovic Morillon – drums Production ; Fabrice Laureau – producer, engineer, mixing ; Yann Tiersen – mixing ; Aymeric Letoquart – mixing ; John Dent – mastering ",
"score": "1.3531744"
},
{
"id": "11813251",
"title": "Somewhere on Tour",
"text": " out tired records by tired bands.\" The Somewhere on Tour production was the most ambitious to date. Band used seven 45 foot articulated trucks packed with over 100 tons of equipment, three crowd buses for 60 people and two nightliners for five musicians. The band – owned customized Turbosound system was probably the biggest in the world used indoors. Total power (PA and stage monitors) was estimated at 180.000 watts. The vast and flexible lighting rig held over 1100 lamps hanged over futuristic stage set including flying space ships, inflatable props, laser guns, pyrotechnics, hydraulic stands, backdrops and monumental Eddie's appearance. The tour was a big success everywhere.",
"score": "1.3409977"
},
{
"id": "28936678",
"title": "On Tour (Yann Tiersen album)",
"text": " On Tour is a live album by Yann Tiersen. It was originally released in 2006 and features songs from Tiersen's past albums as well as some previously unreleased compositions. The album is notable for having a different approach to Tiersen's musical style: the usual multi-instrumental ensemble was replaced with electric guitars and an ondes Martenot, giving the music a fresh rendition. On Tour was also released as a DVD.",
"score": "1.3379531"
},
{
"id": "11705800",
"title": "On Tour Forever",
"text": " On Tour Forever is a live EP album released by Blues Traveler in 1992. Only ten thousand copies were produced, packaged as a double album with copies of the band's second album, Travelers and Thieves. The first three tracks were recorded at The Palace Theater in New Haven, Connecticut on October 30, 1991. The last track, featuring Carlos Santana on guitar, was recorded at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco, California on September 29, 1991. Included with the recording was a tribute to Bill Graham, the band's tour promoter, who had died shortly after the release of Travelers and Thieves.",
"score": "1.3338995"
},
{
"id": "28573100",
"title": "Jeff Zucker",
"text": " In 1989, he was a field producer for Today, and at 26 he became its executive producer in 1992. He introduced the program's trademark outdoor rock concert series and was in charge as Today moved to the \"window on the world\" Studio 1A in Rockefeller Plaza in 1994. He is credited with managing the show during its most successful years and launching it into its 16-years of ratings dominance.",
"score": "1.3302116"
},
{
"id": "378042",
"title": "Robert Ahrens",
"text": " Ahrens is best known as a producer for the Broadway stage adaptation of the film Xanadu, which was nominated for Best Musical at the 2008 Tony Awards. Ahrens began acquiring the stage rights to the Xanadu musical in 2002 after seeing an unauthorized 2001 stage production of the film. Working as an assistant to an executive at Paramount Pictures at the time, he pursued the rights to Xanadu and its soundtrack by the Electric Light Orchestra and swiftly began courting writer Douglas Carter Beane to write the book. He has also produced three films: Bumping Heads, Book of Love, and WTC View. He also produced Evita on Broadway and executive produced Finding Neverland for Harvey Weinstein. He has presented Kathy Griffin Wants a Tony, Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons, and The Temptations and The Four Tops on Broadway.",
"score": "1.3253391"
}
] |
Who was the producer of The Baby on the Barge?
|
[
"Cecil Hepworth",
"Cecil M. Hepworth",
"Cecil Milton Hepworth"
] |
producer
|
The Baby on the Barge
| 5,909,529 | 77 |
[
{
"id": "4690766",
"title": "The Baby on the Barge",
"text": " The Baby on the Barge is a 1915 British silent film drama directed by Cecil Hepworth and starring Alma Taylor and Stewart Rome. No print of the film is known to survive and it is presumed lost.",
"score": "1.6549239"
},
{
"id": "8966410",
"title": "Richard Goodwin (producer)",
"text": " In the latter part of the 1980s, Goodwin turned his hand to a television series for Britain's Channel 4 and the American PBS, Leontyne by Barge from London to Vienna, about his international travels on a barge, called the Leontyne. An accompanying book, Leontyne, written by Goodwin, was published by Collins. Later, Goodwin went on to shoot and produce a collection of films, titled Barging Through Europe, on his travels, on another boat, the Regina, depicting the vanishing trades of France.",
"score": "1.4378843"
},
{
"id": "6105164",
"title": "Ed Barge",
"text": " Edward John Barge (August 10, 1910 – September 29, 1991) was an American animator. Barge was born to Alfred Edward and Margaret G. Barge in San Jose, California. In 1916, the family moved to Bakersfield, where his father was employed by the Santa Fe Railroad and Pacific Western Oil Co. before retiring in 1954. He was the second of six children; his brother Henry was a photographer for the Bakersfield Californian. Barge attended St. Francis Parochial School and high school in Bakersfield, where he was a baseball and basketball star. He was still living in Bakersfield in July 1936 and was becoming known for his landscape paintings. He married Alice Davis, the daughter of Mrs. B.A. Davis of Bakersfield, in Beverly Hills on April 6, 1939. He began his career at the Harman-Ising ",
"score": "1.4289804"
},
{
"id": "27181916",
"title": "Beauty and the Barge (1937 film)",
"text": " Beauty and the Barge is a 1937 British comedy film directed by Henry Edwards and starring Gordon Harker, Judy Gunn and Jack Hawkins. It was produced by Julius Hagen's production company Twickenham Film Studios, but made at the Riverside Studios in Hammersmith rather than at Twickenham. It was based on the 1905 play Beauty and the Barge by W. W. Jacobs.",
"score": "1.4261918"
},
{
"id": "6105165",
"title": "Ed Barge",
"text": " which shut down by August 1937 when Fred Quimby poached a number of its staff members to form the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer cartoon studio. Barge worked at MGM as an assistant animator and received his first screen credit as an animator on Innertube Antics, directed by George Gordon and released in 1944. Gordon's unit had been disbanded the year before, at which point Barge was placed in the William Hanna/Joseph Barbera unit which made the Tom and Jerry cartoons. Barge remained until about the time the studio closed in 1957. Hanna and Barbera opened their own studio that same year and hired Barge in 1965 for the movie The Man Called Flintstone. He remained with Hanna-Barbera until retiring in 1982. In Family Guy episode, \"Road to Rupert\", Barge became archive footage as Jerry's visible.",
"score": "1.4242525"
},
{
"id": "15461052",
"title": "The Bargee",
"text": "Harry H. Corbett as Hemel Pike ; Hugh Griffith as Joe Turnbull ; Eric Sykes as the Mariner ; Ronnie Barker as Ronnie ; Julia Foster as Christine Turnbull ; Miriam Karlin as Nellie Marsh ; Eric Barker as Mr Parkes, the Foreman ; Derek Nimmo as Dr. Scott ; Norman Bird as Albert Williams, the Waterways Supervisor ; Richard Briers as Tomkins ; Brian Wilde as Policeman ; Ronnie Brody as Ted Croxley ; George A. Cooper as Mr Williams, Office Official ; Ed Devereaux as Boat Man ; Wally Patch as Bargee ; Michael Robbins as Bargee ; Jo Rowbottom (credited as Jo Rowbotham) as Cynthia ; Una Stubbs as Bridesmaid ; Eileen Way as Onlooker ; Rita Webb as Onlooker ; Patricia Hayes as Onlooker ; Godfrey Winn as Announcer ; Edwin Apps as George the Barman ",
"score": "1.4222648"
},
{
"id": "762959",
"title": "Girl on the Barge",
"text": " The Girl on the Barge is a 1929 American drama film directed by Edward Sloman and starring Jean Hersholt and Sally O'Neil. Released during the transition to talkies, the Universal Pictures production was essentially a silent film with some talking sequences. It was filmed in Whitehall NY, the town is looking for a copy of the movie as well",
"score": "1.4141469"
},
{
"id": "3239578",
"title": "Sheila Nevins",
"text": "1981: She’s Nobody’s Baby: The History of American Women in the 20th Century – HBO and Ms. magazine ; 1983-1985: Braingames – creator, executive producer ; 1991-2005: America Undercover – executive producer ; 1995: One Survivor Remembers – senior producer ; 1997: 4 Little Girls – executive producer ; 2001: Living Dolls: The Making of a Child Beauty Queen – executive producer ",
"score": "1.4011526"
},
{
"id": "4690769",
"title": "The Baby on the Barge",
"text": "Alma Taylor as Nellie Jennis ; Stewart Rome as Bob Jennis ; Lionelle Howard as Jack Storm ; Edward Lingard as Lord Lafene ; Violet Hopson as Lady Lafene ; Henry Vibart as Doctor ; William Felton as Thief ",
"score": "1.3925605"
},
{
"id": "10590845",
"title": "Sailing Along",
"text": " A rich owner of a fleet of three-masted barges operating on the River Thames in central London has a prospective step-daughter, Kay (Jessie Matthews). She falls in love with the son of one of his barge masters, who has been put to work on a barge at the bottom of the ladder. She initially wants to gives up her chance of stardom as a singer to be with him. Ultimately everyone supports her singing career.",
"score": "1.3850079"
},
{
"id": "12491",
"title": "Michael Mills (British producer)",
"text": " Mills was the original producer of television series Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em (1973–1975), and briefly supervised Wodehouse Playhouse (1976). He joined Thames Television around this time, where he remained for the rest of his career. At Thames, he was responsible for the production of such series as Get Some In! (1975–1978) and Chance in a Million (1984-1986).",
"score": "1.3842423"
},
{
"id": "15461047",
"title": "The Bargee",
"text": " The Bargee is a 1964 British comedy film shot in Techniscope directed by Duncan Wood, and starring Harry H. Corbett, Hugh Griffith, Eric Sykes and Ronnie Barker. The screenplay was written by Ray Galton and Alan Simpson.",
"score": "1.3827962"
},
{
"id": "762961",
"title": "Girl on the Barge",
"text": " Although set on the Erie Canal, The Girl on the Barge was filmed on the Champlain Canal in upper New York with the film crew set up in Glens Falls as the Erie Canal looked too modern and commercialized for the story.",
"score": "1.3801675"
},
{
"id": "10279786",
"title": "The Love Boat",
"text": " Jeraldine Saunders, a real-life cruise director for a passenger cruise-ship line. Saunders was also partly inspired by the German cruise ship MV Aurora. The TV movie was followed by two more (titled The Love Boat II and The New Love Boat), all of which aired before the series began in September 1977. The executive producer for the series was Aaron Spelling, who produced several television series for Four Star Television and ABC from the 1960s into the 1990s. In 1987, the episode with segment titles \"Hidden Treasure\", \"Picture from the Past\", and \"Ace's Salary\" (Season 9, Episode 3) was ranked No. 82 on [[TV Guide's 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time|TV Guide Every episode contained several storylines, each written by a different set of writers working on one group of guest ",
"score": "1.3736689"
},
{
"id": "2607335",
"title": "Richard Kay (producer)",
"text": " Richard Kay was an American film producer. He produced The Golden Mistress, Godzilla, King of the Monsters!, Untamed Women and Wild Weed. He was production supervisor on Angel Baby in 1961.",
"score": "1.3726755"
},
{
"id": "13997874",
"title": "George Dessart",
"text": " George Baldwin Dessart (August 27, 1925 - October 20, 2012) was an American television producer and executive and served as national chairman of the American Cancer Society from 1996–98. Dessart began his career in television at WCAU in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and was the producer of What in the World. He received an EMMY at the New York EMMY awards in 1965 as producer for \"Eye on New York\". His career at CBS as Vice President of Program Practices ended in 1985. With William Baker, he co-authored the book, \"Down the Tube: An inside account of the failure of American television\" in 1998. According to Lloyd Morrisett, George Dessart was one of the first candidates to be considered for the position of executive producer of ''Sesame Street. “The executive producer was, from the creative point of view, obviously key. We ",
"score": "1.3708124"
},
{
"id": "4118038",
"title": "Gene Barge",
"text": " worked with Chess Records during the 1960s, playing on recording sessions and providing arrangements along with some production work. In the 1970s, he continued to produce as well as arrange records, including Natalie Cole's early hits. Barge has toured and played with such notables as Fats Domino, Bo Diddley, Big Joe Turner, LaVern Baker, Ray Charles, Chuck Willis, the Rolling Stones and Natalie Cole; and he had roles in major movies starring Gene Hackman, Chuck Norris, Harrison Ford and Steven Seagal. He has also toured in recent years under the pseudonym 'Daddy G.' Barge has also acted in a handful of movies, including Under Siege and The Fugitive.",
"score": "1.3648845"
},
{
"id": "10936392",
"title": "Julie Goldman (producer)",
"text": "Free Floaters (1997) ; Digital Gremlin for WIndows (1999) ; Hellhounds on My Trail: The Afterlife of Robert Johnson (2000) ; X-Philes (2000) ; Eating Well for Optimum Health (2000) ; Fashion Victim: The Killing of Gianni Versace (2001) ; Saving Grace: Children and Spirituality (2001) ; Pregnant Man (2001) ; Devil's Playground (2002) ; Who Is Alan Smithee? (2002) ; Mama Africa (2002) ; The AMC Project TV Series - The Cult of Cindy (2003) ; American Masters TV Series - Muddy Waters: Can't be Satisfied (2003) ; American Masters TV Series - Hank Williams: Honky Tonk Blues (2004) ; Slasher (2004) ; Three ",
"score": "1.353044"
},
{
"id": "4972311",
"title": "Sam Davis (producer)",
"text": " From 2004 until 2009, Sam took charge of the German Fiction department of Endemol Germany where he was responsible for TV movie and series productions such as \"Liebe ohne Rückfahrschein\", \"Mr. Nanny - Ein Mann für Mama\" and the two-part \"London, Liebe, Taubenschlag\". In January 2010, Sam Davis co-founded and became CEO of Rowboat Film- und Fernsehproduktion. Rowboat's first TV movie A Day for a Miracle premiered at the Hamburg Film Festival in 2011. It was broadcast January 18, 2012 on ORF and, with over one million viewers, the highest rated film of the year. On March 5, 2012 A Day for a Miracle was also successfully broadcast on ZDF with 5.8 million viewers. In 2012 Sam won the ROMY prize in Austria ",
"score": "1.3403635"
},
{
"id": "1833717",
"title": "Fresh Off the Boat",
"text": " Eddie Huang's 2013 autobiography, Fresh Off the Boat, caught the attention of television networks upon its release, with ABC and 20th Century Fox Television ordering a pilot episode for a series based on the memoir in August. Writer Nahnatchka Khan, who was known as the creator and executive producer of fellow ABC sitcom Don't Trust the B in Apartment 23, was hired to write and executive produce the pilot, while Huang himself was brought on as an executive producer. In February 2014, Constance Wu and Randall Park were the first two actors announced to star in the series as its leads. A month later, it was announced that Hudson Yang would be portraying Huang in the ",
"score": "1.339342"
}
] |
Who was the producer of The Trap?
|
[
"Pat Powers"
] |
producer
|
The Trap (1913 film)
| 2,935,301 | 94 |
[
{
"id": "16198949",
"title": "The Trap (1985 film)",
"text": " The Trap (La Gabbia), also known as Collector's Item, Dead Fright and The Cage, is a 1985 erotic thriller directed by Giuseppe Patroni Griffi (his last theatrical film), and starring Tony Musante, Laura Antonelli, and Florinda Bolkan. Famed Italian horror director Lucio Fulci contributed to the screenplay (this film was done during the time Fulci was recovering from hepatitus, so he was unable to direct it). The film is based on a story called \"L'Occhio\", written by filmmaker Francesco Barilli. Barilli intended to make the film himself, but had trouble securing backing and balked at the producers wanting Shelly Winters in the lead role. So he sold the idea to Griffi and let him produce and direct it, retitling it The Trap. Barilli said of the finished product \"Lets' talk frankly here, that movie sucks....\" and Fulci even used profanity alluding to his opinion of Griffi, who he felt stole his chance to direct the film.",
"score": "1.6464124"
},
{
"id": "27069191",
"title": "The Trap (American TV series)",
"text": " The Trap was an hour-long American television dramatic anthology series about people who found themselves in situations of which they had lost control. It was broadcast on CBS from April 29, 1950. through June 24, 1950. Franklin Heller was the producer, and Joseph DeSantis was its host and narrator. Nine 60-minute episodes aired live on CBS in 1950. Its notable stars, many early in their careers, included Kim Stanley, E.G. Marshall, Leslie Nielsen, and George Reeves. The October 17, 1950, episode was \"The Vanishing Lady\", starring Kim Stanley and Jeff Morrow.",
"score": "1.6046126"
},
{
"id": "8199445",
"title": "The Trap (1913 film)",
"text": " The Trap is a 1913 American silent short drama film directed by Edwin August, produced by Pat Powers, and starring Murdock MacQuarrie, Pauline Bush and Lon Chaney. The film is now considered lost. Chaney would later appear in an unrelated film of the same name in 1922.",
"score": "1.572541"
},
{
"id": "16199915",
"title": "The Trap (1959 film)",
"text": " The Trap is a 1959 color film noir directed by Norman Panama and released through Paramount Pictures. It stars Richard Widmark, Lee J. Cobb, Tina Louise, Earl Holliman, and Lorne Greene.",
"score": "1.5566478"
},
{
"id": "9119845",
"title": "Roman Musheghyan",
"text": " television series Trap 1, Trap 2, and Trap 3 (drama, a gangster saga). It became the highest rated project on the Armenian television. The Russian film production \"Central Partnership\" purchased the license on the production of the thriller TV series. While working at Shant TV he directed the TV series Inheritors and Lucky man. In 2010 he directed the TV series Beyond for Armenia TV. By order of the Russian producer company \"Bergsound\" two detective films were directed: Million-dollar murder in 2012 and Pay off in 2013. He is a frequent guest and a jury member at local and international film festivals, held in the region.",
"score": "1.555889"
},
{
"id": "27382424",
"title": "Andrew Trapani",
"text": " Trapani is a founder and producer at Nine/8 Entertainment in Los Angeles California. Prior to forming Nine/8 Entertainment, he was a founding partner at Integrated Films & Management, where he represented writers and directors. He began his entertainment career as a designer and producer of video games for Crystal Dynamics. In 2009, he produced The Haunting in Connecticut, which opened at #2 at the box offices and went on to gross over $99 million. In 2018, he produced Winchester, a supernatural horror film starring Oscar-winner Helen Mirren. In 2016, production began on a documentary about the Showtime era of the Los Angeles Lakers, which Trapani is producing in partnership with Lakers president Jeanie Buss. His projects in development include a remake of the 1981 film An American Werewolf in London, a film adaptation of the Richard Brautigan novel The Hawkline Monster., and a scripted sports drama series for Showtime which he is co-producing with legendary basketball coach Phil Jackson. Trapani is from Saratoga, California.",
"score": "1.5366802"
},
{
"id": "9533068",
"title": "Trap Back",
"text": " was at the time an up-and-coming producer in the Atlanta hip hop scene. While the two had previously worked together on individual tracks, Gucci Mane's lead producer had usually been Zaytoven; Mike Will had never before been as deeply involved with the rapper's musical direction or recording process until these sessions. In addition to producing five songs, Mike Will stayed in-studio for the duration of the sessions to provide the rapper with both encouragement and, at times, blunt critiques. Though Gucci Mane was unaccustomed to recording with a producer who had such a demanding, unvarnished approach, he came to ",
"score": "1.5339848"
},
{
"id": "25684840",
"title": "Kalle Trapp",
"text": " Karl-Heinz \"Kalle\" Trapp was a German music engineer and producer, and owner of the Karo Studio in Münster. The federal state North Rhine-Westphalia became breeding ground for most German metal bands in the 1980s, with Trapp being referred to as \"one of the main power metal producers of the 1980s and '90s\". He became especially known as recurring producer of Blind Guardian's records, also credited as backing vocalist on several Blind Guardian albums. According to Andy Ergün of Grinder, Trapp also recommended that No Remorse Records sign Blind Guardian to release their first record. Trapp also produced or engineered albums by thrash metal bands such as Sieges Even, Destruction, and Paradox; death metal such as Malleus Maleficarum by Dutch Pestilence, as well as heavy metal and hard rock such as Mad Max, Saxon and Uriah Heep. When retiring as a producer, Trapp also closed Karo Studios.",
"score": "1.5307295"
},
{
"id": "9533096",
"title": "Trap Back",
"text": " album, the independently released Trap House III(2013), was the \"culmination\" of the comeback he had begun with Trap Back. The trap production on the mixtape influenced other producers and received retrospective acclaim. Chicago-based electronic musician DJ Rashad sampled the title track from Trap Back for a juke/footwork beat, which can be found on Teklife Volume 1 – Welcome to the Chi (2012). The Philadelphia-based producer Maaly Raw, known for his work with Lil Uzi Vert, cited Trap Back and Trap God as formative influences. When Complex listed the best hip-hop producers of each year between 1979 and 2017, the magazine named Mike Will Made It the best producer of 2012, citing his work on the \"underrated\" Trap Back and I'm Up mixtapes among ",
"score": "1.5282485"
},
{
"id": "16243090",
"title": "The Trap (song)",
"text": " The Trap is a single by German industrial music band X Marks the Pedwalk, taken from the album which follows it, Human Desolation. It was released by Zoth Ommog in Europe as both an LP and CD.",
"score": "1.524695"
},
{
"id": "12431041",
"title": "The Trap (1922 film)",
"text": " The Trap is a 1922 American silent film directed by Robert Thornby and starring Lon Chaney and Alan Hale. It was released by Universal Pictures. The film was released in the United Kingdom under the title Heart of a Wolf. The film stars Chaney as the leading character, Alan Hale as his rival, and Irene Rich as the female lead. Chaney had also appeared in an unrelated film of the same name in 1913. The film also features in a minor role Chaney's son Creighton (later known as Lon Chaney Jr.) in his film debut.",
"score": "1.523224"
},
{
"id": "26015058",
"title": "Trapper John, M.D.",
"text": " In a suit filed in New York state court, Ingo Preminger, producer of the 1970 motion picture M*A*S*H, claimed that under his deal with 20th Century Fox, his production company had both the right of first refusal to produce any spin-off of the movie, and the right to fees from the use of the book and film's material. New York State Supreme Court Justice Martin Stecher found that Preminger's agreement with Fox did not give him the right to produce Trapper John M.D., but did entitle him to a 25% share in profits from the show. This decision was later cited by the same court in its 2008 decision in Kellman v. Mosley, involving a claim for royalties involving the Easy Rawlins detective series. It has sometimes been reported that the producers of the television series M*A*S*H filed suit claiming they were entitled to royalties from the new ",
"score": "1.5186645"
},
{
"id": "31969010",
"title": "The Trap (British TV series)",
"text": " The Trap: What Happened to Our Dream of Freedom is a BBC television documentary series by English filmmaker Adam Curtis, well known for other documentaries including The Century of the Self and The Power of Nightmares. It originally aired in the United Kingdom on BBC Two in March 2007. The series consists of three 60-minute programmes which explore the modern concept and definition of freedom, specifically, \"how a simplistic model of human beings as self-seeking, almost robotic, creatures led to today's idea of freedom.\"",
"score": "1.5153091"
},
{
"id": "12040297",
"title": "Coles Trapnell",
"text": " Valentine Coles Trapnell (August 2, 1910 – January 29, 1999) was an American television producer, writer, and director most famous for a stint following Roy Huggins as the producer of the Warner Bros. Western series Maverick starring James Garner, Jack Kelly, and Roger Moore, beginning with the show's third season. Trapnell also wrote scripts for Yancy Derringer, Lawman, and Twelve O'Clock High, and authored the book Teleplay; an introduction to television writing (original edition, 1966; revised edition, 1974).",
"score": "1.5105897"
},
{
"id": "5571615",
"title": "The Parent Trap (1998 film)",
"text": " The Parent Trap is a 1998 American romantic comedy film directed and co-written by Nancy Meyers, and produced and co-written by Charles Shyer. It is a remake of the 1961 film of the same name and an adaptation of Erich Kästner's 1949 German novel Lottie and Lisa (Das doppelte Lottchen). Dennis Quaid and Natasha Richardson star as a divorced couple who separated shortly after their identical twin daughters' birth; Lindsay Lohan stars (in her film debut) as both twins, Hallie Parker and Annie James, who are fortuitously reunited at summer camp after being separated at birth. David Swift wrote the screenplay for the original 1961 film based on Lottie and Lisa. The story is comparable to that of the 1936 film Three Smart Girls. Swift is credited along with Meyers and Shyer as co-writers of the 1998 version. The Parent Trap was theatrically released in the United States on July 29, 1998 and was a box-office hit, grossing $92.1 million against a $15 million budget. It received positive reviews from critics, with Lohan's performance in particular earning high praise.",
"score": "1.4954641"
},
{
"id": "2540782",
"title": "Trap (3/9)",
"text": " Trap is a sculpture by American artist Tony Smith which was made in an edition of nine with one artist's proof. This bronze sculpture was designed to be large-scale, but was only realized in bronze of the smaller size in 1968. The bronze was patinated to appear black.",
"score": "1.4934244"
},
{
"id": "25881068",
"title": "The Parent Trap (franchise)",
"text": " is featured sharing memories about recording music for Parent Trap II. Charles Fox wrote the theme, \"Let's Get What We Got\" which was the title music in the opening for \"The Parent Trap II\", and the entire music score. He is also featured on-camera, with talking about his experiences in writing the song and music. Disney historian and authors (previous Disney employees) Bill Cotter and Lorraine Santoli are also featured on-camera. The project analyzes and focuses on the life of Erich Kastner who wrote the original German book, Das Doppelte Lottchen that the films were based on. Luke Springman, German professor Aaron Pacentine is an executive producer of the film. This is the first full-length film documentary that details coverage on the 1980s Parent Trap films, and the first time the director, Mollie Miller, has spoken out publicly about the original film since then.",
"score": "1.4890325"
},
{
"id": "2490125",
"title": "Séance Prime",
"text": " Séance Prime was produced by Trap Them and Kurt Ballou.",
"score": "1.4811845"
},
{
"id": "4741021",
"title": "The Trap (1949 film)",
"text": " The Trap (Spanish: La trampa) is a 1949 Argentine thriller film directed by Carlos Hugo Christensen and starring Zully Moreno, George Rigaud, and Juana Sujo. A woman marries a man without understanding the darker depths of his personality.",
"score": "1.4799563"
},
{
"id": "30158637",
"title": "Star Trap",
"text": " Star Trap is a 1988 UK television film with a screenplay written by Tony Bicât that was commissioned for London Weekend Television. Also directed by Bicât, the film was made over a period of six weeks; mainly in the Cotswolds. The final climax of the movie, set during a production of Shakespeare's Richard III, was filmed inside the Cochrane Theatre in London which was made to resemble the Stratford Memorial Theatre for the movie. Star Trap is a detective story featuring two rivals investigating murder that involves the occult. The film stars Daniel Flynn as the Detective, Nicky Henson as Adam Blunt, Philip Sayer as Basil Underwood, Jeananne Crowley as Lady Diana Fortesque, John Pennington as Sir John Fortesque, Frances Tomelty as Hermione Bradstreet, Lucy Benjamin as Nancy, Hugh Simon as Cradock, Allan Surtees as Dr Gregson, Sandra Yue as the Old Woman, Bryan Matheson as the Judge, Arthur Blake as Jim and Sharon Holm as Sue.",
"score": "1.4716735"
}
] |
Who was the producer of The Hayseeds' Back-blocks Show?
|
[
"Beaumont Smith",
"Frank Beaumont Smith",
"Beau Smith"
] |
producer
|
The Hayseeds' Back-blocks Show
| 5,931,380 | 99 |
[
{
"id": "12883453",
"title": "The Hayseeds' Back-blocks Show",
"text": " The Hayseeds' Back-blocks Show is a 1917 Australian rural comedy from director Beaumont Smith. It was the third in his series about the rural family, the Hayseeds. It is considered a lost film.",
"score": "1.9526232"
},
{
"id": "12883454",
"title": "The Hayseeds' Back-blocks Show",
"text": " Dad Hayseed and his friends from Stoney Creek, including Dad Duggan, Cousin Harold, Sam, Tom, Poppy, Molly, Peter, Hopkins and M'Arthur, decide to hold an agricultural show. They go to Brisbane to ask the Governor of Queensland to open it and he agrees. They form a brass band to play, and the show is a great success.",
"score": "1.8251369"
},
{
"id": "12883456",
"title": "The Hayseeds' Back-blocks Show",
"text": " Like the first two Hayseed movies, Beaumont Smith used local appeal to make them attractive to audiences. This one was shot around Brisbane. It was followed by The Hayseeds' Melbourne Cup.",
"score": "1.8083196"
},
{
"id": "12883455",
"title": "The Hayseeds' Back-blocks Show",
"text": "Fred MacDonald as Jim Hayseed ; Tal Ordell as Dad Hayseed ; Harry McDonna as Cousin Harold ; Agnes Dobson ; Collet Dobson ",
"score": "1.794637"
},
{
"id": "15716392",
"title": "Fred MacDonald",
"text": "The Hayseeds' Back-blocks Show (1917) ; The Hayseeds Come to Sydney (1917) ; The Hayseeds' Melbourne Cup (1918) ; On Our Selection (1932) ; The Squatter's Daughter (1933) ; The Silence of Dean Maitland (1934) ; Grandad Rudd (1935) ; Dad and Dave Come to Town ; Dad Rudd, MP (1940) ",
"score": "1.7723699"
},
{
"id": "12883438",
"title": "The Hayseeds Come to Sydney",
"text": " The film was retitled The Hayseeds Come to Town in markets outside Sydney. It was followed by The Hayseeds' Back-blocks Show.",
"score": "1.7520678"
},
{
"id": "15716468",
"title": "Tal Ordell",
"text": "The Hayseeds' Back-blocks Show (1917) ; The Hayseeds Come to Sydney (1917) ; The Hayseeds' Melbourne Cup (1918) ; On Our Selection (1920) ; The Man from Snowy River (1920) ; Silks and Saddles (1920) – actor ; Cows and Cuddles (1921) (short) – director ; The Gentleman Bushranger (1921) – actor ; Rudd's New Selection (1921) – actor ; While the Billy Boils (1921) – actor ; The Kid Stakes (1927) – actor, writer, producer, director ; The Sentimental Bloke (1932) – actor ; The Hayseeds (1933) – actor ; Harvest Gold (1945) – actor ",
"score": "1.6552374"
},
{
"id": "11050617",
"title": "The Hayseeds",
"text": " The Hayseeds is a 1933 Australian musical comedy from Beaumont Smith. It centres on the rural family, the Hayseeds, about whom Smith had previously made six silent films, starting with Our Friends, the Hayseeds (1917). He retired from directing in 1925 but decided to revive the series in the wake of the box office success of On Our Selection (1932). It was the first starring role in a movie for stage actor Cecil Kellaway. It was also known as The Hayseeds Come to Town.",
"score": "1.5869194"
},
{
"id": "9523591",
"title": "Beaumont Smith",
"text": " Our Friends, the Hayseeds (1917) was shot in South Australia. Many of the cast had appeared in Beaumont Smith's theatrical productions of While the Billy Boils and Seven Little Australians. Smith followed it with The Hayseeds Come to Sydney (1917), shot in Sydney, The Hayseeds' Back-blocks Show (1917), shot in Brisbane, and The Hayseeds' Melbourne Cup (1918), filmed in Melbourne. Smith's first non-Hayseed film was a wartime melodrama, Satan in Sydney (1918). He followed it with Desert Gold (1919), a race horse story, and the comedy Barry Butts In (1919) starring Barry Lupino. In May 1919 he stopped producing films until better terms for exhibiting them could be found. He recommenced production in ",
"score": "1.5139041"
},
{
"id": "9523598",
"title": "Beaumont Smith",
"text": "Our Friends, the Hayseeds (1917) ; The Hayseeds Come to Sydney (1917) ; The Hayseeds' Back-blocks Show (1917) ; The Hayseeds' Melbourne Cup (1918) ; Satan in Sydney (1918) ; Desert Gold (1919) ; Barry Butts In (1919) ; The Man from Snowy River (1920) – based on the poem by Banjo Paterson ; A Journey through Filmland (1921) – documentary ; The Betrayer (1921) ; While the Billy Boils (1921) – based on the stories of Henry Lawson ; The Gentleman Bushranger (1922) ; Townies and Hayseeds (1923) ; Prehistoric Hayseeds (1923) ; The Digger Earl (1924) ; Joe (1924) – based on the story by Henry Lawson ; Hullo Marmaduke (1925) ; The Adventures of Algy (1925) ; The Hayseeds (1933) ; Splendid Fellows (1934) ",
"score": "1.5046644"
},
{
"id": "11050621",
"title": "The Hayseeds",
"text": " There is some debate as to the true director of the film. While some sources say that Beaumont Smith both scripted and directed the picture, Smith himself announced that Raymond Longford would direct the picture, and newspapers of the era also gave the credit to Longford.",
"score": "1.4979887"
},
{
"id": "12883437",
"title": "The Hayseeds Come to Sydney",
"text": " After Our Friends, the Hayseeds, Smith was able to pre-sell this sequel to forty Sydney theatres by the end of that month. This was the first film made by stage actor Fred MacDonald who played Dave Rudd on stage and in several films, notably for Ken G. Hall. The part of Jim Hayseed was similar to Dave Rudd. The movie was filmed in and around Sydney in May 1917, with plenty of scenes of local landmarks such as Taronga Zoo and White City. It was claimed 100,000 people saw the movie being shot. During filming the sequence at Manly Beach, Tal Ordell almost drowned and had to be rescued by the cameraman.",
"score": "1.4883003"
},
{
"id": "12883420",
"title": "Our Friends, the Hayseeds",
"text": " Our Friends, the Hayseeds is a 1917 Australian rural comedy from director Beaumont Smith. It centers on the rural family, the Hayseeds, and their rivalry with a neighbouring family, the Duggans. It was Smith's first movie as a director and was a popular success at the box office, leading to a number of sequels. However no known copy of it exists today and it is considered a lost film.",
"score": "1.4847593"
},
{
"id": "5137907",
"title": "Hayseed (film)",
"text": " Hayseed is a Canadian comedy film, directed by Josh Levy and Andrew Hayes and released in 1997. The film stars Jamie Shannon as Gordon, a naive \"hayseed\" from a small town in Northern Ontario who travels to Toronto after receiving a tip from a psychic that his lost dog is in the city, and meets a bizarre cast of characters, from prostitutes to gay sex slave traders, during his trip. The film's cast includes Deborah Theaker, Elva Mai Hoover, Dan Lett, Daniel MacIvor, Scott Thompson, Mark McKinney, Maria Vacratsis, Dan Redican and Bruce LaBruce. The soundtrack included songs by Andy Kim, Babybird, By Divine Right, Local Rabbits, Odds, Pansy Division, Rusty and Treble Charger. The film premiered at the 1997 Toronto International Film Festival, and was subsequently broadcast on television by Citytv.",
"score": "1.4767355"
},
{
"id": "14474568",
"title": "Bill Carruthers",
"text": " stepped in to direct the show. He was named the permanent director, and moved with his family to Los Angeles in 1959 upon the show becoming nationally distributed. He went on to be the director on The Newlywed Game and The Dating Game before starting his own production company in 1968. His company, The William Carruthers Company, produced the ABC country music series The Johnny Cash Show in 1969 with his partner Joel Stein for Screen Gems. He also produced and directed game shows including Give-n-Take, The Neighbors, Second Chance (all with Warner Bros. Television), Lee Trevino's Golf for Swingers (with advertising agency McCann Erickson) and the 1975 version of You Don't Say! ",
"score": "1.4706671"
},
{
"id": "12883435",
"title": "The Hayseeds Come to Sydney",
"text": " In Stoney Creek, Dad Hayseed (Tal Ordell) wins £5,000 in the lottery and decides to take his family to Sydney. The group includes him, Mum, Sam, Jim (Fred MacDonald), Poppy, Molly, Bubs, Peter, Peter and Cousin Harold. They visit shops, theatres, the gardens, Town Hall, Taronga Zoo and White City. Someone tells them to walk in the middle of the road so none of the footpads that are supposed to wait around the corners could sandbag them. Dad goes surfing at Manly Beach and needs to be rescued. The family meet Norah, a country girl who has gone to work at a low-class Woolloomooloo pub. Dad rescues Norah from the hands of some bad characters. Later on, Dad is enticed to the pub buy two spielers on the pretense that Norah needs him, and is drugged. Norah discovers the plot and tells Jim Hayseed and the rest of the boys, who arrive just in time to save Dad after a brawl. Dad then gets a letter from Tom announcing that old Spotty the cow has got a calf and that Mum's eggs are hatching. This makes them get homesick and they go home.",
"score": "1.4696536"
},
{
"id": "12883423",
"title": "Our Friends, the Hayseeds",
"text": " The movie was inspired by the success of Bert Bailey's stage adaptation of Steele Rudd's Dad and Dave stories, On Our Selection and Philip Lytton's play The Waybacks. Smith had worked with Bailey and Edmund Duggan on the initial production of Selection. Shooting took place on location in South Australia in Campbelltown and Norwood. Many of the cast had appeared in Beaumont Smith's theatrical productions of While the Billy Boils (which he filmed in 1921) and Seven Little Australians. While shooting the bushfire scene off the side of a hill at Campbelltown, the fire got out of control and momentarily trapped the actors. According to contemporary press reports, \"they came out of that fire black as coal heavers, almost blind with smoke, and singed badly. Their faces were a study of horror and fear, and that heartless photographer turned the handle all the time. But he got a most realistic picture.\"",
"score": "1.4640017"
},
{
"id": "14346171",
"title": "Hayseed (album)",
"text": "Producer: Crit Harmon ; Cover art Concept: Amy Reeder ; Engineer: Sean Cahalin, Crit Harmon, Lisa Yves ; Editing: BJ Mansuetti ; Graphic design: Krista Loewen ; Mastering: Glenn Barratt ; Photography: Tracy Button ; Video: James Davies ",
"score": "1.4603171"
},
{
"id": "12883422",
"title": "Our Friends, the Hayseeds",
"text": "Roy Redgrave as Dad Hayseed ; Walter Cornock as Joe Hayseed ; Pearl Hellmrich as Pansy Duggan ; Margaret Gordon as Mrs. Hayseed ; J. Plumpton Wilson as Parson ; H.H. Wallace as Dan Hayseed ; Vera Spaull as Poppy Hayseed ; Cecil Haines as Lizzy Hayseed ; Jack Radford as Tommy Hayseed ; Peter Ward as Peter Hayseed ; Tom Cannam as hired hand ; Percy Mackay as Mr Duggan ; Nan Taylor as Mrs Duggan ; Crosbie Ward as Mike Duggan ; Fred Carlton as Jack Dugggan ; Olga Agnew as Mollie Duggan ; Gerald Kay Souper as parliamentarian ; Esther Mitchell as his wife ",
"score": "1.4530584"
},
{
"id": "12883436",
"title": "The Hayseeds Come to Sydney",
"text": "Fred MacDonald as Jim Hayseed ; Tal Ordell as Dad Hayseed ; Harry McDonna as Cousin Harold ; Gladys Leigh as Mrs Hayseed ; H.H. Wallace ; Jack Lennon ; Connie Metters ; Vera Spaull ; Cecil Haines ; Mattie Ive ; Beaumont Smith as man on railway station ",
"score": "1.443638"
}
] |
Who was the producer of Ghost?
|
[
"Hossein Shahabi"
] |
producer
|
Ghost (1998 film)
| 1,398,873 | 85 |
[
{
"id": "9804259",
"title": "Ghost (producer)",
"text": " Ghost is a Scottish record producer based in London, who primarily produces British hip hop. His stage name is a reference to his tendency to spend a lot of time working in his studio, rather than being seen in public. He has been described by some journalists as one of the UK's top hip hop producers. Ghost also presented the Midweek Session on London radio station Itch FM.",
"score": "1.5784748"
},
{
"id": "7688007",
"title": "Ghost Child",
"text": " Production commenced in September 2012.",
"score": "1.5195049"
},
{
"id": "27738382",
"title": "Steven-Charles Jaffe",
"text": " Steven-Charles Jaffe (born 1951) is an American film producer, director, and screenwriter known for his work on such films as Motel Hell (1980), Near Dark (1987), Strange Days (1995), and the Best Picture-nominated romantic fantasy film Ghost. He is a long-time friend and collaborator of directors Nicholas Meyer and Kathryn Bigelow, and has worked with them on films like Time After Time (1979), Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991), and K-19: The Widowmaker (2002). He is a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.",
"score": "1.5134013"
},
{
"id": "28782751",
"title": "Studio 56",
"text": "Matt Sorum Worked as a producer in the mid 1990s and experienced a ghost in the studio located 7000 Santa Monica Blvd; West Hollywood, CA 90038-1012. ",
"score": "1.5117557"
},
{
"id": "10140350",
"title": "Ghost Story (1974 film)",
"text": " Ghost Story is a 1974 British mystery film directed by Stephen Weeks and starring Marianne Faithfull, Leigh Lawson, Larry Dann and Anthony Bate. Although set in England, the film was almost entirely shot on location in India, much of it at Bangalore Palace, owned by the Maharajah of Mysore. The film features a rare performance from actor Vivian MacKerrell, who was later the inspiration for Withnail in Bruce Robinson's Withnail and I. The story and screenplay are by Philip Norman, Rosemary Sutcliff and Stephen Weeks and music is composed by Ron Geesin. In a 2017 interview for \"The Bill Podcast\", actor Larry Dann revealed he has never been paid for his work on the film.",
"score": "1.5112894"
},
{
"id": "5802468",
"title": "The Ghost (1963 film)",
"text": " The Ghost was shot in Rome. It is a Gothic re-imagining of the film Les Diaboliques (1955). The Italian production crew are credited by aliases. The music score is credited to \"Franck Wallace\", whom Italian magazine Bianco e Nero and the Monthly Film Bulletin claim is a pseudonym for Franco Mannino. When Beat Records re-released the score, they found the tapes credited to Francesco De Masi who is not credited in the film. Riccardo Freda had directed Barbara Steele in the horror film The Horrible Dr. Hichcock the previous year. In that film Steele's character was also married to a Doctor Hichcock, but neither character had any connection with those in The Ghost.",
"score": "1.5110946"
},
{
"id": "32906602",
"title": "Ghost (production team)",
"text": " Ghost is a Swedish record producing and songwriting team, composed of Ulf Lindström and Johan Ekhé, based in New York City. They are perhaps best known for writing and producing Swedish singer Robyn's three first studio albums, Robyn Is Here (1996), My Truth (1999), and Don't Stop the Music (2002). Robyn's \"Keep This Fire Burning\" from 2003 was the fourth most played song by Swedish songwriters on Swedish radio from 2000 to 2009. It was later covered by British soul singer Beverley Knight. In 2005 Darin released \"Money for Nothing\", written by Ghost, Robyn and Danish songwriter Remee, which won a Swedish Grammis award for \"Song of the Year\". Additional credits included Sadie, Orup, Ana Johnsson, No Angels, Laura Pausini, and Thomas Helmig. Ghost co-produced Darin's two albums The Anthem and the self-titled Darin. Co-producers included RedOne, Jörgen Elofsson, Arnthor Birgisson, Johan Brorson and George Samuelson for the first album and RedOne, Samuelson and Elofsson for the second.",
"score": "1.5034959"
},
{
"id": "7308651",
"title": "Kevin Foxe",
"text": "The Ghost Experiment (3D film) (2012) (director, writer, producer) ; Life At Large (2012) (webseries) (actor, co-producer) ; Jackson Horn (2011) (TV) (director, executive producer) ; Orphans of Apollo (2008) (documentary) (co-producer) ; Open 24 Hours (short) (2010-2011) (executive producer) ; Beat The Street (2007) (executive producer) ; Movies That Shook The World (2005) (TV documentary) (actor; himself) ; How to Draw a Bunny (2002) (associate producer) ; American Adobo (2001) (executive producer) ; In The Eye Of The Storm (2001) (producer) ; Miracle Boy and Nyquist (2001) (executive producer) ; Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 (2000) (associate producer) ; The Blair Witch Project (1999) (executive producer) ; Nowhere to Go (1998) (producer) ; \"Ancestors\" (1997) (mini) TV Series (producer) ; Eliza and I (1997) (assistant director) ; Rivalen des Glücks - The Contenders (1993) (producer) ; \"The Stand\" (1994) (mini) TV Series (location manager) ; Homicide (1991) (location manager) ; Valmont (1989) (post-production supervisor) ; Lip Service (1988) (TV) (assistant editor) ; Impure Thoughts (1986) (as Kevin Foxe) .... St. Jude Student ",
"score": "1.5000504"
},
{
"id": "2988636",
"title": "The Ghost of Sierra de Cobre",
"text": " The Ghost of Sierra de Cobre is a 1964 American made-for-television horror–thriller film starring Martin Landau, Judith Anderson and Diane Baker. It was written, produced and directed by Joseph Stefano, author of the screenplay for Alfred Hitchcock's 1960 thriller Psycho. The film was a pilot for a proposed supernatural anthology series for CBS called The Haunted. The series was not picked up after CBS president James T. Aubrey left but some additional footage was filmed and it was released as a standalone film.",
"score": "1.4987532"
},
{
"id": "27738385",
"title": "Steven-Charles Jaffe",
"text": " 1977 horror film Demon Seed, which he co-wrote with his brother Robert and co-produced with his father Herb. He wrote and produced Motel Hell with Robert in 1980. Jaffe formed long-term collaborative partnerships with directors Nicholas Meyer and Kathryn Bigelow, serving as a second unit director and producer on films like Time After Time, Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, and Strange Days. He was an executive producer on the 1990 film Ghost, which won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay and was nominated for Best Picture. In 2008, he formed the independent production company Helix Films with producers Gaukhar Noortas and Kevin Foo. He wrote, produced, and directed Gahan Wilson: Born Dead, Still Weird, a documentary based on the life of the eponymous cartoonist.",
"score": "1.4940445"
},
{
"id": "208411",
"title": "Ghost (1998 film)",
"text": "cinematography: Hamid Angaji ; Sound Recorder: Souroosh Kevan ; Costume Designer: Nina Tabrizi ; Makeup designer: Mohammad Baghban ; Music: Hossein Shahabi ; Production manager: karim Nobakht ; producer: Hossein Shahabi ; produced in Baran film house iran 1998 ",
"score": "1.4931278"
},
{
"id": "3640957",
"title": "Michael C. Gross",
"text": " In 1980, Gross moved to California, where he worked as producer or an executive producer on 11 films, including Heavy Metal, Ghostbusters (he designed the \"no ghosts\" logo, and was surprised to see it so popular that it was painted on the nose of a B-52 bomber ), Ghostbusters II, Twins, Beethoven, Legal Eagles, Kindergarten Cop and Dave. He was also the producer for 5 television shows, including The Real Ghostbusters and Beethoven.",
"score": "1.488764"
},
{
"id": "5802462",
"title": "The Ghost (1963 film)",
"text": " The Ghost (Italian title: Lo Spettro) is a 1963 Italian horror film directed by Riccardo Freda, using the pseudonym \"Robert Hampton\". The film stars Barbara Steele and Peter Baldwin. Other titles for the film include The Spectre and Lo Spettro del Dr. Hichcock.",
"score": "1.4852836"
},
{
"id": "25985224",
"title": "Ghostbusters (2016 film)",
"text": " executive producer. ; Ernie Hudson as Patty's uncle, Bill Jenkins, who works as a mortician ; Sigourney Weaver as Holtzmann's mentor, Dr. Rebecca Gorin ; Annie Potts as hotel-receptionist Vanessa Original Ghostbusters cast members appear in the film: Also, original director and producer Ivan Reitman has a cameo as a passerby, while original cast member Harold Ramis' son Daniel cameos as a metalhead. Harold Ramis' likeness is used on a bust outside Gilbert's office. Karan Soni, Bess Rous, Eugene Cordero, and Milana Vayntrub, who co-starred with Casey on director Paul Feig's series Other Space, portray deliveryman Benny, the ghost of Gertrude Aldridge, a bass guitarist, and a woman attacked by rat ghosts. ",
"score": "1.4825424"
},
{
"id": "32955434",
"title": "The Ghost Writer (film)",
"text": " A ghostwriter (Ewan McGregor) is hired by a publishing firm to complete the autobiography of the former British Prime Minister Adam Lang (Pierce Brosnan). The Ghost's predecessor and Lang's aide, Mike McAra, has recently died in a drowning accident. The Ghost travels to Old Haven on Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, where Lang and his wife Ruth (Olivia Williams) are staying. Originally staying at a hotel, The Ghost is relocated to Lang's estate when the media descend on the island since he has learned of Lang's presence there. The former British Foreign Secretary Richard Rycart (Robert Pugh) accuses Lang of authorizing the ",
"score": "1.4824886"
},
{
"id": "9804262",
"title": "Ghost (producer)",
"text": "Seldom Seen Often Heard (2006, Breakin Bread) ; Seldom Seen Often Heard (2006, CCR Records, Japan) ; My Soul Looks Like This Mix CD (2008, Breakin Bread) ; Freedom of Thought (2009, Breakin Bread) ; Freedom of Thought (2009, Guinness Records, Japan) ; Postcards from the Edge (2010, Musicforheads) ",
"score": "1.4818562"
},
{
"id": "6048194",
"title": "List of Power episodes",
"text": " Upon his release, Ghost discovers that Tasha, whose accounts were frozen during the investigation, accepted a large loan from Simon Stern to pay the family’s bills. As payback, Stern forces Ghost to be his partner in a real estate development that requires a Black owner. Against Stern’s wishes, Ghost supports Councilman Rashad Tate’s proposal to develop the run-down neighborhood where Ghost grew up. Tate helps Ghost develop his public image and forces Stern to change his partnership contract to benefit Ghost, but Tate makes clear that he expects favors from Ghost in return. Local waitress Maria Suarez recognizes Ghost’s voice from a TV interview as the man who shot her ",
"score": "1.4806992"
},
{
"id": "3977790",
"title": "Ghost Hunters (TV series)",
"text": "Jason Hawes - lead investigator/producer/TAPS Founder (2004–2016; 2021–present) ; Steve Gonsalves – co-lead investigator, previously tech manager (2004–2016; 2021–present) ; Dave Tango – tech manager/investigator (2005–2016; 2021–present) ; Shari DeBenedetti – investigator (2016; 2021–present) ",
"score": "1.4735439"
},
{
"id": "13196069",
"title": "Ghost Light Projects",
"text": "Randie Parliament - Artistic Producer (2009-2015) ; Greg Bishop - Associate Producer (2012-2015) ; Brenda Matthews - Associate Producer (2009-2013) ; T.J. Tasker (2009) ",
"score": "1.4704144"
},
{
"id": "2975784",
"title": "James Van Praagh",
"text": " Van Praagh served as co-executive producer on the CBS show Ghost Whisperer, which starred Jennifer Love Hewitt. Though the work and experiences of Van Praagh may have influenced the teleplay, Ghost Whisperer was actually inspired by psychic Mary Ann Wynchowski, a woman whom Van Praagh met while filming Beyond with James Van Praagh in 2002. Ghost Whisperer ran for five seasons from September 23, 2005 to May 21, 2010 on CBS.",
"score": "1.4624455"
}
] |
Who was the producer of From Now On?
|
[
"Paulo Branco"
] |
producer
|
From Now On (film)
| 4,171,110 | 72 |
[
{
"id": "32185881",
"title": "From Now On (film)",
"text": " From Now On (Daqui P'ra Frente) is a 2007 Portuguese film directed by Catarina Ruivo, written by Ruivo and Antonio Figueiredo and produced by Paulo Branco. The film stars Luís Miguel Cintra, Adelaide de Sousa, Antonio Figueiredo, Edgar Morais and Alexandre Pinto.",
"score": "1.6654007"
},
{
"id": "32185884",
"title": "From Now On (film)",
"text": " From Now On screened for the first time in 2007 at the Rio Film Festival, (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) and was widely released in Portugal, France and Germany on September 18, 2007. The official premiere took place in Lisbon, Portugal on January 24, 2008.",
"score": "1.627239"
},
{
"id": "9301362",
"title": "From Now On (Will Young album)",
"text": "Notes ; undefined signifies a co-producer ",
"score": "1.6051849"
},
{
"id": "10287687",
"title": "From Now On (EP)",
"text": "All tracks produced by Metro Boomin and Southside. ",
"score": "1.5940291"
},
{
"id": "10287685",
"title": "From Now On (EP)",
"text": " From Now On is the second extended play by American rapper Dreezy. It was released December 25, 2015. The entire EP was produced by Metro Boomin and Southside.",
"score": "1.5903045"
},
{
"id": "1164315",
"title": "From Now On...",
"text": " From Now On... is a solo studio album by former Deep Purple, Black Sabbath and Trapeze bassist/vocalist Glenn Hughes. It was released in 1994 and had a distinctive AOR sound.",
"score": "1.5693109"
},
{
"id": "31236497",
"title": "From Now On (Jaki Graham album)",
"text": " From Now On is the third studio album by British soul singer Jaki Graham. It was released on 19 September 1989 in the United Kingdom by EMI Records and in the United States by Orpheus Records.",
"score": "1.5674689"
},
{
"id": "9301359",
"title": "From Now On (Will Young album)",
"text": " From Now On is the debut studio album by English recording artist Will Young. It was released on 14 October 2002, eight months after he won the first series of Pop Idol. The album reached number one on the UK Albums Chart, having sold 187,350 copies in its first week of sales. From Now On has now sold just over 880,000 copies.",
"score": "1.5614592"
},
{
"id": "32185885",
"title": "From Now On (film)",
"text": "Won: Best Film 2008 Caminhos do Cinema Português",
"score": "1.5480604"
},
{
"id": "26558315",
"title": "From Now...",
"text": " From Now... is the debut studio album from English singer Rik Waller, a finalist in 2001 of the reality TV series Pop Idol. His album was released in July 2002. It features his first two singles, \"I Will Always Love You\" and \"(Something Inside) So Strong\", both of which were UK Top 40 hits.",
"score": "1.5278713"
},
{
"id": "26945985",
"title": "From Now On (Sonny Fortune album)",
"text": " From Now On is an album by saxophonist Sonny Fortune which was recorded in 1996 and released on the Blue Note label.",
"score": "1.5182643"
},
{
"id": "32185883",
"title": "From Now On (film)",
"text": "Luís Miguel Cintra as Antonio ; Adelaide de Sousa as Dora ; Edgar Morais as Nelson ; Alexandre Pinto as Jorge ; Antonio Figueiredo as Policeman ",
"score": "1.4978607"
},
{
"id": "4377400",
"title": "Mike Bennett (writer)",
"text": " Mike Bennett (born 1962, Cheltenham, England) is a British writer and record producer. His first involvement with the music industry came when he was asked to write and produce Toyah Wilcox's Dreamchild album's tracks \"Now and Then\" and \"Out of the Blue\", which was released on Cryptic Records, and featured collaborations with Tim Utah of the Utah Saints.",
"score": "1.4975402"
},
{
"id": "11009003",
"title": "Daringer (producer)",
"text": "Don't Get Scared Now ; Hell Still on Earth ",
"score": "1.4943299"
},
{
"id": "2798875",
"title": "Now Production",
"text": " Now Production Co., Ltd. (株式会社ナウプロダクション) (Stylized as NOWPRO) is a Japanese video game developer headquartered in Chūō-ku, Osaka. Founded in 1986, it started developing various games for major Japanese companies including Namco, Hudson Soft, Capcom, Activision, Taito, Konami, Sega, and Nintendo. The company used to have a development department in East Ikebukuro, Toshima-ku, but it is now closed. Now Production has also been developing and selling software applications for iPhone and iPod touch since 2009.",
"score": "1.4926684"
},
{
"id": "31236500",
"title": "From Now On (Jaki Graham album)",
"text": "Jaki Graham – vocals Phillip Ingram – vocals on \"I Still Run to You\" David Gamson – producer ; Derek Bramble – producer (2–4, 6) ; David Pack – producer (5) ; Kurtis Mantronik – producer (7) ; Pete Wingfield – producer (8) ; Richard James Burgess – producer (9) ; Weldon Cochren – coordinator Andy Earl – photography Additional musicians Production Design",
"score": "1.4889519"
},
{
"id": "31236498",
"title": "From Now On (Jaki Graham album)",
"text": " Ron Wynn of AllMusic wrote, \"A gifted British soul vocalist, Jaki Graham has seldom gotten the kind of songs that her great skills could turn into breakout hits. These are mostly disposable formula filler that she tries to elevate but can't, despite often stunning vocal treatments. She's a great producer away from being a star, and could certainly be a great disco diva with the right tracks.\" From Now On was reissued on CD on 24 April 2009 through Parlophone Records.",
"score": "1.4877462"
},
{
"id": "32185882",
"title": "From Now On (film)",
"text": " Dora (Adelaide de Sousa) divides her time between her work as a beautician, her life with her police officer husband António (Luís Miguel Cintra), and her involvement in left-wing politics.",
"score": "1.4844041"
},
{
"id": "24890895",
"title": "Where Will I Be Now",
"text": "Producer - Harry Maslin ; Written By - Chris East ",
"score": "1.4756994"
},
{
"id": "9301365",
"title": "From Now On (Will Young album)",
"text": " London Community Gospel Choir – gospel choir ; Per Magnusson – producer, arrangement ; David Kreuger – producer, arrangement, programming ; Cathy Dennis – producer, programmer ; Oskar Paul – producer, programmer ; Absolute – producer ; Mike Peden – producer ; Fabian Waltmann – producer, arrangement, additional drum programming, engineer ; Stephen Lipson – producer ; Richard 'Biff' Stannard – producer ; Julian Gallagher – producer, programmer ; Jörgen Elofsson – co-producer ; Bernard Löhr – mixer ; Adrian Bushby – mixer ; Steve Fitzmaurice – mixer ; Brad Gilderman – mixer ; Phillipe Rose – assistant mixer ; Jimmy Robertson ",
"score": "1.4713002"
}
] |
Who was the producer of John Heriot's Wife?
|
[
"Maurits Binger",
"Maurits H. Binger"
] |
producer
|
John Heriot's Wife
| 2,049,387 | 72 |
[
{
"id": "29583726",
"title": "John Heriot's Wife",
"text": " John Heriot's Wife (De vrouw van de minister) is a 1920 Dutch-British silent crime film directed by Maurits Binger.",
"score": "1.6726089"
},
{
"id": "29583727",
"title": "John Heriot's Wife",
"text": "Mary Odette - Camilla Rivers ; Lola Cornero - Tante Lady Foxborough ; Henry Victor - John Heriot ; Annie Bos - Weduwe Clara Headcombe (as Anna Bosilova) ; Adelqui Migliar - Eric Ashlyn ; Renee Spiljar ; Carl Tobi ; Alex Benno ; Reginald Lawson ; Leni Marcus ; Fred Homann ",
"score": "1.559339"
},
{
"id": "12580710",
"title": "John Heriot (journalist)",
"text": " Heriot, now living in London, had mortgaged his pay to help support his parents, and was without any source of income. In an attempt to support himself, he wrote two novels - The Sorrows of the Heart (1787), and The Half-Pay Officer (1789), the latter of which was semi-autobiographical. These raised enough to support him for two years, during which time he married Alison Shiriff, with whom he had two daughters. He was hired as one of a number of journalists who wrote pamphlets and newspaper articles in support of the government during the winter of 1788–89, when George III's insanity had become a matter of very contentious debate. After the insanity crisis had passed, he was put on a permanent salary to continue this work; by 1791, he was drawing ",
"score": "1.4427147"
},
{
"id": "12580706",
"title": "John Heriot (journalist)",
"text": " John Heriot (22 April 1760 – 2 August 1833) was a Scottish journalist and writer. He was forced to join the Royal Marines due to family hardship, and served as a junior officer during the American Revolutionary War. He was wounded in 1780 at the Battle of Martinique, and retired from the service in 1783; after living in financial difficulties for some years, he published two moderately successful novels in the 1780s, the second of which drew extensively on his experiences as a half-pay officer. He was recruited as a pro-government journalist and pamphleteer in 1788, and placed on a salary the following year. He became the founder and sole editor of two pro-government daily newspapers, the Sun and the True Briton, which ran for over a decade, and eventually retired from journalistic work in 1806. He was appointed to a number of government posts, most significantly the comptrollership of Chelsea Hospital, the post he held at his death. He was a distant relative of the philanthropist George Heriot, and the younger brother of the Scots-Canadian artist George Heriot.",
"score": "1.440887"
},
{
"id": "12817105",
"title": "Beryl Vertue",
"text": " America. These successes included Steptoe and Son, which became Sanford and Son in the US, and Till Death Us Do Part, which was turned into All in the Family. In 1975, she was a co-executive producer of the cinema version of The Who's rock opera Tommy, directed by Ken Russell and starring Roger Daltrey. In the 1980s, Vertue formed Hartswood Films, which has produced many comedies including Men Behaving Badly, Is It Legal?, and Coupling. The latter was produced by her daughter Sue Vertue and written by son-in-law Steven Moffat. She also served as executive producer of their dramatic series Sherlock.",
"score": "1.4028087"
},
{
"id": "26981159",
"title": "John Percival (TV producer)",
"text": " Percival and his first wife, the TV presenter and author Jacky Gillott, had two sons; she took her own life in 1980. He married his second wife, Lalage, in 1984, and they had a daughter. He contracted cancer and died in London on 6 February 2005.",
"score": "1.4006798"
},
{
"id": "8876962",
"title": "John's Other Wife",
"text": " John's Other Wife centered around a store executive, his wife, and a woman who worked for him. The man in the title was John Perry, who owned Perry's Department Store. His insecure wife, Elizabeth, suspected John of being romantically involved with either Annette Rogers, his secretary, or Martha Curtis, his assistant. The program was one of many soap operas created and produced by Frank Hummert and his wife, Anne. Sponsors included Bi-So-Dol, Old English floor wax, Louis Phillipe lipstick and Freezone. The theme was \"The Sweetest Story Ever Told\", by Stanley Davis. Beginning on May 8, 1939, John's Other Wife was broadcast via electrical transcription on WMCA in New York City in addition to its regular network airings. It was one of eight Blackett-Sample-Hummert programs to do so as a means of increasing New York City coverage for BSH clients.",
"score": "1.4004537"
},
{
"id": "12580707",
"title": "John Heriot (journalist)",
"text": " Heriot was born at Haddington in 1760, the second son of John Heriot, the sheriff clerk of the town, and his wife Marjory; his older brother was George Heriot, later to become a prominent artist. The Heriots were part of the long-established family of the Heriots of Trabroun, the most well-known member of which was the seventeenth-century goldsmith and philanthropist George Heriot. The family moved to Edinburgh in 1772, where Heriot attended the Edinburgh Royal High School; he had previously been educated at the Coldstream grammar school He studied at the University of Edinburgh after leaving the high school, but the collapse of his father's business in 1777 meant that he had to leave and seek employment. He lived for three months ",
"score": "1.3891175"
},
{
"id": "30046195",
"title": "Lola Cornero",
"text": "John Heriot's Wife (1920) ; As God Made Her (1920) ; Het verborgen leven (1920) ; Zonnetje (1919) ; Amerikaansche meisjes (1918) ; Oorlog en vrede - 1918 (1918) ; Oorlog en vrede - 1916 (1918) ; Oorlog en vrede - 1914 (1918) ; Toen 't licht verdween (1918) ; De kroon der schande (1918) ; Ulbo Garvema (1917) ; Gouden ketenen (1917) ; Madame Pinkette & Co (1917) ; La renzoni (1916) ; Majoor Frans (1916) ; Liefdesoffer (1916) ; Vogelvrij (1916) ",
"score": "1.3882748"
},
{
"id": "25065183",
"title": "Herk Harvey",
"text": " built by Harvey himself. Harvey and his first wife Bea were divorced in 1960, due to the latter's infidelity, and shortly afterward Harvey met Pauline G. Pappas, who was one of the investors for Carnival of Souls. The two were married in 1967. When a crew from ABC came to Lawrence in 1982 to shoot the controversial television movie on nuclear war, The Day After, they cast Harvey in a small speaking role as a farmer, while also casting a handful of other local thespians. The film was broadcast to much international publicity and controversy in 1983. In 1981, Arthur Wolf and Russell Mosser had sold Centron to the ",
"score": "1.379074"
},
{
"id": "15375625",
"title": "Robert Jousie",
"text": " jeweller to Charles I of England, and a son of George Heriot (died 1610), at St Mary Magdalen, Bermondsey. After James Heriot's death, Elizabeth Jousie married David Cunningham of Robertland in 1637, who corresponded with his cousin, the receiver of royal rents, David Cunningham of Auchenharvie about the match. Auchenharvie mentioned her in his letters as Heriot's \"sweet bedfellow\" and wrote in 1635 that \"she is yet a widow but not like to continue, being much importuned with sundry suitors of quality\". Auchenharvie sided with Elizabeth Jousie and Robert Jousie junior in a lawsuit in 1636. Jousie's wife was ",
"score": "1.3668454"
},
{
"id": "3373814",
"title": "All Over",
"text": " Shropshire (the Wife), Myra Carter (the Mistress), Anne Lynn (the Daughter), William Prince (the Best Friend), Pirie MacDonald (the Son), Margaret Thomson (the Nurse), and David O. Petersen (the Doctor). The production was subsequently filmed for television, presented by PBS Great Performances, and aired on 28 April 1976 on WNET Channel 13 in New York. The DVD is available through the Broadway Theatre Archive series. In February 2002, the play was again revived at the McCarter Theatre, Princeton, New Jersey. Directed by Emily Mann, the cast featured Rosemary Harris (the Wife), Pamela Nyberg (the Daughter), Michael Learned (the Mistress), William Biff McGuire (the Doctor), John Christopher Jones (the Son), John Carter (the Best Friend), and Myra Carter (the Nurse).",
"score": "1.3664203"
},
{
"id": "29904857",
"title": "Alex Benno",
"text": "John Heriot's Wife (1920) ; Schakels (1920) ; Brotherhood of Steel (1918) ; Madame Pinkette & Co (1917) ; Majoor Frans (1916) ; Vogelvrij (1916) ; Het geheim van den vuurtoren (1916) ; Koningin Elisabeth's dochter (1915) ; Ontmaskerd (1915) ; Toffe jongens onder de mobilisatie (1914) ; Luchtkastelen (1914) ; Weergevonden (1914) ; Heilig recht (1914) ; Liefde waakt (1914) ; Krates (1913) ; De levende ladder (1913) ",
"score": "1.3631899"
},
{
"id": "12580712",
"title": "John Heriot (journalist)",
"text": " Briton continued for eleven years before collapsing, whilst the Sun survived until Heriot retired in 1806. He continued to write during this period, including a history of Gibraltar (1792) to accompany a work by the artist Antonio de Poggi, and an account of the Battle of the Nile (1798). He was closely connected with the governing circles of the day, and through his personal connections with Pitt the Younger was able to secure two important government posts for his brother George in Upper Canada. He left newspaper work in 1806 and became a commissioner for the lottery; in 1810 he was made an Army deputy paymaster-general in the West Indies; and in 1816 the comptroller of Chelsea Hospital. He died in 1833, of \"sudden paralysis\", three days after his wife.",
"score": "1.3631709"
},
{
"id": "25220910",
"title": "George Heriot (artist)",
"text": " Heriot was born at Haddington, Scotland, in 1759, the eldest child of John Heriot, the sheriff clerk of the town, and his wife Marjory. The Heriots were part of the long-established family of the Heriots of Trabroun, the most well-known member of which was the seventeenth-century goldsmith and philanthropist George Heriot. He was educated at Duns and the Coldstream grammar school, before attending the Edinburgh Royal High School from 1769 to 1774, where he received a conventional classical education. After leaving the Royal High School he remained in Edinburgh, where he studied art under the encouragement of Sir James Grant. In 1777 he travelled to London, apparently with the intention of beginning an artistic career, but instead found himself on a voyage to ",
"score": "1.3594253"
},
{
"id": "27442499",
"title": "Her Husband's Secretary",
"text": " Her Husband's Secretary is a 1937 American drama film directed by Frank McDonald and written by Lillie Hayward. The film stars Jean Muir, Beverly Roberts, Warren Hull, Joseph Crehan, Clara Blandick and Addison Richards. The film was released by Warner Bros. on February 26, 1937.",
"score": "1.355663"
},
{
"id": "13666956",
"title": "Ian Malcolm (politician)",
"text": " On 30 June 1902 at St. Margaret's, Westminster, he married Jeanne Langtry, daughter of Lillie Langtry, the famous actress. Breaking all tradition, the bride was given away by her mother. Unfortunately, Malcolm's family was far from impressed by their new daughter-in-law's mother—it is likely they were highly aware that Jeanne Marie's father was not Lillie Langtry's first husband, Edward Langtry, but Prince Louis of Battenberg. Lillie saw less and less of her daughter. Jeanne and Sir Ian lived alternately in a house in Belgravia, London, or at the Malcolm's family seat at Poltalloch in Scotland. They had four children: George Ian (who later succeeded as 18th Laird of Poltalloch) (1903–1976); Victor Neill (the first husband of the actress Ann Todd) (1905–1977) and Angus Christian Edward (1908–1971); and Helen Mary (1918–2010). Mary later became one of the first two female announcers on the BBC Television Service (now BBC One) from 1948 to 1956, during which time she became a household name in the UK. She died on 13 October 2010 at the age of 92.",
"score": "1.3528631"
},
{
"id": "29570810",
"title": "James Heriot-Maitland",
"text": "Brigadier-General James Dalgleish Heriot-Maitland (1874–1958), Rifle Brigade (The Prince Consort's Own) ; Major John Campbell Heriot-Maitland (1874–1934) Heriot-Maitland married first, in 1872, to Frances Lorne Mary Campbell, daughter of General Sir John Campbell. After her death in 1876, he married in 1882 Jessie Stewart Hutchings, daughter of Captain George Hutchings, RN. He had two sons (twins) with his first wife, who both followed their father in the army:",
"score": "1.3499548"
},
{
"id": "29090909",
"title": "Wives and Daughters",
"text": " In 1971, a television adaptation was made. In 1999, BBC produced a four-part serial based on the novel with a screenplay written by Andrew Davies; Wives and Daughters featuring Justine Waddell, Bill Paterson, Francesca Annis, Keeley Hawes, Rosamund Pike, Tom Hollander, Anthony Howell, Michael Gambon, Penelope Wilton, Barbara Flynn, Deborah Findlay, Iain Glen, Barbara Leigh-Hunt, and Ian Carmichael.",
"score": "1.349945"
},
{
"id": "12635768",
"title": "Meet the Wife (TV series)",
"text": " Meet the Wife is a 1960s BBC situation comedy written by Ronald Chesney and Ronald Wolfe, which featured Freddie Frinton as Freddie Blacklock with Thora Hird as his tyrannical wife, Thora. It ran for five series. The series was based on a 1963 BBC television Comedy Playhouse production, \"The Bed\". The theme tune was by Russ Conway and incidental music by Norman Percival and later Dennis Wilson. The producers were John Paddy Carstairs and later Robin Nash.",
"score": "1.349339"
}
] |
Who was the producer of Italian Style?
|
[
"Kristen Bjorn",
"Robert Russell"
] |
producer
|
Italian Style (2000 film)
| 34,955 | 19 |
[
{
"id": "25855350",
"title": "Weekend, Italian Style",
"text": " L'ombrellone or Weekend, Italian Style is a 1966 Italian comedy-drama film directed by Dino Risi. It was co-produced with Spain and France. The soundtrack is full of Italian Pop songs from the 1960s.",
"score": "1.5111415"
},
{
"id": "11971281",
"title": "Emilio Schuberth",
"text": " In 1940 he established his own company, \"Schuberth Emilio\" located on via Lazio n. 9, however because of the popularity he moved locations within the same year to via XX Settembre n. 4, where his atelier remained. The inside of the atelier was designed and decorated similarly to the Parisian ateliers. His clothing highlighted la bella figura, the Italian feminine ideal of “sensuality, grace, and love of leisure,” which was a popular aesthetic during the 1950s and often seen in Italian cinema from the postwar-era. His popularity as a designer grew starting around December 1948 during the fashion show, ''French Fashion? Italian fashion'' at Casino de la Vallée in ",
"score": "1.4810604"
},
{
"id": "756769",
"title": "Renzo Marignano",
"text": "Divorce Italian Style (1961) - Politician ; La vita agra (1964) - Swiss man (uncredited) ; Countersex (1964) - (segment \"Cocaina di domenica\") (uncredited) ; Made in Italy (1965) - The Snob (segment \"1 'Usi e costumi', episode 1\") ; Pleasant Nights (1966) - Friend of Luca ; Fantabulous Inc. (1967) - The Director of Commercial ; Caprice Italian Style (1968) - L'automobilista (segment \"Perche\"?\") / Principe consorte (segment \"Viaggio di lavoro\") ; Operation Snafu (1970) ; Il trapianto (1970) - The tall Envoy of the Weisses-Kreuz Klinik ; The Divorce (1970) - Marco ; Dorian Gray (1970) - Pornografic Editor (uncredited) ",
"score": "1.4734708"
},
{
"id": "5559744",
"title": "Caprice Italian Style",
"text": " Caprice Italian Style (Capriccio all'italiana) is a 1968 Italian comedy film directed by six different directors, including Mario Monicelli and Pier Paolo Pasolini. The film starred both Totò and the comedy team of Franco and Ciccio.",
"score": "1.4713547"
},
{
"id": "7092770",
"title": "Luigi Creatore",
"text": " Luigi Federico Creatore (December 21, 1921 – December 13, 2015) was an American songwriter and record producer. Creatore was born in New York City in 1921, the son of noted Italian-born bandleader and composer Giuseppe Creatore. After serving with the United States military during World War II, in the 1950s he became a writer then partnered with his cousin, Hugo Peretti to form the songwriting team of Hugo & Luigi which also produced other records. In 1957, they bought into Roulette Records where they both wrote songs for various artists such as Valerie Carr and produced major hits for Jimmie Rodgers including \"Honeycomb\" (Billboard #1) and \"Kisses Sweeter Than Wine\" (Billboard #3), and \"Oh-Oh, I'm Falling in Love Again\" and ",
"score": "1.4693382"
},
{
"id": "12627612",
"title": "Divorce Italian Style",
"text": " Divorce Italian Style was released in Rome in December 1961.",
"score": "1.4664556"
},
{
"id": "3031637",
"title": "Italian fashion",
"text": " (designed by Simon Holloway), Luisa Beccaria, Laura Biagiotti, Blumarine (created by Anna Molinari), Chiara Boni la petit robe, Capucci (directed by Mario Dice), Alberta Ferretti, Elisabetta Franchi, Giamba (created by designer Giambattista Valli), Krizia (founded by Mariuccia Mandelli and now art directored by Zhu Chongyun), Max Mara (created by Laura Lusuardi), Miu Miu (founded and directed by Miuccia Prada), Philosophy (directed by Lorenzo Serafini), Emilio Pucci, Simonetta Ravizza, Mila Schon and Twin-set Milano whilst the most important luxury houses which focus only on menswear and accessories for men are Brioni, Canali, Caruso, Corneliani, Lardini, MP Massimo Piombo, Stefano Ricci, Ermenegildo Zegna (directed by Alessandro Sartori) and Pal Zileri (created by Rocco ",
"score": "1.4663956"
},
{
"id": "28985197",
"title": "Alessi (Italian company)",
"text": " In 1970, Alberto Alessi was responsible for the third transformation of the company. Alessi was considered one of the \"Italian Design Factories\". In this decade under the leadership of Alberto Alessi the company collaborated with some design maestros like Achille Castiglioni, Richard Sapper, Alessandro Mendini, and Ettore Sottsass. In the '70's, Alessi produced the Condiment set (salt, pepper and toothpicks) by Ettore Sottsass, the Espressomaker by Sapper. The 1980s marked a period in which Italian design factories had to compete with mass production. These movements had a different view on design, for the Italian design factories the design and therefore the designer was the most important part of the process while for the ",
"score": "1.459943"
},
{
"id": "3031636",
"title": "Italian fashion",
"text": " directed by Francesco Risso) ; Antonio Marras ; Missoni ; Moncler ; Moschino (directed by Jeremy Scott) ; MSGM (directed by Massimo Giorgetti) ; N°21 (created by Alessandro Dell'Acqua) ; Prada ; Renato Balestra ; Roberto Cavalli ; Salvatore Ferragamo (designed by Paul Andrew for women's shoes and apparel and Guillame Meilland for men's lines) ; Tod's (designed by Andrea Incontri regarding men's lines) ; Trussardi ; Valentino (directed by Pier Paolo Piccioli) ; Versace (directed by Donatella Versace) Examples of major Italian fashion houses focused on both menswear and womenswear, but also accessories: Examples of major fashion brands which are specialized mainly at womenswear (and also accessories for women) are ",
"score": "1.4591004"
},
{
"id": "6073291",
"title": "History of Italian fashion",
"text": " In the post-war, Italian handmade items were recognized as high quality and low-cost products. Italy adopted American methods of production and took advantage of preexisting connections between Italian tailors that emigrated to the United States. The United States helped to Italian textile and clothing industry to integrate into the world, creating also a demand for Italian products. In Florence, Giovanni Battista Giorgini achieved the first contact between Italian fashion and American buyers. He convinced Italian designers to show their works to fashion journalists and American buyers. On 12 February 1951, the Italian businessman Giovanni Battista Giorgini held a fashion show in Florence to make Italy an international leader in ",
"score": "1.45886"
},
{
"id": "31834521",
"title": "Italian-American cuisine",
"text": " the star of television Food Network's Everyday Italian and Behind the Bash, De Laurentiis' cooking style bridges the gap between Italian and Italian American food. ; Editoriale Domus (editor), The Silver Spoon (original title, \"Il cucchiaio d'argento\"). London: Phaidon Press, 2005, ISBN: 0-7148-4531-0: An English translation of a best-selling Italian kitchen reference providing a broad survey of the dishes popular around Italy; provided for comparison with the references about American Italian food. ; Gabaccia, Donna, \"Food, Recipes, Cookbooks, and Italian American Life\" pp. 121–155 in American Woman, Italian Style, Fordham Press, 2011. ISBN: 978-0-8232-3176-8. ; Gentile, Maria, The Italian ",
"score": "1.4525043"
},
{
"id": "12627604",
"title": "Divorce Italian Style",
"text": " Divorce Italian Style (Divorzio all'italiana) is a 1961 Italian drama-comedy film directed by Pietro Germi. The screenplay is by Germi, Ennio De Concini, Alfredo Giannetti, and Agenore Incrocci, based on Giovanni Arpino's novel Un delitto d'onore (Honour Killing). It stars Marcello Mastroianni, Daniela Rocca, Stefania Sandrelli, Lando Buzzanca, and Leopoldo Trieste. The movie won the Academy Award for Best Writing, Story and Screenplay - Written Directly for the Screen; Mastroianni was nominated for Best Actor in a Leading Role and Germi for Best Director.",
"score": "1.4485312"
},
{
"id": "11843035",
"title": "Adultery Italian Style",
"text": " Adultery Italian Style (Adulterio all'italiana) is a 1966 Italian comedy film written and directed by Pasquale Festa Campanile.",
"score": "1.446727"
},
{
"id": "32187235",
"title": "Italian Americans",
"text": " motion picture to be made in the U.S. Other companies founded by Italian Americans – such as Ghirardelli Chocolate Company, Progresso, Planters Peanuts, Contadina, Chef Boyardee, Italian Swiss Colony wines and Jacuzzi – became nationally known brand names in time. An Italian immigrant, Italo Marciony (Marcioni), is credited with inventing the earliest version of an ice cream cone in 1898. Another Italian immigrant, Giuseppe Bellanca, brought with him in 1912 an advanced aircraft design, which he began producing. It was Charles Lindbergh's first choice for his flight across the Atlantic, but other factors ruled this out; however, one of Bellanca's planes, piloted ",
"score": "1.4397361"
},
{
"id": "5839506",
"title": "Italian design",
"text": " and \"Linea Italiana\" entered the vocabulary of furniture design. Ever since the late 1970s and early 1980s, some equipment began to be logoed by notable Italian fashion houses, such as Prada, Versace, Armani, Gucci and Moschino. Examples of classic pieces of Italian furniture include Zanussi's rigorous, creative and streamlined washing machines and fridges, the \"New Tone\" sofas by Atrium, and most famously the innovative post-modern bookcase, made by Ettore Sottsass for the Memphis Group in 1981, inspired by Bob Dylan's song \"Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again\". The bookcase became a huge cultural icon and design event of the 1980s. Modern Italian design has changed the meaning of style and elegance and many interior designers use Italian or Italian inspired pieces in their work.",
"score": "1.4320027"
},
{
"id": "15868126",
"title": "Charles Stendig",
"text": " in Turin, and began importing the pop designs of Giuseppe Raimondi, Guido Drocco Franco Mello and Studio65, and others, icons of the Anti-Design movement in Italy. In 1973, Ceretti-DeRossi-Rosso’s Puffo stool and Piero Gilardi’s foam carpets were added to the collection. Other designers represented by Stendig, Inc. over the years included the Swiss Ubald Klug, the American Andrew Morrison, and the Swede father-and-son duo Carl Erik and Jan Ekselius. Stendig believed that the company’s visual identity should be at the same level as the furniture, so he hired innovative graphic designers to create promotional materials for the company. In its first years, Stendig relied on Ivan Chermayeff and Tom ",
"score": "1.4299636"
},
{
"id": "986697",
"title": "Vincenzo Ferdinandi",
"text": " for her role as ambassador of Italian fashion in the United States. Defying the conventions of the time (it was in the early fifties), he is the first to show an afro-American girl in a fashion parade, the young model Dolores Francine Rhiney. His creations are worn by actresses and famous women of those years. Jennifer Jones, May Britt, Virna Lisi, Sylva Koscina, Isabella Albonico, Eloisa Cianni, Lucia Bosè, Lilli Cerasoli, Ivy Nicholson, Loredana Pavone, Joe Patterson, Anna Maria Ghislanzoni, Marta Marzotto and a very young Elsa Martinelli are some of these In 2014, the Maxxi museum in Rome as part of the \"Bellissima\" exhibition numbers him among the pioneers of Italian fashion",
"score": "1.4280863"
},
{
"id": "6540247",
"title": "Art Nouveau",
"text": " Art Nouveau in Italy was known as arte nuova, stile floreale, stile moderno and especially stile Liberty. Liberty style took its name from Arthur Lasenby Liberty and the store he founded in 1874 in London, Liberty Department Store, which specialised in importing ornaments, textiles and art objects from Japan and the Far East, and whose colourful textiles which were particularly popular in Italy. Notable Italian designers in the style included Galileo Chini, whose ceramics were often inspired both by majolica patterns. He was later known as a painter and a theatrical scenery designer; he designed the sets for two celebrated Puccini operas Gianni Schicchi and Turandot. Liberty ",
"score": "1.4247346"
},
{
"id": "3031635",
"title": "Italian fashion",
"text": "Byblos (designed by Manuel Facchini) ; Bottega Veneta (designed by Daniel Lee) ; Costume National ; Brunello Cucinelli ; Diesel ; Dolce & Gabbana ; Ermanno Scervino ; Etro ; Fay (headed by Arthur Arbesser) ; Fendi (previously directed by Karl Lagerfeld for women's clothes and ready to wear and by Silvia Venturini Fendi for accessories and men's lines) ; Fiorucci ; Frankie Morello ; Gattinoni ; Genny (designed by Sara Cavazza Facchini) ; Giorgio Armani ; Gucci (directed by Alessandro Michele) ; Hogan ; Iceberg (directed by James Long) ; Richmond ; Kiton ; La Perla (directed by Julia Haart) ; Loro Piana ; Marni (founded by Consuelo Castiglioni and ",
"score": "1.4239342"
},
{
"id": "3031634",
"title": "Italian fashion",
"text": " produce parts of their apparel and accessories. The nonprofit association that co-ordinates and promotes the development of Italian fashion is the National Chamber of Italian Fashion (Camera Nazionale della Moda Italiana), now led by Carlo Capasa. It was set up in 1958 in Rome and now is settled in Milan and represents all the highest cultural values of Italian fashion. This association has pursued a policy of organisational support aimed at the knowledge, promotion and development of fashion through high-profile events in Italy and abroad. The talent of young, creative fashion is also promoted in Italy, as in the annual ITS (International Talent Support Awards) young fashion designer competition in Trieste.",
"score": "1.4222561"
}
] |
Who was the producer of Strand?
|
[
"Rouzbeh Rashidi"
] |
producer
|
Strand (film)
| 5,838,023 | 98 |
[
{
"id": "25457549",
"title": "2 Entertain",
"text": " Emmerdale, Brass Eye, Da Ali G Show and Coronation Street. Some BBC programmes (the early series of My Family were one example) were also released by VCI. Confusion often arose between this UK-based company, and the Tulsa, Oklahoma-based home video label VCI Entertainment, founded in 1976 by Bill Blair. Perhaps as a result of this, when VCI entered the American market in the early 1990s, they went under the name of Strand VCI Entertainment, and then Strand Home Video; this operation was sold in 1993 to budget video label Video Treasures (later a core component of Anchor Bay Entertainment), who completed the label's absorption in 1994.",
"score": "1.5601789"
},
{
"id": "3886160",
"title": "The Strand (radio programme)",
"text": " The Strand was the BBC World Service's daily arts show. It was launched on Monday 27 October 2008. The last weekday edition was aired on Friday 29 March 2013, and the last weekly summary on the subsequent weekend. It was regularly hosted by Harriett Gilbert, Mark Coles, Audrey Brown - who also presented the BBC's flagship African News and Current Affairs programmes Focus on Africa and Network Africa, Anna McNamee, and Bidisha. The programme's title came from the Strand, a busy street in London close to the World Service's former studios at Bush House on Aldwych.",
"score": "1.5488744"
},
{
"id": "4672635",
"title": "Strand of Oaks",
"text": " Strand of Oaks is the rock project by songwriter and producer Timothy Showalter. Originally from Indiana, he currently resides in Austin. His music has been classified as rock and folk, as well as folk rock. Showalter has released seven studio albums—Leave Ruin (2009), Pope Killdragon (2010), Dark Shores (2012), Heal (2014), Hard Love (2017), Eraserland (2019) and In Heaven (2021).",
"score": "1.490445"
},
{
"id": "14832262",
"title": "Dick Sheppard School",
"text": "Paulette Randall, actor and producer. ; Tim Roth, actor, who joined Dick Sheppard on the closure of Strand School (see above). ; Nicola Armstrong Edgar, nee MacPherson, international diplomat and global chief executive. ; Douglas Ankrah inventor of the p*rnstar martini and owner of the LAB bar in Soho in 1999, and Townhouse in Knightsbridge",
"score": "1.4588063"
},
{
"id": "12350861",
"title": "Play for Today",
"text": " The strand was a successor to The Wednesday Play, the 1960s anthology series, the title being changed when the day of transmission became variable. Some works, screened in anthology series' on BBC2, like Willy Russell's Our Day Out (1977), were repeated on BBC1 in the series. The producers of The Wednesday Play, Graeme MacDonald and Irene Shubik, transferred to the new series. Shubik continued with the series until 1973 while MacDonald remained with the series until 1977 when he was promoted. Later producers included Kenith Trodd (1973–1982), David Rose (1972–1980), Innes Lloyd (1975–1982), Margaret Matheson (1977–1979), Richard Eyre (1978–1980) and Pharic MacLaren (1974–1982). Plays covered all genres. In its time, Play for Today featured contemporary social realist dramas, historical ",
"score": "1.444602"
},
{
"id": "3886161",
"title": "The Strand (radio programme)",
"text": " Harriett Gilbert regularly presented the Monday and Friday editions, as well as (on the first Saturday of every month) the new hour-long version of long-standing BBC World Service programme World Book Club. She said of the new programme: \"I'm delighted to be presenting The Strand. As a daily programme, it will be a great position to reveal, explore and debate developments as they happen in the world of the arts – including, of course, the world of literature.\" Mark Coles, who previously hosted The Beat and The Ticket on the World Service, is also a music journalist and won the Sony Reporter of the Year Award in 1993. The first programme featured: Roger Moore talking ",
"score": "1.4402683"
},
{
"id": "4015256",
"title": "The Strand Magazine",
"text": " The Strand was brought back into publication in 1998 as a quarterly magazine, now based in Birmingham, Michigan, US. It has published fiction by many well-known writers including John Mortimer, Ray Bradbury, Alexander McCall Smith, Ruth Rendell, Colin Dexter, Edward Hoch, James Grippando, and Tennessee Williams. The magazine also features stories from emerging crime and mystery writers in addition to stories by established writers.",
"score": "1.4393274"
},
{
"id": "4607699",
"title": "Strand Theatre (Shreveport, Louisiana)",
"text": " shows. Emile Weil and Charles G. Davis of New Orleans were the architects of the theater with interior design work by Paul Heerwagen of Arkansas. Construction foreman was Ernest Raleigh Darrow of Shreveport. The Strand was a flagship theatre for Saenger Amusements Company and its successor, Saenger-Ehrlich Enterprises, a forerunner of Paramount Pictures. During the 1960s, when the Strand was in use as a cinema, the facility was desegregated through the efforts of the Reverend Herman Farr, who in 1978 became one of the first three African Americans to have served on the Shreveport City Council. In 1977, the theatre was placed on the National Register of Historic Places. It also became a contributing property of Shreveport Commercial Historic District when its boundaries were increased on 1997-5-16.",
"score": "1.4380431"
},
{
"id": "13811046",
"title": "Bruce Connole",
"text": " The Strand was an alternative rock band named for the Roxy Music song, \"Do The Strand.\" They made their debut in 1987 at The Mason Jar, a nightclub and music venue in Phoenix, Arizona. The Strand was a trio which included Connole (guitar and vocals), Damon Doiron (bass) and Alan Ross Willey (drums). Connole had been struggling with heroin addiction and had moved to California when Doiron called to ask him to return to Arizona to form a new band. Buxer almost joined The Strand, but decided to remain in Los Angeles as a session musician. The Strand marketed their first cassette by making it available in limited supply to the first 250 people to buy tickets to one of their first shows. This idea was initiated by Johnny D, a disc jockey at KEYX in Phoenix. In 1986, they self-released the album, The Strand. Connole's addictive cycle eventually broke up the band''. ''",
"score": "1.432116"
},
{
"id": "14389187",
"title": "Strand School",
"text": "Rev. Donald Aird, Vicar of St Marks Church, Hamilton Terrace, London NW8 (1979–1995), founder of the Society of Christians and Jews. ; Vernon Butcher, Organist of the Chapel Royal. ; David Guthrie Catcheside, seminal figure in the development of post-war genetics. ; Charles Alfred Fisher, Professor of Geography, School of Oriental & African Studies. ; Fruitbat (Les Carter), rock musician, co-founder of Carter USM. ; Leonard Christopher Gilley, artist. ; Sir Reg Goodwin, politician and former Leader of the Greater London Council. ; Leonard Hussey, explorer. ; David Jacobs, CBE, broadcaster, long-time presenter of BBC's Juke Box Jury and Any Questions. ; Lord Sydney Jacobson, newspaper executive and ",
"score": "1.4298009"
},
{
"id": "3886162",
"title": "The Strand (radio programme)",
"text": " his autobiography; a report on the cultural life available to the people of Gaza, in particular what people in Gaza are watching on satellite TV and how it affects their view of the world; a review of AC/DC's album Black Ice; and an interview with Steve McQueen about his film Hunger. The Strand replaced a number of existing World Service arts programmes such as The Word, The Beat, On Screen, Culture Shock and The Ticket. Editions were also presented by Lawrence Pollard, Louise Fryer, Rajan Datar, Tim Marlow, and Aminatta Forna. Arts topics were subsequently integrated into the show Outlook, the duration of which was extended to one hour as of Monday 1 April 2013.",
"score": "1.4278598"
},
{
"id": "32295436",
"title": "Austin Strand",
"text": " Strand was signed to a three-year, entry-level contract by the Los Angeles Kings on November 28, 2017. On October 19, 2020, he was re-signed to a one-year contract. Strand made his NHL debut on February 5, 2021, in the Kings' 5–2 loss to the Vegas Golden Knights.",
"score": "1.4237719"
},
{
"id": "4708553",
"title": "Strand (album)",
"text": " Strand was released on February 27, 1996, by Sub Pop. To promote the album, the band performed with two additional musicians at Lounge Ax in Chicago, Illinois, on March 26, 1996.",
"score": "1.4227862"
},
{
"id": "27282832",
"title": "Karen Strand",
"text": " Karen Strand (7 January 1924 – 10 February 2000) was a Danish goldsmith and jewellery designer. One of the first students to study at the Goldsmiths College (Guldsmedehøjskolen) in Copenhagen, she is remembered for her simplistic style, creating chains threaded with stones. After working for the jeweller A. Dragsted, she established her own business in 1962.",
"score": "1.4204865"
},
{
"id": "2640933",
"title": "Silver Strand (film)",
"text": " Silver Strand is a 1995 action/drama/romance film starring Nicollette Sheridan, Gil Bellows, Jennifer O'Neill, Jay O. Sanders, Tony Plana and Wolfgang Bodison. It was directed by George Miller and written by Douglas Day Stewart. The story follows Class 195 through United States Navy SEAL selection and training known as Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL (BUD/S). Brian Del Piso (Gil Bellows) falls for the wife of his commanding officer, Lucas Hughes (Jay O. Sanders). Michelle Hughes (Nicollette Sheridan) was a Navy brat and is now Lucass wife.",
"score": "1.4185555"
},
{
"id": "4015249",
"title": "The Strand Magazine",
"text": " The Strand Magazine was founded by George Newnes in 1890, and its first edition was dated January 1891. The magazine's original offices were located on Burleigh Street, off the Strand, London. The first editor was Herbert Greenhough Smith, who remained the editor until 1930. The magazine published factual articles in addition to fictional short stories and series. It was targeted at a mass market readership. The initial price of an issue was sixpence, about half the typical rate for comparable titles at the time. Initial sales were around 300,000, and circulation soon rose to half a million. The magazine also published a United States edition from February 1891 through February 1916. In its early years, the contents of the US edition were identical ",
"score": "1.4168165"
},
{
"id": "1771999",
"title": "Strand (film)",
"text": " Strand premiered in Short Film Corner of Cannes Film Festival (May 2009 Cannes - France). Shortlisted for Culture Unplugged filMedia platform, Culture Unplugged (Online Festival) efforts are focused on enabling networks of socially & spiritually conscious content and its creators. With presence in India, US, UK, Indonesia and New Zealand. The film \"Strand – 2008\" remained at this venue for 6 months (180 days).",
"score": "1.410959"
},
{
"id": "32295435",
"title": "Austin Strand",
"text": " Austin Strand (born February 17, 1997) is a Canadian professional ice hockey defenseman currently playing for the Ontario Reign in the American Hockey League (AHL) as a prospect to the Los Angeles Kings of the National Hockey League (NHL). He previously played for the Seattle Thunderbirds and Red Deer Rebels of the Western Hockey League (WHL).",
"score": "1.4076853"
},
{
"id": "9113841",
"title": "Lars Ketil Strand",
"text": " Lars Ketil Strand (11 May 1924 – 12 March 2020) was a Norwegian forester. He was born in Kristiania in May 1924. He took the Dr. Agric. degree in 1959, and worked at the Norwegian Forest Research Institute from 1965. He was then a professor at the Norwegian College of Agriculture from 1968 to 1990. He served as rector there from 1971 to 1977. He also has an honorary degree from the University of Helsinki. He died in March 2020 at the age of 95.",
"score": "1.40695"
},
{
"id": "1771998",
"title": "Strand (film)",
"text": " Rashidi made this film with no/low budget over a three months period in summer 2008. Shot in stark black and white, the film deals with images of love, friendship, separation, loneliness and isolation; a \"strand\" of life in modern-day Iran. The usage of Direct Cinema and cinéma vérité techniques, non-diegetic sound, Super 8mm, stock footage and heavily manipulative editing are the common stylistic styles that shapes Strand.",
"score": "1.4060155"
}
] |
Who was the producer of The Thing We Love?
|
[
"Jesse Louis Lasky",
"Jesse L. Lasky",
"Jesse Lasky",
"Jesse Louis Lasky Sr."
] |
producer
|
The Thing We Love
| 5,959,504 | 58 |
[
{
"id": "16124292",
"title": "The Thing We Love",
"text": " The Thing We Love is a 1918 American silent drama film starring Wallace Reid, Kathlyn Williams, and Tully Marshall, produced by Jesse Lasky, distributed by Paramount Pictures, and directed by Lou Tellegen. This marked Tellegen's second foray into directing as he usually was a leading man in front of the camera like Reid.",
"score": "1.9008358"
},
{
"id": "16124294",
"title": "The Thing We Love",
"text": " This film is now considered a lost film.",
"score": "1.7213116"
},
{
"id": "8563101",
"title": "A Lovesome Thing",
"text": "John Snyder – producer ; Jay Newland, Joe Lopes – engineer ",
"score": "1.6885784"
},
{
"id": "27021614",
"title": "The One Thing (song)",
"text": " single, \"One Thing\", peaked at number 14 on the Australian Kent Music Report Singles Chart. Due to the success of the song Murphy hired Opitz to produce three more songs. Murphy also approached WEA Australia with copies of the song, leading to INXS signing a recording deal in July 1982 with WEA for releases in Australia, South East Asia, Japan and New Zealand, Atco Records (a subsidiary of Atlantic Records) for North America and Polygram for Europe and the UK. Shabooh Shoobah was released in the United States in February 1983 and peaked at number 46 on the Billboard 200 album chart. \"The One Thing\" brought INXS their first Top 40 ",
"score": "1.5957866"
},
{
"id": "32899963",
"title": "The Thing at the Nursery Room Window",
"text": "Produced by Kerry Fahey ",
"score": "1.5822275"
},
{
"id": "27021612",
"title": "The One Thing (song)",
"text": " \"The One Thing\" is a song by Australian rock group INXS, released in July 1982 as the first single ahead of their third studio album, Shabooh Shoobah, which appeared in October that year. At the 1982 Countdown Music Awards, the song was nominated for Best Australian Single.",
"score": "1.5567324"
},
{
"id": "31841978",
"title": "Dan Shea (producer)",
"text": "Sweet Thing ; Funky Xmas ",
"score": "1.5523664"
},
{
"id": "1360377",
"title": "This Thing of Ours (film)",
"text": " This Thing of Ours is an American 2003 crime/drama film directed by Danny Provenzano and starring him alongside Frank Vincent, Edward Lynch, Vincent Pastore and James Caan. The title is a reference to the Italian term Cosa Nostra, \"This Thing Of Ours\", which refers to the American Mafia. Colombo crime family underboss, John Franzese, was an associate producer of the film. The film garnered primarily negative reviews, earning a 40% score on Rotten Tomatoes and receiving a 36/100 on the review aggregator Metacritic, signifying generally unfavorable reviews.",
"score": "1.5188739"
},
{
"id": "13271145",
"title": "The Thing (The Thing album)",
"text": " The Thing is an album by saxophonist Mats Gustafsson, bassist Ingebrigt Håker Flaten and drummer Paal Nilssen-Love, who then took the album title as the name of their trio. The album was recorded in February 2000 and released that year by Crazy Wisdom, part of Universal.",
"score": "1.517576"
},
{
"id": "29840365",
"title": "Getting Our Thing Together",
"text": "Lew Futterman - Producer ; Richard Evans - Production Supervisor ; Jerry Griffith - Album Design ; Nancy Reiner - Cover Art ; Stu Black - Engineer ; Bill Ardis - Liner Notes ",
"score": "1.5127738"
},
{
"id": "14206961",
"title": "Things We Like",
"text": " Arranged and produced by Jack Bruce. Recorded at I.B.C. Studios, London, August 1968.",
"score": "1.5063175"
},
{
"id": "28672144",
"title": "This Thing Called Love (album)",
"text": "Tommy Sands – vocals ; Bob Bain – arranger ",
"score": "1.4916834"
},
{
"id": "16124293",
"title": "The Thing We Love",
"text": "Wallace Reid - Rodney Sheridan ; Kathlyn Williams - Margaret Kenwood ; Tully Marshall - Henry D. Kenwood ; Mayme Kelso - Mrs. Kenwood ; Charles Ogle - Adolph Weimer ; William Elmer - Kenwood's Agent (*billed Billy Elmer) ",
"score": "1.4869366"
},
{
"id": "27000362",
"title": "Love Is a Wonderful Thing (Michael Bolton song)",
"text": " The video was directed by Dominic Sena and shot in Phoenix, Arizona.",
"score": "1.4759398"
},
{
"id": "13271147",
"title": "The Thing (The Thing album)",
"text": " The album was first released in 2000 by Crazy Wisdon, part of Universal Group. It was also included in the box set Now and Forever in 2007.",
"score": "1.4705881"
},
{
"id": "4825494",
"title": "Our Thing (album)",
"text": " Our Thing is the second release by American jazz tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson on Blue Note. It features performances by Henderson, Kenny Dorham, Andrew Hill, Pete La Roca and Eddie Khan of originals by Henderson and Dorham. The CD reissue added a bonus take of \"Teeter Totter\".",
"score": "1.464778"
},
{
"id": "31841973",
"title": "Dan Shea (producer)",
"text": "Someone To Love You ",
"score": "1.4623231"
},
{
"id": "26040472",
"title": "Tom Shaw (producer)",
"text": " Beautiful thing, by Robert Delamere and Tom Shaw QNQ Productions 2013",
"score": "1.4593201"
},
{
"id": "27021615",
"title": "The One Thing (song)",
"text": " in the US, reaching number 30 on the Billboard Hot 100 in May–June 1983. It was a big hit on album-oriented rock radio, reaching number 2 on the Billboard Top Tracks chart, and was also a top 20 hit in Canada. The music video for the song, directed by Soren Jensen, featured the band members having a decadent banquet with a number of beautiful models, including Hutchence's then girlfriend Michele Bennett, interspersed with clips of the band playing their instruments. Hutchence knew Jensen, who was an assistant director on the Australian soap opera, The Young Doctors, through his mother, Patricia, who was a make-up artist for the show. The models, Susan ",
"score": "1.4584174"
},
{
"id": "4825498",
"title": "Our Thing (album)",
"text": "Bob Blumenthal – liner notes ; Michael Cuscuna – reissue ; Kenny Dorham – liner notes ; Alfred Lion – producer ; Reid Miles – design, cover design ; Rudy Van Gelder – engineer, remastering, digital remastering ; Francis Wolff – photography, cover photo ",
"score": "1.4578427"
}
] |
Who was the producer of One of Those?
|
[
"Aldo Fabrizi",
"Aldo Fabbrizi"
] |
producer
|
One of Those
| 2,941,209 | 81 |
[
{
"id": "9163596",
"title": "One of Those",
"text": " One of Those (Una di quelle, also known as Totò, Peppino e... una di quelle) is a 1953 Italian comedy-drama film produced, written, directed and starred by Aldo Fabrizi.",
"score": "1.446234"
},
{
"id": "4493582",
"title": "Martin Manulis",
"text": "Days of Wine and Roses (producer, 1962) ; Dear Heart (producer, 1964) ; Luv (producer, 1967) ; Duffy (producer, 1968) ",
"score": "1.4212954"
},
{
"id": "4493581",
"title": "Martin Manulis",
"text": "Casey, Crime Photographer (producer, 1951-1952) ; Suspense (producer, 1952-1953) ; Studio One Summer Theatre (producer, 1953) ; The Best of Broadway (producer, 1954-1955) ; Climax! (producer, 1955-1956) ; Playhouse 90 (producer, 1956-1958) ; The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis (producer, 1959-1963) ; Adventures in Paradise (producer, 1959-1962) ; Five Fingers (producer, 1959-1960) ; Double Solitaire (producer, 1974; TV movie) ; James at 15 (executive producer, 1977-1978) ; The Day Christ Died (producer, 1980; TV movie) ; The Fighter (executive producer, 1983; TV movie) ; Chiefs (executive producer, 1983; miniseries) ; Space (producer, 1985; miniseries) ; Harem (executive producer, 1986; TV movie) ; Grass Roots (producer, 1992; TV movie) ",
"score": "1.4034755"
},
{
"id": "5263647",
"title": "Out of Many...One",
"text": "Producer: Tami Chynn, Kwame Kandekore, Ty \"Tyjae\" Jackson, Neil Case and Tessanne Chin ; Executive Producer: Conroy Forte and Kwame Kandekore ; Mixing Producer: Esco ",
"score": "1.3755249"
},
{
"id": "1529259",
"title": "David Tyler (producer)",
"text": "Dead At 30, pilot, producer, 1991. ; Paul Merton: The Series, producer, series 1 and 2, 1991-1993. ; Absolutely, producer, series 4, 1993. ; Introducing Tony Ferrino - Who? And Why? - A Quest, producer, 1993 ; The Tony Ferrino Phenomenon, producer, 1993. ; The Imaginatively Titled Punt & Dennis Show, Producer, 1994. ; Pauline Calf's Wedding Video - \"Three Fights, Two Weddings & A Funeral\", producer, 1994. ; The Marriage Of Figaro, executive producer, 1994 ; The Paul Calf Video Diary, producer, 1994. ; Coogan's Run, producer, 1995. ; The End Of The Year Show, producer, 1995. ; Cows, pilot, producer, 1997. ; dinnerladies, series 1 & 2, executive producer, 1998–2000. ; Stephen Fry's 'Live From The Lighthouse', producer, 1998. ; tlc, producer, 2001. ; Gash, producer, 2003. ; The Strategic Humour Initiative, producer, 2003. ; The Comic Side Of 7 Days, producer/director, series 1 & 2, 2004-5. ; Giles Wemmbley Hogg Goes Off… To Glastonbury, producer, 2007. ; Music Hall Meltdown, producer, 2007. ; Saturday Live Again!, producer, 2007. ; For One Night Only, executive producer, 2008. ; Milton Jones Live Universe Tour: Part 1 - Earth, DVD producer, 2009. ",
"score": "1.370331"
},
{
"id": "12491",
"title": "Michael Mills (British producer)",
"text": " Mills was the original producer of television series Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em (1973–1975), and briefly supervised Wodehouse Playhouse (1976). He joined Thames Television around this time, where he remained for the rest of his career. At Thames, he was responsible for the production of such series as Get Some In! (1975–1978) and Chance in a Million (1984-1986).",
"score": "1.3694737"
},
{
"id": "2185533",
"title": "William Jacobs (producer)",
"text": " (1941) (assoc. producer) ; Nine Lives Are Not Enough (1941) (assoc. producer) ; Bullets for O'Hara (1941) (assoc. producer) ; Father's Son (1941) (assoc. producer) ; The Hidden Hand (1942) (assoc. producer) ; Escape from Crime (1942) (assoc. producer) ; Busses Roar (1942) (assoc. producer) ; Secret Enemies (1942) (assoc. producer) ; Always in My Heart (1942) (assoc. producer) ; Lady Gangster (1942) (assoc. producer) ; Murder in the Big House (1942) (assoc. producer) ; Bullet Scars (1942) (assoc. producer) ; I Was Framed (1942) (assoc. producer) ; Spy Ship (1942) (assoc. producer) ; Find the Blackmailer (1943) (assoc. producer) ; The Gorilla Man (1943) (assoc. ",
"score": "1.3682935"
},
{
"id": "2185534",
"title": "William Jacobs (producer)",
"text": " ; Truck Busters (1943) (assoc. producer) ; The Mysterious Doctor (1943) (assoc. producer) ; Murder on the Waterfront (1943) (assoc. producer) ; Adventure in Iraq (1943) (assoc. producer) ; Crime by Night (1944) (assoc. producer) ; The Last Ride (1945) (producer) ; Shine On, Harvest Moon (1945) (producer) ; Conflict (1945) (assoc. producer) ; Christmas in Connecticut (1945) (producer) ; Danger Signal (1945) (producer) ; Too Young to Know (1945) (producer) ; Never Say Goodbye (1946) (producer) ; The Verdict (1946) (producer) ; Shadow of a Woman (1946) (assoc. producer) ; Nora Prentiss (1947) (producer) ; Love and Learn (1947) (producer) ; My Wild Irish Rose ",
"score": "1.3675532"
},
{
"id": "1097980",
"title": "Martin Richards (producer)",
"text": "Chicago (producer) 2002 ; Fort Apache, The Bronx (producer) 1981 ; The Shining (associate producer: The Producer Circle Organization) 1980 ; The Boys from Brazil (producer) 1978 ; The Image (producer – as Marty Richards) 1975 ; Fun and Games (producer – as Marty Richards) 1973 ; Some of My Best Friends Are... (producer – as Marty Richards) 1971 ",
"score": "1.3603721"
},
{
"id": "4067778",
"title": "The Last Producer",
"text": " The Last Producer is a 2000 American drama film directed by and starring Burt Reynolds. It also featured Sean Astin, Ann-Margret, Lauren Holly, Rod Steiger, and Benjamin Bratt. It was also referred to as The Final Hit in final packaging and promotional materials. It is the final film to be directed by Reynolds before his death in 2018.",
"score": "1.3584919"
},
{
"id": "3044232",
"title": "Frank Ross (producer)",
"text": "Of Mice and Men (1939) (associate producer) ; The Devil and Miss Jones (1941) (producer) ; A Lady Takes a Chance (1943) (producer) ; The House I Live In (1945) (producer) ; The Flame and the Arrow (1950) (producer) ; The Lady Says No (1951) (director and producer) ; My Favorite Husband (1953) (executive producer, TV series) ; The Robe (1953) (producer) ; Demetrius and the Gladiators (1954) (producer) ; The Rains of Ranchipur (1955) (producer) ; Sally (1957) (producer, TV series) ; Kings Go Forth (1958) (producer) ; One Man's Way (1964) (producer) ; Mister Moses (1965) (producer) ; Where It's At (1969) (producer) ; Maurie (1973) (producer) ",
"score": "1.3547195"
},
{
"id": "1580325",
"title": "Paul Jackson (producer)",
"text": " Jackson was a member of the council of IPPA, a forerunner of Pact, the body which established terms for trade between independent producers and the BBC and other broadcasters. PJP was eventually taken over by Noel Gay Television, a company chaired by the British entertainment executive, Bill Cotton. Jackson served as the Managing Director and the company produced Red Dwarf, the long-running and internationally successful comedy series, the pilot episode of Bottom (Rik Mayall and Adrian Edmonson) and, working with LWT, the hugely influential Channel Four variety show, Saturday Live. Saturday Live featured such comedy stars as Lenny Henry, Pamela Stephenson, ",
"score": "1.3528512"
},
{
"id": "9050207",
"title": "Allan McKeown",
"text": " In 1969, he changed course and became a producer at James Garrett and Partners, at the time the largest TV commercials producer in the UK. He was appointed Managing Director shortly after joining. He left to form a production company Witzend with Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais. Initially making commercials, then the feature film Porridge (US: Doing Time, 1979). McKeown was the executive producer for Central Television's Auf Wiedersehen, Pet, with Clement and La Frenais as the show's main writers. He was one of the first independent television producers in the UK. McKeown not only produced in Britain with his company, WitzEnd, but also produced in the US for all of the networks. In 1986, Witzend acquired Selectv, and in the process became a public company. The company grew as it added Alomo, a venture with writers Laurence Marks and Maurice Gran to its stable of production ",
"score": "1.3489377"
},
{
"id": "15591002",
"title": "Mikaela Beardsley",
"text": "Makers: Women Who Make America (2014) (Producer- 2 Episodes) ; The 50 Year Argument (2014) (Supervising Producer) ; Half The Sky (2012) (Executive Producer) ; Independent Lens(2012) (Executive Producer- 1 Episodes) ; Meena (2011) (Producer) ; Woinshet (2009) (Producer) ; Reporter (2009) (Producer) ; I Am an Animal: The Story of Ingrid Newkirk and PETA (2007) (Producer) ; Val Lewton: The Man in the Shadows (2007) (Line Producer) James Blunt: Return to Kosovo (2007) (Producer) (Also: Camera Operator) ; #1 Single (2006) (Producer - 1 Episode) ; The Blues (2003) (Supervising Producer - 2 Episodes) (Also: Coordinating Producer - 1 Episode, Co-Producer - 1 Episode) ; The Soul of a Man (2003) (Supervising Producer) ; Gladiator Days: Anatomy of a Prison Murder (2002) (Associate Producer) ; The Kennedy Center Presents: Speak Truth to Power (2000) (Co-Producer) ; Soldiers in the Army of God (2000) (Associate Producer) ; The Irish in America: Long Journey Home (1998) (Series Associate Producer - 3 Episodes) (Also: Associate Producer - 1 Episode) ",
"score": "1.3457618"
},
{
"id": "14602424",
"title": "René Echevarria",
"text": " He created The 4400 alongside Scott Peters for USA Network. He was reunited with one of his colleagues from Deep Space Nine, as Ira Steven Behr was one of the producers on the series. Echevarria was also involved in the development of the Teen Wolf television series for MTV, where he remained on the series as an executive producer. Echevarria was working as the show runner on ABC's television adaptation of the film True Lies, when he was asked to take over production duties on the pilot of Terra Nova. This followed the termination of four writers and another producer, amid a series of other issues with the production. The production cost $14 million, and suffered from ",
"score": "1.3437996"
},
{
"id": "13328847",
"title": "Norrie Paramor",
"text": " Although the term \"producer\" was not in circulation at the time Paramor started producing records (the usual term being Artiste and Repertoire Manager, or A&R man), he effectively began this role in 1952 when he became Recording Director for EMI's Columbia Records. As well as being producer for Cliff Richard and the Shadows, he produced records for Ruby Murray, Eddie Calvert, Michael Holliday, Helen Shapiro, Frank Ifield, Frankie Vaughan, the Mudlarks, the Avons, and Ricky Valance, among others. Per The Guinness Book of British Hit Singles, Paramor and George Martin – his opposite number at EMI sister label Parlophone – jointly held the record for having produced the most UK Number 1 hit singles until Martin produced \"Candle in the Wind 97\" for Sir Elton John, 18 years after Paramor died. This ignores The Beatles' second single \"Please Please Me\", produced by Martin, which was recognised as a number one hit by every other publicly available chart of the time, but not by Record Retailer and therefore not by British Hit Singles, which uses that chart as its source from 1960. In the late 1960s he left EMI to form his own production company.",
"score": "1.3409132"
},
{
"id": "4018154",
"title": "One More Step",
"text": " Production was helmed by Brent Milligan and Jeff Pardo.",
"score": "1.3407133"
},
{
"id": "28992537",
"title": "Norman Twain",
"text": "Bajour – Producer (1965) ; Peterpat – Producer (1965) ; The World of Charles Aznavour – Producer (1965) ; Manuela Vargas – Producer (1966) ; Gilbert Becaud on Broadway – Producer (1966) ; The Apparition Theatre of Prague – Producer (1966) ; Henry, Sweet Henry – Producer (1967) ; Gilbert Becaud Sings Love – Producer (1968) ; Cop-Out – Producer (1969) ; Hamlet – Producer (1969) ; Charles Aznavour – Producer (1970) ",
"score": "1.3403078"
},
{
"id": "3636258",
"title": "Joel Sill",
"text": " (uncredited) ; 1971 - Prairie Madness - Prairie Madness - producer ; 1970 - Flying Ahead - Atlee Yeager - producer ; 1970 - Lovers and Other Strangers - executive in charge of music (uncredited) ; 1970 - Lancelot Link and the Evolution Revolution - Lancelot Link & The Evolution Revolution - producer ; 1969 - Sunshower - Thelma Houston - producer ; 1969 - Minus-Plus - Smith - producer ; 1969 - A Group Called Smith - Smith - producer, composer ; 1969 - Easy Rider - coordination and production ; 1964 - Kustom City U.S.A. - Kustom Kings - producer ",
"score": "1.3388239"
},
{
"id": "8800487",
"title": "Ken Gord",
"text": " directed by Martin Campbell, starring Gary Oldman and Kevin Bacon. The movie was produced for Hemdale Film Corporation and distributed by Warner Bros. In 1988, he was the Canadian Executive in Charge of Production on the mini-series Day One, for CBS and Aaron Spelling Productions, which won an Emmy in 1989 for Best Drama Special. In 1991 and 1992, Gord produced two seasons of the CBS late-night crime show Sweating Bullets (aka Tropical Heat) in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico and Eilat, Israel. This led him to what he was perhaps best known for, as the producer of the hit syndicated series Highlander: The Series, which filmed six seasons through the 1990s. ",
"score": "1.3383088"
}
] |
Who was the producer of The Lie?
|
[
"Independent Moving Pictures",
"Independent Moving Pictures Company"
] |
producer
|
The Lie (1912 film)
| 5,937,854 | 95 |
[
{
"id": "1232733",
"title": "Greedy Lying Bastards",
"text": " Greedy Lying Bastards was directed, produced and narrated by Craig Rosebraugh. He co-wrote the film with two-time Emmy Award winning editor Patrick Gambuti, Jr., who also served as editor. Daryl Hannah was an executive producer and Michael Brook, who wrote the score for An Inconvenient Truth, was the composer. In making the film Rosebraugh sought to \"undertake a project that would uncover the hidden agenda of the oil industry and provide answers as to why we as a nation fail to implement clean energy policies and take effective action on important problems such as climate change.\" The film began production in 2009 and finished late in 2012.",
"score": "1.6524811"
},
{
"id": "5058085",
"title": "The Lie (2018 film)",
"text": " The Lie is a 2018 psychological horror film written and directed by Veena Sud. The film is a remake of the 2015 German film We Monsters, and stars Mireille Enos, Peter Sarsgaard and Joey King. Jason Blum serves as a producer under his Blumhouse Television banner. The Lie premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 13, 2018. It was later released on October 6, 2020, by Amazon Studios, as the first installment in the anthological Welcome to the Blumhouse film series.",
"score": "1.6448895"
},
{
"id": "14833775",
"title": "An Honest Liar",
"text": " An Honest Liar is a 2014 biographical feature film documentary, directed and produced by Justin Weinstein and Tyler Measom, written by Weinstein, Greg O'Toole and Measom, produced through Left Turn Films, Pure Mutt Productions and Part2 Filmworks, and distributed by Abramorama. The film documents the life of former magician, escape artist, and skeptical educator James Randi, in particular the investigations through which Randi publicly exposed psychics, faith healers, and con-artists. The film also focuses on Randi's relationship with his partner of 25 years, José Alvarez, who at the time of filming, had been discovered to be living under a false identity, calling into question \"whether Randi was the deceiver or the deceived.\" The film was screened at a number of 2014 film festivals, including the Tribeca Film Festival, Hot Docs, and AFI Docs Festival, where it won the Audience Award for Best Feature. It was released in February 2015.",
"score": "1.6435049"
},
{
"id": "12803959",
"title": "Lie to Me",
"text": " Samuel Baum was the original showrunner and head writer on Lie to Me. Brian Grazer, David Nevins, and Steven Maeda were executive producers. Katherine Pope, former president of NBC Universal's TV studio, signed on as a consulting producer, working on the final four episodes of the first season. Shawn Ryan, creator of The Shield and The Unit, took over as show runner for the second season. The show's theme song, Brand New Day, was performed by Ryan Star.",
"score": "1.6290562"
},
{
"id": "5910318",
"title": "Sumu la Penzi",
"text": " The show was produced by, Dorothy Ghettuba, the producer of Lies that Bind.Both of the television series, were produced by Spielswork media.",
"score": "1.624294"
},
{
"id": "14833783",
"title": "An Honest Liar",
"text": " In 2012 producers Tyler Measom and Justin Weinstein visited James Randi at his home in Plantation, Florida to express interest in filming a documentary about his life. To illustrate their bona fides to him, they gave him copies of their previous documentaries. Randi comments, \"When I saw the product that they had turned out, I thought to myself, 'These are the guys. These are the guys that I think I can trust with my life story.'\" The film was funded in part via a campaign Kickstarter, which successfully concluded on February 15, 2013, obtaining $246,989 USD from 3,096 backers, $98,989 more than its goal of $148,000. The film is produced through Left Turn Films, Pure Mutt Productions, and Part2 Filmworks by Tyler Measom and Justin Weinstein, who also directed, and written by Weinstein, Measom and Greg O'Toole. Toole also edited the film. The film's music is produced by Joel Goodman. It is distributed by Abramorama.",
"score": "1.6198475"
},
{
"id": "12688311",
"title": "The Lie (2011 film)",
"text": " The Lie is a 2011 American drama-comedy film, directed by Joshua Leonard, from a screenplay by Leonard, Jess Weixler, Mark Webber, and Jeff Feuerzeig. It is based upon a short story of the same name by T. Coraghessan Boyle, which was printed in The New Yorker. It stars Leonard, Weixler, Webber, Kelli Garner, Jane Adams, Alia Shawkat, Gerry Bednob, Holly Woodlawn, Kirk Baltz, Tipper Newton and Violet Long. It had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on January 25, 2011. It was released on November 18, 2011, by Screen Media Films.",
"score": "1.6197889"
},
{
"id": "15819476",
"title": "The Lie (CBS Playhouse 90)",
"text": "Charles Kreiner and Jan Scott, winner, Best Art Direction or Scenic Design For a Dramatic Program or Feature Length Film, for a Series, a Single Program of a Series or a Special Program ; William M. Klages, winner, Outstanding Achievement in Lighting Direction ; Lewis W. Smith, nominee, Outstanding Achievement in Video Tape Editing ; Charles Kreiner and Jan Scott, winner, Art Decorator and Set Decorator of the Year. \"The Lie\" is an American television play broadcast on April 24, 1973 as the first installment of the CBS Playhouse 90 series. The production was based on a play by Ingmar Bergman. The cast included George Segal, Shirley Knight, Robert Culp, Dean Jaffer, Louise Lasser, and William Daniels. The play was a drama depicting the interactions of a group of wealthy people. The production was nominated for five Primetime Emmy Awards and won four:",
"score": "1.6078298"
},
{
"id": "12688315",
"title": "The Lie (2011 film)",
"text": " The film had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on January 25, 2011. Shortly after, Screen Media Films acquired distribution rights to the film. It was released on November 18, 2011.",
"score": "1.6001136"
},
{
"id": "667726",
"title": "The Lies We Tell Ourselves",
"text": "John Glover – Producer, Engineering, Mixing ; Marke Townsend – Producer ; thelastplaceyoulook – Producers ; Justin Nava – Producer, Engineering ",
"score": "1.5955945"
},
{
"id": "5058092",
"title": "The Lie (2018 film)",
"text": " The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 13, 2018. In August 2020, Amazon Studios acquired distribution rights to the film, and premiered it on October 6, 2020. Along with Black Box, it's one of the first two movies released from Blumhouse Productions's 8-film anthology Welcome to the Blumhouse.",
"score": "1.5816212"
},
{
"id": "12688314",
"title": "The Lie (2011 film)",
"text": " Joshua Leonard had been on the lookout for a story to be made into a movie, when he read the short story, The Lie, which was in the April 14, 2008 issue of The New Yorker. He realized that the story was a good fit for an independent film that could be made in Los Angeles, using collaborators he already knew in the area. The original short story was sixteen pages long. The crew spent two and a half weeks shooting the film, and six months editing it. For the baby Xana, the filmmakers cast Violet Long (an infant at that time) whose parents are Daniel (the film's co-producer) and Darby Long.",
"score": "1.5710082"
},
{
"id": "10523130",
"title": "True Lies",
"text": " True Lies is a 1994 American action comedy film written and directed by James Cameron. It was executive produced by Lawrence Kasanoff and stars Arnold Schwarzenegger, Jamie Lee Curtis, Tom Arnold, Art Malik, Tia Carrere, Bill Paxton, Eliza Dushku, Grant Heslov and Charlton Heston. It is based on the 1991 French comedy film La Totale! The film follows U.S. government agent Harry Tasker (Schwarzenegger), who struggles to balance his double life as a spy with his familial duties. True Lies was the first Lightstorm Entertainment project to be distributed under Cameron's multimillion-dollar production deal with 20th Century Fox, as well as the first major production for the visual effects company Digital Domain, which was co-founded by Cameron. It was also the first film to cost $100 million. For her performance, Curtis won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy and the Saturn Award for Best Actress, while Cameron won the Saturn Award for Best Director. The film ultimately grossed $378 million worldwide at the box-office and was also nominated at the Academy Awards and BAFTAs in the Best Visual Effects category, and also for seven Saturn Awards.",
"score": "1.5491033"
},
{
"id": "26024108",
"title": "Fear Itself (TV series)",
"text": " Its title is derived from the famous Franklin D. Roosevelt quote, \"The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.\" The anthology was born out of Masters of Horror and shares several of the same creative elements. It features self-contained horror/thriller stories directed by the biggest horror directors working in features today, both shows were created by Mick Garris, and both shows are produced by Industry Entertainment's Andrew Deane, Adam Goldworm and Ben Browning. Stuart Gordon, Brad Anderson, John Landis, Ernest Dickerson and Rob Schmidt all directed at least one episode of each series. The series was filmed in the city of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, with some additional filming taking place in the city of St. Albert and the town of Devon, Alberta. Guest stars included Eric Roberts, Anna Kendrick, Brandon Routh, Briana Evigan, Jesse Plemons, Elisabeth Moss, and Cory Monteith. The song in the opening credits is titled \"Lie Lie Lie\" by System of a Down frontman Serj Tankian, from his first solo album Elect the Dead.",
"score": "1.5470536"
},
{
"id": "31725330",
"title": "Lynda Obst",
"text": " in-studio producer going on to produce such notable films as Sleepless in Seattle, One Fine Day, Someone Like You, Contact and The Siege. In 1989, Obst founded the production company Lynda Obst Productions. Initially based at Columbia Pictures, it moved to 20th Century Fox in 1993. By 2007, the company was named Obst/Rosen Productions. In 2009, Obst completed principal photography as producer on the Ricky Gervais–Matthew Robinson co-writing and directing debut, The Invention of Lying (originally titled \"This Side of the Truth\"), starring Ricky Gervais and Jennifer Garner. The film was released in October 2009. She was also the producer of Gurinder ",
"score": "1.5400474"
},
{
"id": "30694061",
"title": "Teresa Cheng",
"text": "True Lies (1994): Digital Effects Producer ; Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls (1995): Digital Production Supervisor ; Batman Forever (1995): Digital Effects Producer ; Batman & Robin (1997): Visual Effects Production Supervisor ; Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron (2002): Production Manager ; Shrek 2 (2004): Production Supervisor ; Madagascar (2005): Co-producer ; The Madagascar Penguins in a Christmas Caper (2005): Producer ; Shrek the Halls (2007): Producer ; Shrek Forever After (2010): Producer ; Hitman: Agent 47 (2015): Executive Producer ; Strange Magic (2015): Executive Producer ; Me and My Shadow (not yet released): Producer ",
"score": "1.5382087"
},
{
"id": "1500632",
"title": "Liar (band)",
"text": " Liar was formed in 1975 in Maidenhead in Berkshire by Dave Taylor formerly of Edison Lighthouse. In 1976, the band came to the attention of Chris Demetriou, a freelance producer and A&R man for Decca Records. Demetriou took the band into Decca's West Hampstead studios, inviting singer/guitarist Paul Travis, with whom he had worked before, to sit in with them to help with song arrangements and also to provide a channel of communication between studio and control room. Following various personnel changes, the line-up for the first album, Straight from the Hip, comprised David Burton (lead vocals and guitar), Dave ",
"score": "1.5320041"
},
{
"id": "31504303",
"title": "The Invention of Lying",
"text": " The Invention of Lying is a 2009 American romantic comedy film written and directed by comedian Ricky Gervais and writer Matthew Robinson in their directorial debuts. The film stars Gervais as the first human with the ability to lie in a world where people can only tell the truth. The cast also includes Jennifer Garner, Jonah Hill, Louis C.K., Jeffrey Tambor, Fionnula Flanagan, Rob Lowe, Philip Seymour Hoffman and Tina Fey. The film premiered at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival on September 14, 2009 and was released in the United States on October 2, 2009 by Warner Bros. Pictures and Focus Features. It grossed $32.7 million against a $18.5 million budget.",
"score": "1.5256112"
},
{
"id": "8495924",
"title": "The Truth of Lie",
"text": " The Truth of Lie (Die Wahrheit der Lüge) is a 2011 German psycho-thriller directed by Roland Reber. It was first shown at Hofer Filmtage in October 2011, and released in 2012.",
"score": "1.5235372"
},
{
"id": "14833784",
"title": "An Honest Liar",
"text": " An Honest Liar was screened at the April 2014 Tribeca Film Festival. It was then screened May 1 and 3, 2014 at Toronto's Hot Docs film festival. It was also screened at the June 2014 AFI Docs Festival in Silver Spring, Maryland and Washington, D.C., where it won the Audience Award for Best Feature. Its wide releases was March 6, 2015. On November 2, 2014 BBC Four aired the film as an episode of the documentary series Storyville, under the name: Exposed: Magicians, Psychics and Frauds.",
"score": "1.5234058"
}
] |
Who was the producer of Early Man?
|
[
"Steve Roach"
] |
producer
|
Early Man (album)
| 3,974,408 | 9 |
[
{
"id": "8312712",
"title": "Early Man (film)",
"text": " Early Man was released in the United Kingdom on 26 January 2018, by StudioCanal. StudioCanal also distributed the film in France, Germany, Australia and New Zealand. In the United States, it was released on 16 February 2018, by Lionsgate, through its Summit Entertainment label.",
"score": "1.5956633"
},
{
"id": "8312710",
"title": "Early Man (film)",
"text": " In June 2007, two new films were announced by Aardman, one of them being appropriately joked as an \"untitled Nick Park film, which is not another Wallace & Gromit feature film.\" In May 2015, it was announced that the title of the film would be Early Man, and it would be financed by the British Film Institute for $50 million. As with previous stop motion films created by Aardman, the characters in Early Man were developed over time with the voice actors to determine the way the characters look, move, and speak. The results were turned over to the film's 35 animators at the studio to work on individualizing the characters. A crowd of people took part in an audio recording at the Memorial Stadium Home of Bristol Rovers. The studio began Principal photography on the film in May 2016 and wrapped on 5 October 2017.",
"score": "1.5751845"
},
{
"id": "8312711",
"title": "Early Man (film)",
"text": " On 21 September 2017, a competition was launched on the CBBC television programme Blue Peter to design a prehistoric character inspired by Early Man, with the winner receiving the opportunity to see their character brought to life by Aardman, as well as receiving tickets to the premiere alongside the runners up. It closed on 12 October 2017, and the winner was announced in January 2018.",
"score": "1.5710548"
},
{
"id": "8312699",
"title": "Early Man (film)",
"text": " Early Man is a 2018 British stop motion animated sports comedy film directed by Nick Park, the creator of Wallace and Gromit, written by Mark Burton and James Higginson, and starring the voices of Eddie Redmayne, Tom Hiddleston, Maisie Williams, and Timothy Spall. The film follows a tribe of primitive Stone Age valley dwellers, who have to defend their land from bronze-using invaders in a football match. The film premiered on 20 January 2018 at the BFI Southbank cinema. Released theatrically on 26 January 2018, the film received generally positive reviews from critics, who praised the animation, voice acting, and humour, although it was deemed inferior to previous Aardman works. However, the film was also a box office bomb, only grossing $54 million against a budget of $50 million.",
"score": "1.5561128"
},
{
"id": "8312713",
"title": "Early Man (film)",
"text": " Early Man was a massive failure, grossing only $8.2 million in North America and $46.3 million in other territories (including $15.8 million in the United Kingdom) for a worldwide gross of $54.6 million, against its budget of $50 million, it was deemed a box office bomb.",
"score": "1.5095363"
},
{
"id": "8312717",
"title": "Early Man (film)",
"text": " The soundtrack, titled Early Man: (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack), was released under Lionsgate on 26 January 2018, the same day the film was released. The film's score was composed by Harry Gregson-Williams and Tom Howe. Gregson-Williams previously collaborated Park on the Aardman film Chicken Run.",
"score": "1.5019308"
},
{
"id": "27200516",
"title": "Early Man (band)",
"text": "2005: \"Death Is the Answer\" ; 2008: \"Tormentor of the Unseen\", split 7-inch with Rammer ",
"score": "1.4799702"
},
{
"id": "8312716",
"title": "Early Man (film)",
"text": " On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of based on reviews, and an average rating of, making it the lowest rated film Nick Park has made. The website's critical consensus reads, \"Early Man isn't quite as evolved as Aardman's best work, but still retains the unique visuals and sweet humor that have made the studio a favorite among animation enthusiasts.\" On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 68 out of 100, based on 39 critics, indicating \"generally favourable reviews\". Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of \"B\" on an A+ to F scale.",
"score": "1.4753445"
},
{
"id": "7416624",
"title": "Kent Walton",
"text": " In the early 1970s, he was involved with British sexploitation movies and is credited as a producer of such films as Clinic Exclusive, aka Clinic Xclusive, aka With These Hands (1971). A co-founder of Pyramid Films, he jointly used a pseudonym, Elton Hawke, with his business partner Hazel Adair, the co creator of the soap opera Crossroads. He used other pseudonyms to keep this part of his life from gaining public attention, but it was revealed in a 1975 episode of the TV documentary series Man Alive.",
"score": "1.4722838"
},
{
"id": "27200512",
"title": "Early Man (band)",
"text": " Early Man is an American heavy metal band from Brooklyn, New York City, now based in Los Angeles.",
"score": "1.4610765"
},
{
"id": "8331818",
"title": "Bernard Smith (editor)",
"text": "Immortal Gentleman (1935, producer). ; Men Without Honour (1939, producer). ; Elmer Gantry (1960, producer). ; How the West Was Won (1962, producer). ; Cheyenne Autumn (1964, producer). ; 7 Women (1966, producer). ; Alfred the Great (1969, producer). ",
"score": "1.4440689"
},
{
"id": "27807530",
"title": "First Man (film)",
"text": " In early 2003, actor-director Clint Eastwood and production people at the Warner Bros. studio bought the film rights to James R. Hansen's First Man: The Life of Neil A. Armstrong. Eastwood had previously directed as well as starred in the 2000 space-themed picture Space Cowboys, though he stated that he would likely not appear on camera in First Man. Universal and DreamWorks ultimately took up the First Man project in the mid-2010s. Damien Chazelle, who had received critical acclaim for his work on 2014's Whiplash, signed onto the film's production that year, and hired Josh Singer to rewrite an existing script. Gosling, who starred in Chazelle's 2016 film La La Land, joined as well to portray Armstrong in November 2015, and Hansen was hired to co-produce the film because of his role as the book's author. Wyck Godfrey and Marty Bowen also produced the film through Temple Hill Entertainment, with pre-production starting in March 2017. Actor Jon Bernthal was originally attached to the project and was cast as David Scott, but had to depart the production when his daughter suffered a serious illness. PIX Systems were used to aid in the production of this film.",
"score": "1.4165943"
},
{
"id": "13440015",
"title": "David Bohnett",
"text": " the DVD was released in 2010. He was executive producer of the 2005 documentary Little Man, about a micro-preemie boy who was born 100 days too early and weighed only one pound at birth. Bohnett also made a major financial contribution to the 2007 documentary For the Bible Tells Me So, about homosexuality and its perceived conflict with Christianity. He was the executive producer of Political Animals, a 2016 documentary about the struggles of openly gay politicians. He co-funded and co-sponsored the drive to continue the manufacture of peel-apart instant film. The initiative, headed by photographer Florian Kaps and ",
"score": "1.4106083"
},
{
"id": "4175829",
"title": "Daniel Melnick",
"text": " turned to Grant Tinker at NBC, who had Don Adams under contract and were looking for a project for the comedian. Talent Associates produced the Emmy Award-winning TV productions aired on CBS, with Ages of Man starring John Gielgud in 1966, which included readings from William Shakespeare's works ranging from Romeo and Juliet to Richard II, with critic Jack Gould of The New York Times calling it \"a viewing occasion to be treasured\". In 1967 they presented Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman, starring Lee J. Cobb, a production that Jack Gould of The Times described as one \"that will stand as the supreme understanding of the tragedy of Willy Loman.\" The firm, Talent Associates, was bought out by Norton Simon, Inc. in August 1968 for an undisclosed price, ",
"score": "1.3940096"
},
{
"id": "15914827",
"title": "John Foreman (producer)",
"text": " In the late 1960s, he and actor Paul Newman founded Newman-Foreman productions. He went on to produce Winning (1969) and Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969). He later produced four films in collaboration with director John Huston, The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean (1972), The Mackintosh Man (1973), The Man Who Would Be King (1975), and Prizzi's Honor (1985). His other film credits as producer include, The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds (1972) and They Might Be Giants (1971) He was nominated twice for the Academy Award Best Picture for his films Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and Prizzi's Honor. Forman was married to actress and singer Linda Lawson. Amanda Foreman and Julie Foreman, both actresses, are their daughters.",
"score": "1.3831434"
},
{
"id": "24886932",
"title": "American International Pictures",
"text": " Nicholson and Arkoff served as executive producers while Roger Corman and Alex Gordon were the principal film producers and, sometimes, directors. Writer Charles B. Griffith wrote many of the early films, along with Arkoff's brother-in-law, Lou Rusoff, who later produced many of the films he had written. Other writers included Ray Russell, Richard Matheson and Charles Beaumont. Floyd Crosby, A.S.C. famous for his camera work on a number of exotic documentaries and the Oscar winner, High Noon, was chief cinematographer. His innovative use of surreal color and odd lenses and angles gave AIP films a signature look. The early rubber monster suits and miniatures of Paul Blaisdell were used in AIP's science fiction films. The company also hired Les Baxter and Ronald Stein to compose many of its film scores. In the 1950s, the company had a number of actors under contract, including John Ashley, Fay Spain and Steve Terrell.",
"score": "1.3831155"
},
{
"id": "28770624",
"title": "The Late Bloomer",
"text": " Alcon Entertainment acquired the film rights to the journalist Ken Baker's autobiographical book Man Made: A Memoir of My Body in 2008, with a script set to be written by Gary Rosen. The film would be based on the true story of Baker, who went through his puberty in three weeks at the age of 27. The delaying of his puberty and normal development was caused by a benign tumor in his brain. The film's titling as The Late Bloomer was first announced in January 2010, as Alcon was developing the film. At the time, Andrew Kosove and Broderick Johnson were attached as producers, and the studio was re-imagining the idea ",
"score": "1.381666"
},
{
"id": "3135059",
"title": "Man Beast (film)",
"text": " Man Beast is a 1956 American horror film directed and produced by Jerry Warren. It was Warren's first directorial effort and the first film distributed by his Associated Producers, Inc. The film is about a young woman who persuades some mountain climbers to trek up to the Himalayas to attempt to find her missing brother, who hasn't been heard from since he went there on an earlier expedition to find the Abominable Snowman. A mysterious guide befriends them, but winds up actually in league with the Yeti who inhabit the mountains, and he secretly works against the explorers behind their backs, killing them off one by one. Film historian Bill Warren said a lot of the mountain climbing footage was taken from an unfinished foreign film, \"probably of Mexican origin\". The film was shown as early as April 1956, and opened in Los Angeles on December 5, 1956. The film was distributed in the United States as a double feature with Prehistoric Women.",
"score": "1.3813148"
},
{
"id": "8417109",
"title": "First Men in the Moon (1964 film)",
"text": " Harryhausen was planning on following Jason and the Argonauts (1963) with a version of H.G. Wells' 1904 novel The Food of the Gods and How It Came to Earth when he met with writer Nigel Kneale. Harryhausen had long wanted to film Wells' First Men in the Moon but producer Charles Schneer was not enthusiastic, in part due to worries about the film's period setting. Kneale thought it was an excellent idea, however, and he and Harryhausen managed to persuade Schneer to make it. Schneer said Kneale \"is a very dour, straightforward, serious classicist. He was recognized in England as being the contemporary science-fiction screenwriter. I hired him because we needed his technical expertise. Then, we superimposed on ",
"score": "1.3804033"
},
{
"id": "27200513",
"title": "Early Man (band)",
"text": " Guitarist and vocalist Mike Conte began performing under the name \"Early Man\" in the early 2000s, and when drummer Adam Bennati moved to New York in 2003, the two formed the nucleus for the current lineup. Drawing influence from bands such as Black Sabbath, Mercyful Fate, Megadeth, Judas Priest, Kreator, Celtic Frost, and early Metallica, their traditional approach quickly gained the attention of the independent music scene and they released their first EP in early 2005 on Monitor Records. Matador Records quickly signed them and released their debut album, Closing In, in the fall of the same year. Lead guitarist Pete Macy was added to the band's lineup in 2005. The band has used several bass players over the years and at times will perform without one. The band cut ties with Matador Records and signed with The End Records in 2008. They ",
"score": "1.3782363"
}
] |
Who was the producer of The Garden of Weeds?
|
[
"James Cruze"
] |
producer
|
The Garden of Weeds
| 2,933,563 | 91 |
[
{
"id": "9412932",
"title": "The Garden of Weeds",
"text": " The Garden of Weeds is a 1924 American silent drama film directed by James Cruze and starring Betty Compson. It is based on the Broadway play Garden of Weeds by Leon Gordon and Doris Marquette. Famous Players-Lasky produced and Paramount Pictures distributed.",
"score": "1.6145267"
},
{
"id": "31331721",
"title": "Weeds (TV series)",
"text": " head writer Jenji Kohan, whose credits include Tracey Takes On..., Mad About You, and Sex and the City, is the executive producer of the series, alongside Roberto Benabib, of Little City fame. Kohan also explains how she and Benabib \"tag team[ed]\" in running the writers room. The writer Matthew Salsberg and director Craig Zisk also joined as executive producers in later seasons. Following Zisk's departure from the series after five seasons, Mark Burley, director Scott Ellis, and Lisa Vinnecour were added as executive producers. By season 8, writers Victoria Morrow and Stephen Falk became the other executive producers. Exterior scenes for the first two seasons were shot almost exclusively in Stevenson Ranch, a suburban area of Santa Clarita Valley, California. The large fountain and Agrestic sign in the opening credits of the ",
"score": "1.5401584"
},
{
"id": "32890355",
"title": "Jenji Kohan",
"text": " Kohan was the creator of the Showtime dark comedy-drama television series Weeds, which she executive produced as showrunner and head writer at her writing studio, Tilted Productions, in Los Angeles, California throughout its entire eight season airing.",
"score": "1.5057027"
},
{
"id": "31331717",
"title": "Weeds (TV series)",
"text": " Weeds is an American dark comedy-drama television series created by Jenji Kohan that aired on Showtime from August 8, 2005, to September 16, 2012. Nancy Botwin (Mary-Louise Parker), a widowed mother of two boys—Silas (Hunter Parrish) and Shane (Alexander Gould)—begins selling marijuana to support her family. Other main characters include Nancy's lax brother-in-law Andy Botwin (Justin Kirk), who moves in to help raise her children; naive acquaintance Doug Wilson (Kevin Nealon); narcissistic neighbor Celia Hodes (Elizabeth Perkins), who lives with her husband Dean (Andy Milder) and their daughter Isabelle (Allie Grant); as well as Nancy's wholesalers Heylia James (Tonye Patano) and Conrad Shepard (Romany Malco). Over the course of the series, the Botwin family become increasingly entangled in ",
"score": "1.5015025"
},
{
"id": "31331751",
"title": "Weeds (TV series)",
"text": " On August 7, 2007, Simon Spotlight, a division of Simon and Schuster, published In the Weeds: The Official Guide to the Showtime Series by Kera Bolonik, which features interviews with the series creator/showrunner, its other writer-producers, and the entire cast. It also features detailed character and plot descriptions, recipes, trivia and behind-the-scenes information.",
"score": "1.5008688"
},
{
"id": "31331733",
"title": "Weeds (TV series)",
"text": " posing as a hedge fund. The show has a changing cast of supporting characters. Heylia James (Tonye Patano) and her family — Conrad and Vaneeta, portrayed by Romany Malco and Indigo, respectively — play key roles during the first three seasons. They are wholesalers who supply marijuana to Nancy. Conrad later develops his own strain of marijuana, called MILF weed, which Nancy sells. Season three features Sullivan Groff (Matthew Modine), an unethical, womanizing real estate developer with big plans for Agrestic. When Nancy moves to Ren Mar, the characters in Esteban's drug cartel—primarily Cesar (Enrique Castillo), Ignacio (Hemky Madera), and ",
"score": "1.4968069"
},
{
"id": "9412933",
"title": "The Garden of Weeds",
"text": " As described in a review in a film magazine, of great wealth but lacking in the better traits, Phillip Flagg (Fellowes) maintains an estate which he calls his \"Garden of Weeds\" where he entertains girls of the stage until he tires of them. Attracted to Dorothy Delbridge (Compson), he has her fired because she refuses to accept his attentions. She later accept his invitation and becomes the mistress of \"Garden of Weeds.\" Meeting Douglas Crawford (Baxter), another wealthy chap, she breaks with Flagg and marries him but has not the courage to reveal her past. Crawford engages Flagg’s butler, who threatens to reveal the secret. Flagg comes to see Crawford and arranges to fleece him in a shady deal. He begins to taunt her with veiled jibes to get even. Dorothy, unable to stand it any longer, reveals the truth. Crawford says he has known it all the time and proceeds to thrash Flagg, who falls over the balcony railing and is killed.",
"score": "1.4865551"
},
{
"id": "9412934",
"title": "The Garden of Weeds",
"text": " With no prints of The Garden of Weeds located in any film archives, it is a lost film.",
"score": "1.4860494"
},
{
"id": "31331720",
"title": "Weeds (TV series)",
"text": " Produced by Tilted Productions, in association with Lionsgate Television, the show is inspired by crime series, such as The Shield and The Sopranos, in the sense of an antihero serving as the protagonist while retaining an individual moral code, which usually goes against the norms of society. The title, according to Kohan, refers \"to a lot of things\", including marijuana and widow's weeds; however, it mainly alludes to \"hardy plants struggling to survive.\" The basic premise, as illustrated by the lyrics of the opening song from seasons 1-3 and 8, satirizes off-color characters struggling with faux suburban reality, in which everything is \"all style, no substance\". According to Kohan, she first pitched the series to HBO, which dismissed it. Robert Greenblatt invested in the show before it was commissioned by Showtime. Showrunner ",
"score": "1.4723387"
},
{
"id": "32169237",
"title": "Weeds (1987 film)",
"text": " Weeds is a 1987 American drama film directed by John D. Hancock, and starring Nick Nolte, Ernie Hudson, Lane Smith and Rita Taggart. The screenplay concerns a prison inmate who writes a play that catches the attention of a visiting reporter.",
"score": "1.4717789"
},
{
"id": "5476438",
"title": "Weeds (Millennium)",
"text": " \"Weeds\" is the eleventh episode of the first season of the American crime-thriller television series Millennium. It premiered on the Fox network on January 24, 1997. The episode was written by Frank Spotnitz, and directed by Michael Pattinson. \"Weeds\" featured guest appearances by Ryan Cutrona, Josh Clark and Terry David Mulligan. Forensic profiler Frank Black (Lance Henriksen), a member of the private investigative organisation Millennium Group, investigates a series of kidnappings in a gated community, finding that the real danger in the neighborhood comes from within its own walls. \"Weeds\" was Spotnitz's writing début for the series, and saw the return of recurring guest star C. C. H. Pounder, whose appearance received some critical appreciation. The episode, which begins with a quote from the Book of Jeremiah, was met with a mixed reception, with reviews complimenting the interesting, but poorly executed plot.",
"score": "1.4716914"
},
{
"id": "31331739",
"title": "Weeds (TV series)",
"text": "Season 1 ; Malvina Reynolds Season 2 ; 1) Elvis Costello ; 2) Death Cab for Cutie ; 3) Engelbert Humperdinck ; 4) Kate & Anna McGarrigle (in French) ; 5) Charlie (Charles Phelps) Barnett Jr ; 6) Aidan Hawken ; 7) Ozomatli ; 8) The Submarines ; 9) Tim DeLaughter of Polyphonic Spree ; 10) Regina Spektor ; 11) Jenny Lewis and Johnathan Rice ; 12) Malvina Reynolds Season 3 ; 1) Randy Newman ; 2) Angelique Kidjo ; 3) Kinky (in Spanish) ; 4) Donovan ; 5) Billy Bob Thornton ; 6) The Shins ; 7) The Individuals ; 8) Man Man ; 9) Joan Baez ; 10) The Decemberists ; 11) Michael ",
"score": "1.44608"
},
{
"id": "30942512",
"title": "Steven Starr",
"text": " Starr then executive produced and organized theatrical distribution for the Academy Award-nominated, urban farming documentary The Garden.",
"score": "1.4411156"
},
{
"id": "31331719",
"title": "Weeds (TV series)",
"text": " free of charge. The show has received numerous awards, including two Emmy Awards, two Satellite Awards, one Golden Globe Award, a Writers Guild Award, and a Young Artist Award. In November 2019, it was revealed that a sequel series was in development at Starz, titled Weeds 4.20. The series features Mary-Louise Parker and Elizabeth Perkins reprising their roles with the story set 10 years after the conclusion of the original series. Victoria Morrow, who was a producer on the writing team for Weeds, is set to return as writer and executive producer on the spin-off series, while original series creator and showrunner Jenji Kohan is not yet confirmed to be involved, along with any other returning cast.",
"score": "1.4383528"
},
{
"id": "1010117",
"title": "Kent Weed",
"text": " The Dennis Prager Show, The Newz, Roundhouse, and To Tell The Truth. He also started working in reality television during its early years with shows like Pure Insanity, Made in the USA, and Fantasies of the Stars. In 1994, Weed created his own production company, W.A.V.E. Productions. The full-service production company produced dance and music videos, in addition to infomercials and the variety show Paris by Night. Weed also directed and produced the famous Michael Jackson music video \"Earth Song\" shot at the World Music Awards. Weed has also worked with numerous top talents in the music world, including Shakira, Mariah Carey, Diana Ross, P Diddy, Celine ",
"score": "1.4313748"
},
{
"id": "1010118",
"title": "Kent Weed",
"text": " Shania Twain, and Brad Paisley. In 2000, Weed moved on from W.A.V.E. Productions and founded A. Smith & Co. Productions with Arthur Smith (producer). As executive producer on all the company’s projects, Weed produced the Emmy and People's Choice Award-nominated hit show Hell's Kitchen, along with \"Kitchen Nightmares\", American Ninja Warrior, \"Team Ninja Warrior\", \"I Survived a Japanese Game Show\", \"Conspiracy Theory with Jesse Ventura\", \"Full Throttle Saloon,\" \"Unsung,\" \"Unsung Hollywood\", \"American Gangster\", \"Pros vs. Joes\", \"UFC Countdown\", \"The Swan\", and \"Trading Spaces\". Weed also directed \"Crash Course\" for ABC, as well as Skating with Celebrities, I Married a Stranger and \"Gordon Ramsay: Cookalong Live\" for FOX.",
"score": "1.4295639"
},
{
"id": "28884137",
"title": "Michael Trim (television producer)",
"text": " Michael Trim is a cinematographer, director, and producer. He is best known for his works on Weeds, Parks and Recreation, and Orange Is the New Black. In 2010, Trim won a [[Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Cinematography for a Single-Camera Series (Half-Hour)|Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Cinematography for a Half-Hour Series]] for episode \"A Modest Proposal\" of the television series Weeds.",
"score": "1.4282668"
},
{
"id": "32890351",
"title": "Jenji Kohan",
"text": " Jenji Leslie Kohan (born July 5, 1969) is an American television writer and producer. She is best known as the creator of the Showtime comedy-drama series Weeds and the Netflix comedy-drama series Orange Is the New Black. She has received nine Emmy Award nominations, winning one as supervising producer of the comedy series Tracey Takes On....",
"score": "1.4274298"
},
{
"id": "28884139",
"title": "Michael Trim (television producer)",
"text": "4 episodes of 30 Rock. ; 13 episodes of Cavemen. ; 50 episodes of Weeds. ; 34 episodes of Parks and Recreation. 36 episodes of Weeds. ; The entire first season of Orange Is the New Black (13 episodes) and part of the second season. 1 episode of Man Up!. ; 4 episodes of Parks and Recreation. ; 18 episodes of Weeds. ; 7 episodes of Orange Is the New Black. ; 1 episode of 68 Whiskey. Trim worked as director of photography for: He has worked in some producer capacity for: Trim has directed: He has also worked in various other capacities, including production assistant, electrician, best boy, gaffer, cinematography. His initial interest in entertainment was in lighting.",
"score": "1.4259187"
},
{
"id": "16547796",
"title": "Weeds (2017 film)",
"text": " Weeds' production team consisted of 40+ artists, using animation software like Maya, Houdini, Hyperion and Nuke. To inject personality and life in the film's dandelion central character, some of the animators filmed themselves \"acting out\" the performance of the dandelion, to explore and prepare for their shots. One animator, Wayne Unten, executed a hand-drawn animation pass for his shots to create a foundation for his CG animation, as his was one of the most complicated in the film (a moment where the dandelion pulls itself out of the ground and leaps skyward), requiring some inventive rigging.",
"score": "1.4225863"
}
] |
Who was the producer of Maling Kutang?
|
[
"Kinaryosih"
] |
producer
|
Maling Kutang
| 3,859,284 | 88 |
[
{
"id": "4205705",
"title": "Maling Kutang",
"text": " Maling Kutang was directed by Rako Prijanto, best known for his comedies, and produced by Ody Mulya Hidayat of Maxima Pictures. The script was written by Raditya Dika, who had recently become popular after the success of his blog-turned-novel Kambing Jantan. A review of the film in The Jakarta Globe suggested that Dika had an \"incongruous style of observational humour\", which remained evident in Maling Kutang. Cinematography, which took less than a week, was handled by Rendra Yusworo, while editing was completed by Azis Natandra. Music was provided by Joseph S Djafar, with Yusuf A Patawari and Khikmawan Santosa on sound. The film starred Arie K. Untung, Indra Birowo, Deswita Maharani, and Kinaryosih, with minor roles played by actors including Fanny Fadillah and Nani Widjaja. In an interview, Kinaryosih – who had several years' experience working in comedies – stated that she had been told the title was Kutang Kutangkap (I Catch a Bra) during casting. The film's title is a play on Malin Kundang, a Minang folktale.",
"score": "2.0259314"
},
{
"id": "4205698",
"title": "Maling Kutang",
"text": " Maling Kutang (literally The Bra Thief) is a 2009 Indonesian comedy film directed by Rako Prijanto. Starring Arie K. Untung, Indra Birowo, Deswita Maharani, and Kinaryosih, it follows two neighbours who steal a bra they think is magical. It was released to mixed critical reception.",
"score": "1.8539901"
},
{
"id": "4205706",
"title": "Maling Kutang",
"text": " Maling Kutang was released on 1 October 2009, with a press screening at Jakarta Theater the day before. This was several weeks before Dika's Menculik Miyabi (Kidnapping Miyabi), starring AV idol Maria Ozawa, was scheduled to begin production. The film received a mixed reception. A review in The Jakarta Globe suggested that Maling Kutang was a \"like a mere preview\" for Menculik Miyabi. The reviewer praised several aspects of the film, including Untung's \"Jim Carrey-esque\" performance, and summarised that Maling Kutang was sufficient for \"a few light laughs\", but audiences might find it better to wait for Menculik Miyabi. A review on the entertainment website KapanLagi.com found the film better than its title suggested, with a clear plot and good performances by Birowo and Maharani, but considered the reliance on sexual innuendo to be poor form. Kartoyo DS, writing for Suara Karya, considered the comedy forced; he wrote that the film, unlike the Warkop comedies of the 1980s, did not produce any laughs.",
"score": "1.8131764"
},
{
"id": "3844500",
"title": "The Teng Chun",
"text": " as producer and director ; Tengkorak Hidoep (Living Skull; 1941) – as producer ; Srigala Item (Black Wolf; 1941) – as producer ; Si Gomar (1941) – as producer ; Singa Laoet (Lion of the Sea; 1941) – as producer ; Ratna Moetoe Manikam (1941) – as producer ; Elang Darat (Land Hawk; 1941) – as producer ; Poetri Rimba (Daughter of the Jungle; 1941) – as producer ; Noesa Penida (1941) – as producer ; Matula (1941) – as producer ; Djantoeng Hati (Heart and Soul; 1941) – as cinematographer ; Genangan Air Mata (Puddle of Tears; 1954) – as director ; Konde Tjioda (1954) – as producer ; Dinamika (Dynamics; 1955) – as producer During his career The released at least 34 films, as follows:",
"score": "1.7114027"
},
{
"id": "8366140",
"title": "D. Djajakusuma",
"text": " (Warriors for Freedom; 1960) – as production manager ; Mak Tjomblang (Mrs. Tjomblang; 1960) – as director and screenwriter ; Lahirnja Gatotkatja (Birth of Gatotkatja; 1960) – as director and screenwriter ; Masa Topan dan Badai (Time of Cyclones and Storms; 1963) – as director ; Rimba Bergema (Echoing Jungles; 1964) – as director ; Bimo Kroda (1967) – as director ; Malin Kundang (Anak Durhaka) (Malin Kundang [Faithless Child]; 1971) – as director ; Api Dibukit Menoreh (Gugurnya Tohpati) (Fire on Mount Menoreh [Death of Tohpati]; 1971) – as director ; Bang Kojak (Brother Kojak; 1977) – as producer ",
"score": "1.6845264"
},
{
"id": "27825334",
"title": "Malin Kundang",
"text": "a black and white Malay movie was produced in 1961; ; the 1979 autobiographical The Travel Journals of Si Tenggang II, one of the major poetical collections of the Malaysian laureate Muhammad Haji Salleh, uses the story as a metaphor for the general experience of moving away from one's cultural roots, and; ; a 2009 Malaysian documentary chronicling the origins of the legend produced by Astro. As a parable on family responsibility, the story is popular in Southeast Asia as a theme for animations, film, drama and literature even until today. For example:",
"score": "1.6815665"
},
{
"id": "9723404",
"title": "Malin Kundang (film)",
"text": " Malin Kundang was released in 1971. The Indonesian film critic Salim Said wrote that the first portion of the story was well-done, considering Rano Karno perfect for young Malin and the story well put together. However, he considered the choice of Wijaya to be a poor one, as the actor did not resemble Rano Karno in the slightest.",
"score": "1.6663923"
},
{
"id": "9723403",
"title": "Malin Kundang (film)",
"text": " Kroda (1967). Cinematography was handled by Kasudllah, while editing was done by Soemardjono and music was supplied by Frans Haryadi. Rano Karno, son of the actor Sukarno M. Noor, was cast as a young Malin. He attended the audition with his friend Itang Yunasz and, displeased with the changes to the story, blurted out \"That's not how the story goes.\" Djajakusuma was impressed and immediately cast him; it was Karno's first film role. Putu Wijaya – better known for his work in theatre – was cast as the adult Malin. Fifi Young, who had been active in film since 1940, was chosen as Malin's mother.",
"score": "1.6616812"
},
{
"id": "67447",
"title": "Lagu Kenangan",
"text": " Lagu Kenangan was produced for Persari Film Corporation by Djamaluddin Malik. The film was one in a long line of commercially oriented ventures which had been produced by the company starting with Sedap Malam in 1950. This black-and-white film was written and directed by, who joined Persari shortly after completing Pahit-Pahit Manis for their competitor Banteng Film. The film starred Titien Sumarni and AN Alcaff. They were supported by Mien Sondakh, M. Budhrasa, Sjamsu, Ramlan, and Djauhari Effendi.",
"score": "1.6558905"
},
{
"id": "9723398",
"title": "Malin Kundang (film)",
"text": " Malin Kundang (Anak Durhaka) (literally Malin Kundang, the Unfaithful Child]) is a 1971 film directed by D. Djajakusuma and adapted by Asrul Sani from the folktale of the same name. It follows a young boy who forgets his roots after spending much of his childhood at sea. Starring Rano Karno, Putu Wijaya, and Fifi Young.",
"score": "1.6477735"
},
{
"id": "9723402",
"title": "Malin Kundang (film)",
"text": " Malin Kundang was written by Asrul Sani, who adapted a Minang folktale of the same name. However, the film changed several aspects of the folktale, such as the ending. In the original story, Malin had turned to stone after his mother cursed him; however, Sani considered it illogical for a Muslim mother to curse her son, no matter what his sins. Funding for the film came from Elly Yunara, the wife of the recently decease film producer Djamaluddin Malik. Her production house, Remadja Ellynda Film, produced the film. It was directed by D. Djajakusuma, who had previously had experience in adapting part of the Mahābhārata in ",
"score": "1.6267354"
},
{
"id": "8366129",
"title": "D. Djajakusuma",
"text": " (Malin Kundang [Faithless Child]). The first, released for Penas Film Studio and based on a novel by Singgih Hadi Mintardja, followed soldiers from the Kingdom of Pajang in their efforts to subdue soldiers from the rival kingdom of Jipang. The second film was an adaptation of the Malay folktale of the same name. Starring Rano Karno and Putu Wijaya as the title character, the film follows a young boy who forgets his roots after spending much of his childhood at sea. His last role as a filmmaker was in 1977, when he helped produce Fritz G. Schadt's comedy Bang Kojak (Brother Kojak; 1977).",
"score": "1.626697"
},
{
"id": "9038708",
"title": "Pahit-Pahit Manis",
"text": " Pahit-Pahit Manis was produced by Banteng Film and produced by King Hay Ping. It was the company's third and final production, following K.M. 49 and Apa Salahku. This black-and-white film was written and directed by L. Inata. The film starred Titien Sumarni, Chatir Harro, Turino Djunaedy, and S. Poniman.",
"score": "1.6170288"
},
{
"id": "3844499",
"title": "The Teng Chun",
"text": " the \"Hong Lian Sie\"; 1936) – as producer and director ; Lima Siloeman Tikoes (Five Mouse Demons; 1936) – as producer and director ; Anaknja Siloeman Oeler Poeti (Child of the White Snake; 1936) – as producer and director ; Gadis jang Terdjoeal (The Sold Maiden; 1937) – as producer and director ; Tjiandjoer (Cianjur; 1938) – as director ; Oh Iboe (Oh Mother; 1938) – as director ; Roesia si Pengkor (1939) – as producer and director ; Alang-Alang (Grass; 1939) – as producer, director, and screenwriter ; Melati van Agam (Jasmine of Agam; 1940) – as producer ; Matjan Berbisik (Whispering Tiger; 1940) – as producer ; Kartinah (1940) – as producer ; Dasima (1940) – as producer ; Rentjong Atjeh (Rencong of Aceh; 1940) ",
"score": "1.6157598"
},
{
"id": "111",
"title": "Star Film (Dutch East Indies company)",
"text": " network as a journalist. He wrote a single work for the company, Tjioeng Wanara, based on the Sundanese legend as retold by M. A. Salmoen in a 1938 Balai Pustaka-published edition; this was directed and produced by Jo. Several actors cast for the film continued with Star for the remainder of its existence, including comedian S Waldy and future film producer Elly Joenara. However, Ariffien left Star owing to dissatisfaction over Tjioeng Wanara. Star continued expanding, and Jo brought aboard Chinese director Wu Tsun, whose first film for the company was Lintah Darat. It had begun production before the release of Tjioeng Wanara and dealt with a family torn apart by dealings with a loan shark. This production received positive ",
"score": "1.5846903"
},
{
"id": "1486928",
"title": "Ponirah Terpidana",
"text": " Ponirah Terpidana was written and directed by Slamet Rahardjo for Sukma Putra Film. It was produced by Manu Sukmajaya and A. Gunawan, with Tantra Surjadi on camera and editing by George Kamarullah. Rahardjo's brother Eros Djarot handled the musical arrangement, while Suparman Sidik handled sound. Benny Benhardi handled artistic direction. The film starred Nani Vidia and Bambang Hermanto, with other roles filled by Christine Hakim, Bambang Hermanto, Slamet Rahardjo, Ray Sahetapy, Teguh Karya, Nano Riantiarno, and Ratna Riantiarno. Much of the cast had worked together for Karya's Teater Populer, with Hakim, Karya, Nano Riantiarno, and Rahardjo having previously collaborated on films like Cinta Pertama (First Love; 1973). Hermanto had been in cinema for over thirty years, rising to fame after starring in D. Djajakusuma's Harimau Tjampa (Tiger from Tjampa) in 1953. Meanwhile, Vidia was a new actor, making her feature film debut with Ponirah Terpidana.",
"score": "1.5812955"
},
{
"id": "1989068",
"title": "Lewat Tengah Malam",
"text": " Lewat Tengah Malam (literally Past Midnight) is a 1971 Indonesian film and the first feature-length production by director Sjumandjaja. Starring Rachmat Hidayat, Rima Melati, and Soekarno M. Noer, it follows a thief named Lono who steals from the corrupt to give to the poor. The film, which may have been influenced by The Thomas Crown Affair (1968), was reportedly very tiring for the director, who briefly considered never directing again. The social realist elements led to Suharto's New Order government keeping Sjumandjaja under surveillance.",
"score": "1.5753753"
},
{
"id": "26912718",
"title": "Cinema of Malaysia",
"text": " operations, both MFP and Cathay-Keris produced three colour films each. Shaw Brothers’ produced Ribut (Storm), Hang Tuah and Raja Bersiong (The Fanged King). The latter, a legend from the state of Kedah, was written by Malaysia’s first Prime Minister, the late Tunku Abdul Rahman. Cathay-Keris produced Buluh Perindu (The Magic Flute), Cinta Gadis Rimba (The Virgin Of Borneo) and Mahsuri (The Maid of Langkawi), another Kedah legend written by Tunku Abdul Rahman. Although many companies emerged, such as Nusantara Films, Tan & Wong Film Company, Rimau Productions and Cathay-Keris, many closed down due to escalating production costs and diminishing audiences, leaving only MFP and Cathay-Keris both operating in Singapore. In ",
"score": "1.5720642"
},
{
"id": "9723399",
"title": "Malin Kundang (film)",
"text": " Malin (Rano Karno) is a young boy who lives in Sumatra with his mother (Fifi Young) and sister; his father had disappeared at sea several years earlier. When a group of pirates land at the village, Malin catches the eye of their leader, Nakoda Langkap, who takes the boy as his own. As they are leaving the village, they pass the ship of another pirate, the slaverunner Nakoda Hitam. Nakoda Langkap and his men take the ship, wounding (evil pirate captain) and freeing the slaves. One, a boy named Lalang, is orphaned when his mother is killed in the battle; Nakoda Langkap takes him in as a son too. Nakoda Langkap raises the boys to be good sailors and respect others. He also honours his promise to Malin's mother, bringing the ",
"score": "1.5707096"
},
{
"id": "10758531",
"title": "Maliq & D'Essentials",
"text": "\"Tafakur\" (2008, Kompilasi LCLM 2008) ; \"Prasangka\" (2011, A Tribute to KLa Project) ; \"Berlari dan Tenggelam\" (2012, Kompilasi Radio Killed The TV Stars #1) ; \"Barcelona\" (2014, Fariz RM & Dian PP in Collaboration With) ; \"Mendekat, Melihat, Mendengar\" (2016, Kompilasi Pop Hari Ini) ; \"Bagaimana Kutahu\" (2017, Cerita 25 Tahun Momen Kebersamaan McDonald’s) ; \"Lautan Kenangan\" (2017, Candra Darusman: Detik Waktu) ",
"score": "1.5671346"
}
] |
Who was the producer of Party?
|
[
"Gary Coleman",
"Gary Wayne Coleman"
] |
producer
|
Party (1994 film)
| 5,386,402 | 64 |
[
{
"id": "6515204",
"title": "Maestro (producer)",
"text": "\"Party All the Time\" ",
"score": "1.6689873"
},
{
"id": "32658053",
"title": "Francis Hsueh and Steven Hahn",
"text": " In fall 2005, Hsueh and Hahn completed their first film, Party, a feature-length documentary about New York's Asian nightlife. They shot, directed, edited, scored, produced and financed it themselves. The film features intersecting stories of several party promoters and partygoers, as well as a voiceover narration provided by Prof. Gary Okihiro of Columbia University. Party appeared at the 2007 Rotterdam Asiascope Overseas Asian Film Festival and was chosen for distribution by Pathfinder Pictures in 2006.",
"score": "1.6443498"
},
{
"id": "1071356",
"title": "The Arsenio Hall Show",
"text": " In 1990, Hall decided to develop a companion program to his own as what he termed to be his show's \"afterparty\". This idea became The Party Machine, a 30-minute late night music show in the same vein as shows like Club MTV or Soul Train. Hall co-produced the series with its host, singer/actress Nia Peeples, and it debuted on January 7, 1991, in syndication (usually following its parent series). Although initial ratings were high, especially in its larger markets, The Party Machine began sliding in the ratings quickly and the program was cancelled five months after its debut. Its final episode aired on September 15, 1991.",
"score": "1.6430184"
},
{
"id": "1078209",
"title": "Party (1994 film)",
"text": " Party is a 1994 short film starring Gary Coleman, Floyd Harden, DeAnna Hawkins, Ron Litman and Greg Nassief. The film was directed by Eric Swelstad and produced by Johnnie J. Young of J&E Studio Productions, from a script by Jay Woelfel based on a story by Nathaniel Hawthorne. The film was shot in 1994 on location in Lucerne Valley in the Mojave Desert in California.",
"score": "1.6415153"
},
{
"id": "31376970",
"title": "The Party (The Party album)",
"text": " The Party is the eponymous debut album by the band of the same name. It was the first full-length release on Hollywood Records, which was released August 1990. The Party worked with the industry's top writers and producers at the time, such as Stephen Bray, Jellybean Benitez, Andre Cymone, and Deborah Gibson. The album produced two U.S. charting singles: \"That's Why\" reached #55 on the Billboard Hot 100 and #52 on Cash Box. And its follow-up, \"Summer Vacation,\" reached #86 after having peaked a year earlier at #72 in the summer of 1990 as an advance single.",
"score": "1.6367316"
},
{
"id": "2679714",
"title": "The Party (TV play)",
"text": " The Party is a 1969 Australian TV play. It was made by the ABC in Melbourne under the direction of Chris Muir. It was written for the ABC by the head of Victorian religious broadcasts, John Nicholson. It aired in Melbourne and Sydney on 12 October 1969. It ran for 45 minutes.",
"score": "1.615832"
},
{
"id": "6074250",
"title": "The Party Machine with Nia Peeples",
"text": " Arsenio Hall created The Party Machine as a televised afterparty to his own program, The Arsenio Hall Show, and to be a late-night alternative to Club MTV. Hall built the half-hour show around Nia Peeples, who previously hosted MTV's Friday night Street Party series and the short-lived US adaptation of Top of the Pops. The Party Machine set featured live music venues, multi-level dance floors, conversation pits, a VIP room, a non-alcoholic bar and a resident DJ. Music videos were introduced by Peeples, who also served as a dancer/choreographer. The show, sold to markets as a companion piece to Hall's talk show, aired weeknights in syndication beginning January 7, 1991 on approximately 150 stations. In addition to Club MTV, its format brought comparisons to Soul Train, Dance Party USA and American Bandstand.",
"score": "1.5965489"
},
{
"id": "26368247",
"title": "The Party (play)",
"text": " The Party is a play by the British dramatist, actor and director Jane Arden (1927–82) which was first staged at the New Theatre, London on 28 May 1958. The play was directed by Charles Laughton and starred, in addition to Laughton himself, Albert Finney, Laughton's wife Elsa Lanchester, Ann Lynn, Joyce Redman, and John Welch. Following generally enthusiastic reviews The Party ran for six months at the New Theatre and has occasionally been performed in repertory since. The play was published by Samuel French Limited.",
"score": "1.5875175"
},
{
"id": "26400119",
"title": "TV Party",
"text": " After Glenn O'Brien was a guest on the weekly variety show television show, The Coca Crystal Show: If I Can’t Dance, You Can Keep Your Revolution, he went on to create his own show, TV Party. Glenn O'Brien was the host of TV Party; Chris Stein, the co-founder of the pop band Blondie, was the co-host; and Walter \"Doc\" Steding was the leader of the TV Party orchestra. Amos Poe was the director. Guests on the show included Mick Jones, David Byrne, Debbie Harry, James Chance, Klaus Nomi, Charles Rocket, Elliott Murphy and Jean-Michel Basquiat. In 2005 Brink Films has re-released some of the best of the 80 plus episodes on DVD, as well as a documentary about the TV show.",
"score": "1.5776098"
},
{
"id": "12055590",
"title": "Party of Five",
"text": " Party of Five is an American television teen and family drama created by Christopher Keyser and Amy Lippman that originally aired on Fox for six seasons from September 12, 1994, to May 3, 2000. The series featured an ensemble cast led by Scott Wolf as Bailey, Matthew Fox as Charlie, Neve Campbell as Julia, and Lacey Chabert as Claudia Salinger, who with their baby brother Owen (played by several actors) constitute five siblings whom the series follows after the loss of their parents in a car accident. Notable co-stars included Scott Grimes, Paula Devicq, Michael Goorjian, Jeremy London, and Jennifer Love Hewitt. While categorized as a series aimed at teenagers and young adults, Party of Five ",
"score": "1.5730278"
},
{
"id": "12423216",
"title": "Party (upcoming film)",
"text": " Party is an upcoming Indian comedy thriller film written and directed by Venkat Prabhu and produced by T. Siva. The film stars Jai, Jayaram, Shiva, Shaam, Sathyaraj, Ramya Krishna and Regina Cassandra, with Sanchita Shetty, Nivetha Pethuraj, Nandha Durairaj, Nassar and Kayal Chandran appear in supporting roles. After the release of his seventh directorial and debut production venture, it was announced that director Venkat Prabhu will do a film for Amma Creations banner of T.Siva which is celebrating its 25th year in film industry. It was reported that the producer of the film, T Siva of Amma creations, has confirmed the film is seeking a theatrical release.",
"score": "1.5703517"
},
{
"id": "27236918",
"title": "Party Game (game show)",
"text": " were also invited to send their own joke or phrase, which if used, could win them a small prize. The show premiered on CHCH in 1970. In its first season the show was hosted by Al Boliska, who was succeeded in 1971 by Bill Walker. Walker hosted for the remainder of the show's run. Party Game was produced by Riff Markowitz, the executive producer and star of The Randy Dandy Show and executive producer of The Hilarious House of Frightenstein. The set was a simple living room type with couches and a few wall pictures and pieces. The voice-over announcer who announced each charade was credited as \"Gardiner Westbound\", a nod to a stretch of the Gardiner Expressway in Downtown Toronto heading toward Hamilton, but was actually producer Markowitz.",
"score": "1.5674646"
},
{
"id": "2106432",
"title": "The Party (band)",
"text": " The Party is an American pop band. The group was originally composed of Albert Fields, Tiffini Hale, Chase Hampton, Deedee Magno Hall, and Damon Pampolina, all of whom were cast members of The All New Mickey Mouse Club from 1989 until 1991. In 2013, the group reunited, minus Tiffini Hale.",
"score": "1.5663323"
},
{
"id": "11961371",
"title": "The Party (Casiopea album)",
"text": " Yujiro Takeda, Tsutomu Abe, Shinji Arima, Norio Ninomiya, Mikio Sakai, Futoshi Yokobori, Seiji Takaku, Toshiya Tsurumi, Kenshiro Fujiwara, Takatori Mukai ; Hair & Make Up - Hisako Oguri ; FV Engineer - Yoshiki Nishina ; Editor - N・A・O ; M.A. Mixer - Takumi Murayama ; Sound Effect - Nori Miyata ; Art Designer - Mitsuaki Takeda ; Cover Designer - Mayumi Fujimori ; Assistant Producer - Tadashi Nomura ; Chief Manager - Kazuaki Negishi ; Manager - Takeshi Inoue ; Technicians - Shigeo Matsuyama, Yasushi Horiuchi, Yoshitsugu Nozawa ; Co-Producer - Shunsuke Goto (TAMCO) ; Producer - Takatsune Kudo (PIONEER LDC) ",
"score": "1.5648539"
},
{
"id": "3769401",
"title": "Party Down",
"text": " The series was executive produced by co-creators John Enbom, Rob Thomas, Dan Etheridge and Paul Rudd. Enbom served as showrunner. The co-executive producers were Jennifer Gwartz and Danielle Stokdyk and Jennifer Dugan was a producer. Beginning with season two, series star Adam Scott served as a producer, while series directors Bryan Gordon and Fred Savage served as supervising producers. Series star Ken Marino directed the second-season finale episode.",
"score": "1.5638496"
},
{
"id": "7391189",
"title": "The Party Animal",
"text": " The Party Animal is an independently produced comedy written and directed by David Beaird released in 1984 across the United States where it was critically derided but did respectably well at the box office. The film is a slapstick mockumentary-style comedy that spoofed the college campus sexploitation genre popularised by Animal House and Porky's. Though the movie was made on a shoestring budget, its soundtrack featured Buzzcocks, The Untouchables (who also perform in the film), The Fleshtones, The Convertables and Chelsea. The theme song for The Party Animal was \"Why Can't I Touch It\".",
"score": "1.5635743"
},
{
"id": "3260452",
"title": "Life of the Party (2018 film)",
"text": " In September 2020, Melissa McCarthy, Ben Falcone and the film's producers were sued for $10 million by Eva Kowalski, who claimed she pitched the concept for the film to the studio in 2014 and they breached an implied-in-fact contract by producing it without compensation.",
"score": "1.562973"
},
{
"id": "9535142",
"title": "The Party Line (radio)",
"text": " The show was typically written and produced only 24 hours before it was broadcast, so it sometimes contained references to current events.",
"score": "1.5615023"
},
{
"id": "32049468",
"title": "The Party (1968 film)",
"text": " The Party was the only non-Pink Panther collaboration between Sellers and Edwards. Producer Walter Mirisch knew that Sellers and Edwards were considered liabilities; in his autobiography, Mirisch wrote \"Blake had achieved a reputation as a very expensive director, particularly after The Great Race.\" Sellers had played an Indian man (Dr. Ahmed el Kabir) in his hit film The Millionairess (1960), and another Indian physician in The Road to Hong Kong (1962). He is mostly remembered as a similar klutz as Inspector Clouseau in The Pink Panther series. The film started shooting in May under the title RSVP. The film's interiors were shot on a set, at the MGM lot, though this may be a mistake as IMDb lists the Samuel Goldwyn Studios on ",
"score": "1.551598"
},
{
"id": "9582562",
"title": "Party Over Here",
"text": " Party Over Here is an American sketch comedy television series created by Paul Scheer and The Lonely Island, who serve as executive producers. It premiered on Fox on March 12, 2016. It was the first original live-action program carried in Saturday late night by Fox after the cancellation of The Wanda Sykes Show in 2010. This was also the second female-led sketch comedy show to be aired on Fox, the first was The Tracey Ullman Show in 1987. On August 9, 2016, Fox cancelled the series after one season.",
"score": "1.5433369"
}
] |
Who was the producer of Saturday Morning?
|
[
"Hal Roach"
] |
producer
|
Saturday Morning (1922 film)
| 5,698,467 | 97 |
[
{
"id": "32577900",
"title": "Children's programming on the American Broadcasting Company",
"text": " that was different from those carried by its competitors at the time, recruiting Peter Hastings (who had left Warner Bros. Animation in a dispute over the creative direction of Animaniacs and Pinky and the Brain, which he had both written for) to help overhaul ABC's Saturday morning lineup. The concept that was developed revolved around the idea that Saturday is different from every other day of the week; Hastings also came up with the idea of utilizing virtual set technology for the hosted interstitial segments. The concept debuted as Disney's One Saturday Morning on September 13, 1997, formatted as a ",
"score": "1.562811"
},
{
"id": "10375187",
"title": "Saturday Zoo",
"text": " The series was produced by host Jonathan Ross's own production company, Channel X, headed by Kenton Allen. Unlike previous shows, Ross specifically designed it to be \"a show that I want to watch\" without being particularly interested in viewing figures or popularity. The show was broadcast live, with no possibility for re-takes or editing. Writers for the series included Kevin Day and Patrick Marber. The music director and keyboard player was Janette Mason, who also wrote the show's theme tune.",
"score": "1.555588"
},
{
"id": "26155540",
"title": "Herbert Schlosser",
"text": " Schlosser played a key role in the creation of Saturday Night Live, authoring a February 1975 memo that proposed a new variety show to replace weekend re-runs of Johnny Carson's The Tonight Show. Schlosser's memo suggested that the show be called \"Saturday Night\", that it should air at 11:30, and that \"if possible the show should be done live\" and should seek to \"get different hosts\". \"It would be a variety show\", he wrote, \"but it would have certain characteristics. It should be young and bright. It should have a distinctive look, a distinctive set and a distinctive sound … We should attempt to use the show to develop new television personalities.\" He said the show should be filmed in Studio 8H at 30 Rockefeller Plaza. Schlosser worked with NBC's then head of late-night entertainment, Dick Ebersol, who recruited Lorne Michaels to create Saturday Night Live, which premiered on October 11, 1975.",
"score": "1.5431663"
},
{
"id": "341906",
"title": "Saturday Morning (2007 film)",
"text": " Saturday Morning is a 2007 American comedy film written and directed by Rob Greenberg and starring Joey Piscopo, George Wendt, Valerie R. Feingold, Louis Mandylor, Ashley Carin, Victor Raider-Wexler, Beth Ostrosky, and Lillo Brancato, Jr.",
"score": "1.5345336"
},
{
"id": "3726654",
"title": "Jean Doumanian",
"text": " Show creator Lorne Michaels resigned as producer of Saturday Night Live at the end of its fifth season and the entire cast and writing staff followed, with the exception of writer Brian Doyle-Murray. Doumanian, who had been an associate producer during the first five seasons of the show and produced a special for Michaels in 1978, was one of the few who remained. She was offered Michaels' job running SNL, much to Michaels' surprise, and took over the show for the 1980 season, hiring a completely new cast and new writers. Doumanian's tenure as SNL executive producer was tumultuous. She hired Denny Dillon, Gilbert Gottfried, Gail Matthius, Joe Piscopo, Ann Risley and Charles Rocket as repertory players, and Yvonne Hudson, Matthew Laurance and ",
"score": "1.4969563"
},
{
"id": "5825842",
"title": "Weekend (1974 TV program)",
"text": " The program was hosted by Lloyd Dobyns, who also did much of the reporting. The show's creator and executive producer was past (and future) president of NBC News, Reuven Frank. Together, Dobyns and Frank were largely responsible for the distinctive writing and quirky style of the program. The opening theme was the guitar intro to \"Jumpin' Jack Flash\" by The Rolling Stones. As a forward-focused executive, Frank brought in a woman, Clare Crawford-Mason, as the show's producer. In 1978, after four years of critical success and moderately good ratings for that hour, NBC moved Weekend to prime time. After airing once ",
"score": "1.4914405"
},
{
"id": "15884440",
"title": "Elwy Yost",
"text": " Ida Makes a Movie, the first of four television shorts that spawned The Kids of Degrassi Street in 1982 and by extension, the Degrassi media franchise. The format of Saturday Night at the Movies was that of two movies, separated by in-depth interviews conducted by Yost. In the early years the interviews were with local film experts, but the show's producers took the opportunity to interview visiting actors when they had engagements in Toronto. As the show grew in popularity, funds were found to send Yost and a crew to Hollywood to arrange interviews with film personalities. The library includes interviews with the stars of classic films, character actors, directors, screenwriters, composers, film-editors, special-effects ",
"score": "1.4872086"
},
{
"id": "10815758",
"title": "Saturday Night Live (season 1)",
"text": " drew up some ideas and brought in Dick Ebersol – a protégé of legendary ABC Sports president Roone Arledge – to develop a 90-minute late-night variety show. Dick Ebersol's first order of business was hiring a young Canadian producer named Lorne Michaels to be the show-runner. Television production in New York was already in decline in the mid-1970s (The Tonight Show had departed for Los Angeles two years prior), so NBC decided to base the show at their studios in Rockefeller Center to offset the overhead of maintaining those facilities. Lorne Michaels was given Studio 8H, a converted radio studio that prior to that point was most famous ",
"score": "1.4858806"
},
{
"id": "1131091",
"title": "History of the American Broadcasting Company",
"text": " 1972 and which in summer 1975 was locally pre-empting AM America; this was the first-morning show to use a set modeled after a living room and provided news and weather updates at the top and bottom of each hour. Discovering that these formats appealed to viewers, the network adopted them for a new national morning show, Good Morning America, which debuted on November 3, 1975. In 1975, ABC launched the short-lived late night comedy show \"Saturday Night Live with Howard Cosell\". The show was not a tremendous success and was cancelled shortly afterward. After the program's cancellation, NBC purchased the rights to the title ",
"score": "1.484144"
},
{
"id": "10047895",
"title": "Sunday Morning (radio program)",
"text": " The program was launched in 1976 with Bronwyn Drainie and Bruce Rogers as hosts. Rogers was replaced after several months by Warner Troyer. In 1979, Troyer reduced his workload, continuing as a literary critic for the program but retiring as cohost; he was succeeded by Patrick Martin. Stuart McLean was associated with the show in its early years as a documentary reporter and producer. He won an ACTRA Award in 1979 for \"Operation White Knight\", his Sunday Morning documentary about the Jonestown Massacre. For much of its run, comedian Nancy White contributed a weekly satirical song to the program. In 1981, the program won two ACTRA Awards, for Best Radio Program and Best Host or Interviewer in a Radio Program (Martin and Drainie). That fall, Martin and Drainie were replaced by Russ Patrick and Barbara Smith, and the program was revamped ",
"score": "1.4839354"
},
{
"id": "25107387",
"title": "CBS Saturday Morning",
"text": " CBS debuted its first Saturday morning newscast on September 13, 1997, alongside the relaunch of its Saturday morning children's programming lineup as Think CBS Kids. Titled CBS News Saturday Morning, the program was originally anchored by Russ Mitchell and former New York congresswoman Susan Molinari, who left in 1998, followed by Dawn Stensland-Mendte in 1998–1999. For its first year, the program was broadcast live one hour later than the Monday through Friday version of the original CBS This Morning, starting at 8:00 a.m. Eastern Time; however, it was based out of the same studio at the CBS Broadcast Center that was home to the weekday broadcast. The program moved to the 7:00 a.m. Eastern time slot (uniform with the weekday broadcast) ",
"score": "1.4823425"
},
{
"id": "29903571",
"title": "February 1950",
"text": "NBC premiered a 90-minute comedy variety show that was telecast live every Saturday night, with a different guest host each week and a regular cast of comedians. The program, originally called Saturday Night Revue was soon called Your Show of Shows. ; The final issue of Great Britain's The Strand Magazine reached newsstands, after publishing monthly since 1894. The Strand had introduced the Sherlock Holmes stories of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, as well as the H.G. Wells' novel The First Men in the Moon. ; Born: ; Neil Jordan, Irish film director, writer, and producer (The Crying Game), in Sligo ; Néstor Kirchner, 51st President of Argentina 2003-2007, in Río Gallegos (d. 2010) ; Died: ; George Minot, 64, American physician, 1934 Nobel Prize laureate ; Nikolai Luzin, 66, Soviet mathematician ",
"score": "1.4803865"
},
{
"id": "1580325",
"title": "Paul Jackson (producer)",
"text": " Jackson was a member of the council of IPPA, a forerunner of Pact, the body which established terms for trade between independent producers and the BBC and other broadcasters. PJP was eventually taken over by Noel Gay Television, a company chaired by the British entertainment executive, Bill Cotton. Jackson served as the Managing Director and the company produced Red Dwarf, the long-running and internationally successful comedy series, the pilot episode of Bottom (Rik Mayall and Adrian Edmonson) and, working with LWT, the hugely influential Channel Four variety show, Saturday Live. Saturday Live featured such comedy stars as Lenny Henry, Pamela Stephenson, ",
"score": "1.4764806"
},
{
"id": "32577897",
"title": "Children's programming on the American Broadcasting Company",
"text": " the same time that ABC launched I Love Saturday Night – a block that was inspired by the success of ABC's Friday night TGIF sitcom block (the former of which ultimately ended after several weeks due to low ratings), executive producer Jim Janicek also brought the hosted programming block concept to Saturday mornings, under the brand More Cool TV. Stars from live-action series aired as part of the Saturday morning lineup, most notably including the cast of ABC's Land of the Lost revival, hosted interstitials every half-hour during the block. The MCTV segments at times were several seconds shorter than those shot for TGIF and I Love Saturday Night. While an opening ",
"score": "1.4763472"
},
{
"id": "16362922",
"title": "Friday Night, Saturday Morning",
"text": " Friday Night, Saturday Morning is a UK television chat show with a revolving guest host. It ran on BBC2 from 28 September 1979 to 2 April 1982, broadcast live from the Greenwood Theatre, a part of Guy's Hospital. It was notable for being the only television show to be hosted by a former British Prime Minister (Harold Wilson), and for an argument about the blasphemy claims surrounding the film Monty Python's Life of Brian (1979). The programme was the idea of Iain Johnstone and Will Wyatt, who insisted on a changing presenter every fortnight. Another innovation was that the presenters chose the guests they were to interview.",
"score": "1.4710944"
},
{
"id": "11928164",
"title": "The Saturday Show (2015 TV series)",
"text": "Craig Stevens (Showbiz news) ; Stacey Solomon (Correspondent) ; David Domoney (Gardening) ; Joe Inglis (Pets) ; Pollyanna Woodward (Gadgets) ",
"score": "1.4704056"
},
{
"id": "10177547",
"title": "Today (Australian TV program)",
"text": " After the initial success of Today, a Saturday edition was produced in the early nineties. Hosted by Tracy Grimshaw, it featured more news, politics and economic reports. Tracy Grimshaw was later followed by Tara Brown and Richard Wilkins, before reporter Helen Dalley joined the program in 1996. These hosts were accompanied by news presenters Michael Usher, Anna Coren and Mark Burrows. In 2002, Today on Saturday Australia was cancelled due to budget cuts by the Nine Network.",
"score": "1.470015"
},
{
"id": "28379004",
"title": "Kenton Allen",
"text": " In 1990 he joined the recently formed independent production company Channel X to produce all of Jonathan Ross's shows. He produced over 200 live editions of Tonight with Jonathan Ross for Channel 4. In 1991 he produced Jonathan Ross Presents Madonna, which became Channel 4's highest rated entertainment programme of the year. Other credits include the innovative live comedy entertainment series Saturday Zoo which featured the live television debuts of the likes of Steve Coogan, John Thompson, Lily Savage, and Mark Thomas, and the factual entertainment hit Fantastic Facts for ITV.",
"score": "1.4683304"
},
{
"id": "28950211",
"title": "Alan Zweibel",
"text": "Saturday Night Live (1975–1980/1984/1987) ; The Beach Boys: It's OK (1976) ; The Paul Simon Special (1977) ; Steve Martin's Best Show Ever (1981) ; The New Show (1984) ; It's Garry Shandling's Show (1986–1990) (also Co-Creator) ; The Boys (1989) (also Creator/Executive Producer) ; Saturday Night Live: 15th Anniversary (1989) ; Good Sports (1991) (also Creator/Executive Producer) ; The Please Watch the Jon Lovitz Special (1992) (also Executive Producer) ; Great Performances: 25th Anniversary Special (with Cy Coleman) (1997) ; I Am Your Child (with Rob Reiner) (1997) ; Curb Your Enthusiasm (2001–2002) (Consulting Producer) ; What Leonard Comes Home To (2002) (Executive Producer) ; 56th Primetime Emmy Awards (2003) ; Monk (2007) ; Late Show with David Letterman (2008–2009) ; Women Without Men (2010) ; 700 Sundays (2014) ",
"score": "1.4674898"
},
{
"id": "31442053",
"title": "1975 in Canada",
"text": "Saturday Night Live, produced by Canadian Lorne Michaels and also featuring Paul Shaffer and Dan Aykroyd, premieres in the United States. ",
"score": "1.4661136"
}
] |
Who was the producer of Mother and Child?
|
[
"Carl Froelich",
"Carl August Hugo Froelich"
] |
producer
|
Mother and Child (1924 film)
| 1,153,600 | 63 |
[
{
"id": "3773141",
"title": "Mother of the Bride (1993 film)",
"text": " Mother of the Bride is a 1993 American made-for-television drama film that stars Kristy McNichol, who also served as producer of the movie and was directed by Charles Correll Jr. It premiered on CBS on February 27, 1993 and was released on DVD in 2006. It was preceded by Children of the Bride (1990) and Baby of the Bride (1991).",
"score": "1.6150707"
},
{
"id": "9276023",
"title": "Mother and Child (2009 film)",
"text": " Mother and Child is a 2009 drama directed and written by Rodrigo García. It premiered on September 14, 2009, at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival and at the Sundance Film Festival on January 23, 2010, and was the closing night selection within Maryland Film Festival 2010. It was given a limited release in the United States beginning May 7, 2010.",
"score": "1.6011807"
},
{
"id": "9276027",
"title": "Mother and Child (2009 film)",
"text": " The film was originally going to be produced by Cha Cha Cha Films, Focus Films and Universal Studios; Julie Lynn through Mockingbird Films took over in late 2008 with a production budget of $7 million. Principal photography began in January, 2009.",
"score": "1.5862907"
},
{
"id": "27911343",
"title": "Little Mother (1973 film)",
"text": " Little Mother (also known as Woman of the Year) is a 1973 drama, romance, cult film directed by Radley Metzger and starring Christiane Krüger, Siegfried Rauch and Ivan Desny. The story was loosely modelled on that of Evita Peron in Argentina. It was a co-production between the United States, West Germany and Yugoslavia.",
"score": "1.5544662"
},
{
"id": "13980517",
"title": "Gail Parent",
"text": " co-wrote the book for the 1974 musical Lorelei. It is her sole Broadway credit. Parent's greatest success has been in television, most notably with The Golden Girls and Tracey Ullman's sketch comedy series Tracey Takes On..., serving as a producer and writer for both. She also wrote episodes of The Smothers Brothers Show, The Carol Burnett Show, Rhoda, Steven Spielberg's Amazing Stories, Babes (of which she also served as series creator) and Finder of Lost Loves, and the musical variety special Sills and Burnett at the Met (1976). With Ann Marcus, she co-created the 1976-77 soap opera satire Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman. With Kenny Solms, she created the 1970 situation comedy The Tim Conway Show. Parent is the winner of a CableACE Award and two Emmys, and has been nominated for an additional twelve Emmys and two Writers Guild of America Awards.",
"score": "1.5447478"
},
{
"id": "30145748",
"title": "Motherhood (2009 film)",
"text": " Motherhood and Arlen Faber (later renamed The Answer Man) were a pair of films independently financed and produced by the New York City-based iDeal Partners Film Fund. The two films were part of a coordinated effort by iDeal Partners to reduce the risk in investing in film production during the late-2000s recession; they were pre-sold to foreign distributors, cast with \"commercially-tested actors\" and took advantage of U.S. state tax incentives that encouraged film production. Both also premiered at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival. As of January 2009, Jana Edelbaum, co-founder of iDeal Partners, was predicting \"at least a 15 percent return for her investors and – if something big happens with Motherhood or Arlen Faber – as much as 40 percent.\"",
"score": "1.5400305"
},
{
"id": "12491",
"title": "Michael Mills (British producer)",
"text": " Mills was the original producer of television series Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em (1973–1975), and briefly supervised Wodehouse Playhouse (1976). He joined Thames Television around this time, where he remained for the rest of his career. At Thames, he was responsible for the production of such series as Get Some In! (1975–1978) and Chance in a Million (1984-1986).",
"score": "1.538084"
},
{
"id": "2325911",
"title": "Mary Parent",
"text": " She was a producer in all films unless otherwise noted.",
"score": "1.5348198"
},
{
"id": "9302446",
"title": "Mother (1996 film)",
"text": " Mother is a 1996 American comedy-drama film directed by Albert Brooks, co-written by Brooks with Monica Johnson, and starring Brooks and Debbie Reynolds as son and mother. Brooks portrays a novelist who moves back home with his mother after his second divorce, hoping to determine why all his relationships with women were unsuccessful. Mother was Reynolds's first major film role in over 20 years. The film earned positive reviews and was Brooks's most financially successful film as a director.",
"score": "1.5302832"
},
{
"id": "16572125",
"title": "Darren Aronofsky",
"text": " reads, \"There's no denying that mother! is the thought-provoking product of a singularly ambitious artistic vision, though it may be too unwieldy for mainstream tastes.\" His next film would be \"A courtroom drama of Artificial intelligence\", in which he would cooperate again with Paramount Pictures, having doing so in mother!. In 2018, he was the co-executive producer of SPHERES, a virtual reality journey through the universe, that was acquired in a seven figure deal at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival. In January 2021, his next film was announced to be The Whale, a film adaptation of Samuel D. Hunter's play of the same name, starring Brendan Fraser.",
"score": "1.5241249"
},
{
"id": "2631550",
"title": "Children, Mother, and the General",
"text": " Children, Mother, and the General (Kinder, Mütter und ein General, and also released as Sons, Mothers, and a General) is a 1955 West German war film directed by László Benedek and starring Hilde Krahl, Therese Giehse and Ewald Balser. The film was not a popular success, possibly because its anti-war perspective clashed with support for German rearmament and membership in NATO. The film's sets were designed by the art director Erich Kettelhut and Johannes Ott. It was shot at the Bavaria Studios in Munich and the Wandsbek Studios in Hamburg. Location filming took place on Lüneburg Heath.",
"score": "1.5232711"
},
{
"id": "3267771",
"title": "Mother Mother (film)",
"text": "Mother Mother received a 2 million TWD subvention from the Bureau of Audiovisual and Music Industry Development of Taiwan. ; Production on the film started from February 19 and ended on March 5, 2014. ; This Television film is produced and aiming for the upcoming Taiwan Golden Bell Awards. ",
"score": "1.5212294"
},
{
"id": "16297037",
"title": "Bundle of Joy",
"text": " The original narrative of Bundle of Joy was produced by Joe Pasternak who had developed a winning formula in Universal Picture's Berlin division. His second picture with Henry Koster (director), Felix Jackson (writer), and Franciska Gaal (actress) was Kleine Mutti (Little Mother, 1935) about the orphan Marie who raises a foundling and ends up marrying a banker. The German-language film was remade in English as Bachelor Mother three years later. Bundle of Joy is a musical adaptation of Bachelor Mother, and Jackson retains story credit on both pictures. RKO Studios had ceased production after Howard Hughes sold it. The new owners announced a program of 11 films costing $22,500,000; The First Travelling Saleslady, Back from Eternity, Tension at Table Rock, Beyond a Reasonable Doubt, Stage Struck, Bundle of Joy, A Farewell to Arms, Cash McCall, Misty, The Syndicate and Is This Our Son?. (Not all these films would be made by RKO and several were not made at all.)",
"score": "1.514272"
},
{
"id": "33106141",
"title": "David Conolly",
"text": " Having spent a few years in constant development it was decided to combine their many skills and create a feature film, entitled Mothers & Daughters. Six months were spent with actors devising and rehearsing the screenplay, followed by intense bursts of filming with breaks so that cast and crew could earn money to live on during production and so that Hannah and David could earn money to finance the next phase of filming! Finally producer and writer Lynda La Plante (Prime Suspect) saw a rough-cut of Mothers & Daughters and became their post production fairy Godmother. Mothers & Daughters was invited to film festivals worldwide, debuting at Cannes then playing at São Paulo, Montreal, Quebec, Barcelona, Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, The Hamptons, London and Dinard \"Great performances, good pacing, sharp script\", Variety declared, they were nominated - The Golden Hitchcock Award for Direction. Mothers & Daughters was selected as one of the top six British Films of the year.",
"score": "1.5058849"
},
{
"id": "3800282",
"title": "Michael A. Krauss",
"text": " coffee table book to release about the shows with John Lennon. After the Mike Douglas Show, Krauss went on to segment produce for ABC where he met and married Joan Lunden of Good Morning America and where he was nominated for two Emmys including one for \"Producer, Best Daytime Show.\" After Good Morning America he went on to create and produce Mother's Day with Joan Lunden where he won an ACE Award for Best Show in 1984. Mother's Day was also awarded the Parent's Choice Award. Day ran for a total of 8 years on the Lifetime channel. After Mother's Day he created and executive produced the spin-off Mother's Minutes. \"Minutes\" were quick segments about ",
"score": "1.5010891"
},
{
"id": "955987",
"title": "Tony Kahn",
"text": "Mother's Little Network, producer, writer, and performer, 1974 ; Media Probes. Soundaround, as writer and host, 1982 ; The Day the Cold War Came Home, as producer, writer and narrator, 1987 ; Here in My Arms, producer, writer and narrator, 1990 ; Learning to Drive, producer, writer and narrator, 1991 ; Fathers: A Family Album, 1992 ; Nova, 14 programs, narrator ; Frontline, 2 programs, narrator ; Chronicle, host of closing social commentary segment (1982–1985) ",
"score": "1.4993343"
},
{
"id": "30141979",
"title": "Any Mother's Son",
"text": " Any Mother's Son is a 1997 American made-for-television drama film directed by David Burton Morris. The movie is based on a true story, the murder of Allen Schindler, a United States Navy sailor who was killed for being gay. The film stars Bonnie Bedelia, Hedy Burress, Sada Thompson and Paul Popowich. It premiered on August 11, 1997 on Lifetime. The movie won the GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Made for TV Movie, and Bedelia was nominated for a CableACE Award for Outstanding Actress in a Movie or Miniseries.",
"score": "1.499208"
},
{
"id": "5985578",
"title": "Barbara Corday",
"text": " a publicist for the anti-war organization Another Mother for Peace where she met its founder, Barbara Avedon who was also a new mom. Avedon got their foot in the door with their projects because she had prior experience working on TV series like The Donna Reed Show, Father Knows Best, The Danny Thomas Show, The Ann Sothern Show, Margie, Gidget, Medical Center and That Girl. Danny Arnold hired them to write a script for a Barbara Eden pilot (which never went to development). They worked so well together, they officially became writing partners. From 1972 to 1979, they wrote several episodes for television series and a few pilots as free-lance writers including ",
"score": "1.4975784"
},
{
"id": "3061419",
"title": "Mother and Baby",
"text": " Mother and Baby is a British television series which aired on the BBC during 1951. The series followed the first twelve weeks of life of a baby named David Malcolm Suckling. It aired fortnightly for six episodes aired in a 20-minute time-slot.",
"score": "1.4949846"
},
{
"id": "9276028",
"title": "Mother and Child (2009 film)",
"text": " The film has been met with generally positive reviews, with critics praising the standout performance of Annette Bening, and garnering a 78% approval rating based on 128 reviews with an average score of 6.70/10 from Rotten Tomatoes and a weighted average score of 64 at Metacritic. The film was awarded the Grand Prix du Jury 2010 at the Deauville American Film Festival (France).",
"score": "1.4910135"
}
] |
Who was the producer of Revelations?
|
[
"Tony Gayton"
] |
producer
|
Revelations (Hell on Wheels)
| 5,563,707 | 86 |
[
{
"id": "1325217",
"title": "Revelations Entertainment",
"text": " Revelations Entertainment is an independent movie production company founded by actor Morgan Freeman and business partner Lori McCreary in 1996. Its mission statement, to \"reveal truth,\" drives to company produce thought-provoking entertainment with artistic integrity and \"soul.\" In 2006, Revelations became the first film production company in history to distribute a film (10 Items or Less) online while the movie was still playing in theaters. This was achieved by using ClickStar (also founded by Freeman and McCreary as a joint venture with Intel Corporation) as their online distribution site.",
"score": "1.6782355"
},
{
"id": "31536551",
"title": "Revelations (2005 TV series)",
"text": " Revelations is an American apocalyptic drama television miniseries created by David Seltzer and based on the Book of Revelation. The series follows two central characters, an astrophysicist (Bill Pullman) and a nun (Natascha McElhone), in a race against time to see if the end of the world can be averted. It also stars Michael Massee, Mark Rendall, Chelsey Coyle, Brittney Coyle, John Rhys-Davies, Orla Brady, Alexa Nikolas, Tobin Bell, Martin Starr, Fred Durst, and Caryn Green.",
"score": "1.6228656"
},
{
"id": "7930190",
"title": "Lori McCreary",
"text": " Lori McCreary (born in Antioch, California) is an American motion picture producer and computer scientist. She is CEO of the production company Revelations Entertainment, which she co-founded with actor Morgan Freeman.",
"score": "1.5771427"
},
{
"id": "7930191",
"title": "Lori McCreary",
"text": " McCreary graduated from UCLA with a degree in Computer Science. While still in college, she co-founded software company CompuLaw, now a part of Aderant. McCreary's appreciation for the stage play Bopha! inspired her to go into motion picture production. Actor Morgan Freeman was signed to direct the film. Later, the pair partnered in the formation of Revelations Entertainment in 1996 with a mission to produce entertainment that reveals truth. As Revelations CEO, McCreary produced The Magic of Belle Isle, directed by Rob Reiner. Before that, she produced Invictus, directed by Clint Eastwood, with Freeman starring in the long-awaited portrayal of Nelson Mandela and co-starring Matt Damon. She is currently Executive Producer of CBS's hit series Madam Secretary starring Téa Leoni. She is also Executive producer of The Story ",
"score": "1.5526683"
},
{
"id": "13445551",
"title": "The Revelations of 'Becka Paulson",
"text": " The story was adapted into an episode of 1995 television series The Outer Limits. Brad Wright wrote the teleplay, and Steven Weber directed. In July 2020, Deadline Hollywood announced that The CW is adapting the story into a one-hour drama series titled Revelations.",
"score": "1.5455381"
},
{
"id": "10771519",
"title": "Revelations – The Initial Journey",
"text": " Revelations – The Initial Journey is a 2002 TV series, produced by Cloud 9 Screen Entertainment Group in New Zealand. The stories are told through the narrator who is called Jess and played by Tom Hern. Each episode contains a story from a different time and place in world history. The show ran for one season and it had 26 half-hour episodes.",
"score": "1.5439901"
},
{
"id": "12184896",
"title": "Revelation Films",
"text": " Revelation Films is a British film and television production and distribution company delivering visual entertainment via cinema, television and digital platforms. Tony Carne founded Revelation Films in 1992 as a video and television production business following a career at CBS/Fox, Harper Collins and Simitar Entertainment. Initially a production entity, the company earned two BAFTA nominations for the BBC with Out And About, a regional magazine series. It also discovered a raw drag comedian called Paul O’Grady and introduced UK audiences to his alter ego Lily Savage. A national theatre tour followed and the TV show Paying The Rent was broadcast by Channel 4 and the Paramount Comedy Channel. Trevor Drane joined Carne in 1996 having previously been at First Independent Films where he collected a lifetime achievement award for Dirty Dancing and the Freddie Award at Hanna Barbera during his time as head of that companies home entertainment output.",
"score": "1.5385339"
},
{
"id": "7930192",
"title": "Lori McCreary",
"text": " God with Morgan Freeman, the highest-rated series in NatGeo's history, as well as the expansion series The Story of Us with Morgan Freeman. She was the Executive Producer of Discovery Science's Through the Wormhole With Morgan Freeman. Utilizing the latest work at NASA, the series explores how astrobiology, string theory, quantum mechanics and astrophysics are pushing the boundaries of our understanding of the universe. McCreary's additional producer credits include Mimi Leder's Thick as Thieves with Antonio Banderas and The Maiden Heist starring Christopher Walken, William H. Macy, Marcia Gay Harden and Morgan Freeman. Revelations also co-produced Along Came a Spider for Paramount Pictures. In July 2005, Revelations Entertainment teamed with Intel to form a new digital entertainment company, ClickStar. ClickStar officially launched their site on December 15, ",
"score": "1.520201"
},
{
"id": "8557721",
"title": "Revelation (TV series)",
"text": " Revelation is a three-episode Australian documentary series directed by Nial Fulton and Sarah Ferguson. The series was broadcast on ABC TV in March 2020. In a world television first, the producers took cameras into the criminal trials of Catholic priests accused of sex crimes against children and interviewed Father Vincent Ryan and Brother Bernard McGrath, two of the most prolific child sex abusers in Australia. The series culminates in the Vatican, with the story of Cardinal George Pell, a Catholic cleric accused of abusing boys at an orphanage in Australia.",
"score": "1.5167141"
},
{
"id": "4097978",
"title": "Resident Evil: Revelations",
"text": " Revelations was developed by Capcom and directed by Koshi Nakanishi, who had worked as a game designer for Resident Evil 5. The game was developed simultaneously with Resident Evil: The Mercenaries 3D and the team in charge of the project was not involved in the production of Resident Evil 6. The team chose to develop the game for the Nintendo 3DS because they felt that its 3D capabilities could produce a \"tense, scary experience with a realistic atmosphere that could make players feel like there could be something lurking around every corner.\" They decided to give the game an episodic structure with short and ",
"score": "1.4935261"
},
{
"id": "27705640",
"title": "Revelations (Hell on Wheels)",
"text": " \"Revelations\" is the seventh episode of the first season of the American television drama series Hell On Wheels; it December 18, 2011 on AMC and was written by the series co-creators Joe Gayton and Tony Gayton, and directed by Michelle MacLaren. In the episode, Thomas C. Durant (Colm Meaney) and Lily Bell (Dominique McElligott) travel by train to Chicago, for different reasons; the Irishmen from Hell On Wheels intend to kill Elam (Common) to entertain themselves, but Cullen Bohannon (Anson Mount) interferes and helps Elam escape.",
"score": "1.4786065"
},
{
"id": "10603306",
"title": "Revelations (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)",
"text": " \"Revelations\" is the seventh episode of season three of the television show Buffy the Vampire Slayer. It was written by Doug Petrie, directed by James A. Contner, and first broadcast on November 17, 1998.",
"score": "1.477928"
},
{
"id": "12298434",
"title": "Revelations (The X-Files)",
"text": " \"Revelations\" was written by Kim Newton and directed by David Nutter, his final episode of The X-Files. Nutter decided that, after the episode, he wished to pursue different things and that the series was in excellent hands with fellow directors Rob Bowman and Kim Manners. Actor Kenneth Welsh, who appears in the episode as the demonic Simon Gates, had previously portrayed a chief antagonist in the critically acclaimed 1990 serial drama Twin Peaks, alongside Duchovny. The episode contains a role reversal with Dana Scully the believer and Fox Mulder the skeptic, which David Duchovny called \"a refreshing change of pace.\" Nutter believed that by examining faith, the show's creators were able to explore the nuances and seeming contradictions of Scully and her worldview. The episode was ",
"score": "1.4779086"
},
{
"id": "1325218",
"title": "Revelations Entertainment",
"text": "Bopha! (1993) ; Mutiny (1999) ; Under Suspicion (2000) ; Along Came a Spider (2001) ; Levity (2003) ; 10 Items or Less (2006) ; The Contract (2006) ; Invictus (2009) ; Feast of Love (2007) ; Thick as Thieves (2009) ; The Maiden Heist (2009) ; Curiosity: Season 1, Episode 5 - Is There a Parallel Universe? (4 Sep. 2011) ; Through The Wormhole (Discovery Science Channel TV Series 2010-2015) Seasons 1 to 6 ; Madam Secretary (CBS, 2014–present) (TV) Seasons 1 to 4 ; The Magic of Belle Isle (2012) ; 2012 Image Control Assessment Series (2012) ; Stem Cell Universe with Stephen Hawking (2014) (TV) ; \"Man vs. the Universe\" (2014) ; 5 Flights Up (2014) ; The Story of God with Morgan Freeman (2016) ; The Story of Us with Morgan Freeman (2017) ; The World's Biggest Ghost Hunt: Pennhurst Asylum (2019) ; The Killing of Kenneth Chamberlain (2019) Revelations Entertainment is behind several well-known movie and TV productions, including: These productions have involved established actors such as Monica Bellucci, Kirsten Dunst, Danny Glover, Gene Hackman, Holly Hunter, Thomas Jane, Paz Vega, Zina Pistor and Billy Bob Thornton.",
"score": "1.4741704"
},
{
"id": "12298426",
"title": "Revelations (The X-Files)",
"text": " \"Revelations\" is the eleventh episode of the third season of the science fiction television series The X-Files. It premiered on the Fox network on December 15, 1995. It was written by Kim Newton and directed by David Nutter. The episode is a \"Monster-of-the-Week\" story, unconnected to the series' wider mythology. \"Revelations\" earned a Nielsen household rating of 10, being watched by 15.25 million people in its initial broadcast. The episode received mixed to positive reviews. The show centers on FBI special agents Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) who work on cases linked to the paranormal, called X-Files. Mulder is a believer in the paranormal, while the skeptical Scully has been assigned to debunk his work. In this ",
"score": "1.4603319"
},
{
"id": "15216282",
"title": "Morgan Freeman",
"text": " While filming Outbreak, Freeman expressed an interest in starting a film production company. He turned to Lori McCreary, producer of Bopha!, to be his business partner. Freeman explained to her that he wanted to achieve representation on screen, explore challenging issues and reveal hidden truths, so they chose to name their firm Revelations Entertainment. In 1997, Freeman narrated the Academy Award-winning documentary The Long Way Home, about Jewish refugees' liberation after World War II and the establishment of Israel. He also appeared in Steven Spielberg's historical epic Amistad alongside Djimon Hounsou, Anthony Hopkins, and Matthew McConaughey. Based on the events ",
"score": "1.4601774"
},
{
"id": "27271112",
"title": "Erik Hoel",
"text": " Erik also authored a literary fiction novel The Revelations, a mystery set at New York University concerning a fictional scholarship program that brings together eight young consciousness researchers, one of whom is murdered. Publishers Weekly called it \"a dizzying, impressive debut\".",
"score": "1.460038"
},
{
"id": "32660266",
"title": "Marc Samuelson",
"text": "TT3D: Closer to the Edge (2011) (producer) ; Roofworld (2006) (announced) (producer) ; Tales Not Told (2006) (announced) (producer) ; Skellig (2007) (pre-production) (executive producer) ; Stormbreaker (2006) (producer) ; Keeping Mum (2005) (executive producer) ; Chromophobia (2005) (executive producer) ; Need (2005/II) (producer) ; The Libertine (2004) (executive producer) ; Strange Little Girls (2004) (executive producer) ; Things To Do Before You're 30 (2004) (producer) ; The Pact (2002) (TV) (executive producer) ; The Gathering (2002) (producer) ; Gabriel & Me (2001) (producer) ; Guest House Paradiso (1999) (executive producer) ; Arlington Road (1999) (producer) ; The Commissioner (1998) (co-producer) ; This Is the Sea (1997) (executive producer) ; Wilde (1997) (producer) ; Dog's Best Friend (1997) (TV) (executive producer) ; Tom & Viv (1994) (producer) ; Playmaker (1994) (producer) ; Man God and Africa (1992) (TV) (producer) ",
"score": "1.4584494"
},
{
"id": "7887714",
"title": "Revealed (British TV programme)",
"text": " The production team were based at Grafton House, home to the 5:19 show, and BBC Switch. Revealed... was produced by Amy Hollis, Toby Sealey and Jay Husbands; Revealed Extra was Produced and Directed by James Taylor. The Executive Producers are Geoffrey Goodwin and Rod McKenzie.",
"score": "1.4484743"
},
{
"id": "16141778",
"title": "Industrial Revelations",
"text": " Industrial Revelations is a Documentary show showing the connections between related industrial advances. The show's presenter has changed several times since the original host of Mark Williams in 2001 and 2002.",
"score": "1.4479723"
}
] |
Who was the producer of Home?
|
[
"Carrie Akre"
] |
producer
|
Home (Carrie Akre album)
| 1,074,278 | 67 |
[
{
"id": "3536454",
"title": "Home (1954 TV program)",
"text": " Arlene Francis hosted the program as editor-in-chief with Hugh Downs serving as her announcer and assistant. Music was performed by the Norman Paris Trio and singer Johnny Johnston. The team of editors presenting segments on particular topics included Poppy Cannon (food), Rose Franzblau (family relations and child psychology), Eve Hunter (fashion and beauty), Sydney Smith (interior decorating), Estelle Parsons (special projects), Leona Baumgartner (health), and Will Peigelbeck (gardening and home repairs).",
"score": "1.6972234"
},
{
"id": "9833598",
"title": "Home (2020 TV series)",
"text": " Home is executive produced by Joe Poulin, Matthew Weaver, Bruce Gersh, Ian Orefice, Doug Pray, Collin Orcutt, Matt Tyrnauer, Corey Reeser and Kim Rozenfeld. Nick Stern serves as co-executive producer. Matt Tyrnauer is set to direct the series.",
"score": "1.5789826"
},
{
"id": "3536452",
"title": "Home (1954 TV program)",
"text": " Home was an American daytime television program hosted by Arlene Francis. Intended for an audience of women, it debuted in 1954 as one of NBC's three major non-primetime shows. While the other two shows—Today and Tonight—are still being produced 60 years later, Home was cancelled in 1957.",
"score": "1.5627409"
},
{
"id": "5792107",
"title": "Home (1988 TV program)",
"text": " Home, also referred to as The Home Show, is a daytime informational talk show which aired on ABC from 1988 to 1994. The program was co-hosted by Robb Weller and Sandy Hill during the first season. Gary Collins hosted the show for the remainder of its run. Co-hosts included Cristina Ferrare, Dana Fleming, Beth Ruyak and Sarah Purcell. Decorating and craft segments were frequently presented by Hanala Sagal aka Suzan Stadner, Fitness Expert and Sally Marshall, Dian Thomas, Carol Duvall and Kitty Bartholomew. Marc Summers and Wil Shriner presented segments on the latest in technology (computers, home gaming, etc.). The show's various directors were Arthur Forrest (who directed the pilot), Booey Kober, Bob Loudin, Jerry Kupcinet, Paul Forrest and Bob Levy. Mother Love joined the show as the announcer in the final season, replacing Bob Hilton.",
"score": "1.5606501"
},
{
"id": "31106116",
"title": "Home (Australian TV series)",
"text": " It was written by Graeme Farmer and directed by Richard Sarell, Walter Boston, Noel Price and Douglas Sharp. Home screened in the UK in 1985 and a number of European countries.",
"score": "1.5223684"
},
{
"id": "9833596",
"title": "Home (2020 TV series)",
"text": " Home is an American documentary streaming television series produced for Apple TV+. In January 2018, Apple gave the production a series order consisting of a single season of nine episodes. It is produced by three media companies: MediaWeaver, Four M Studios and Altimeter Films, premiered on April 17, 2020. On the 8th June ‘Home’ was nominated best documentary series, at the Critics' Choice Real TV Awards.",
"score": "1.511338"
},
{
"id": "6762000",
"title": "Anna Home",
"text": " Anna Margaret Home (born 13 January 1938) is an English television producer and executive who worked for most of her career at the BBC.",
"score": "1.4992597"
},
{
"id": "13372192",
"title": "Home of Angels",
"text": " Home of Angels was produced by Cloverlay Productions, whose only movie produced so far is Home of Angels. Filmed on locations in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1992, was Aries Spears first film when he was then 17.",
"score": "1.4971004"
},
{
"id": "14382755",
"title": "Carol Duvall",
"text": " her first craft-oriented program, \"Here's Carol Duvall\". One day she received a call from a man she had met when he was still an intern in Cleveland. He was putting together a new show called the Home Show and they needed a craft person. The show was picked up by ABC and ran for six years. When the Home Show came to an end in 1994, the host Robb Weller formed a production company with Gary Grossman which developed The Carol Duvall Show. The program ran on HGTV from 1994 until 2005, then on DIY Network from 2005 until the end of 2009. Duvall attended Michigan State University where she was a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority.",
"score": "1.4920111"
},
{
"id": "3604113",
"title": "A. M. Homes",
"text": " Homes wrote for season two of the television drama series, The L Word, and produced season three. She developed an HBO series, The Hamptons about the resort towns along the ocean on eastern Long Island, which she described as \"a cross between Desperate Housewives and Grapes of Wrath.\" Since 2010, Homes has been developing television pilots for CBS with Timberman/Beverly Productions. In 2013 she was developing Koethi Zan's best-selling novel, The Never List, as a dramatic series for CBS television. Homes was a writer and co-executive producer on the 2017 USA Series Falling Water, and also a writer and co-executive producer on the Stephen King Series, Mr. Mercedes, which was developed by David E. Kelley.",
"score": "1.4906193"
},
{
"id": "88178",
"title": "Home (British TV series)",
"text": " Home is a British comedy-drama television series created and written by Rufus Jones. Channel 4 confimed they would not broadcast another series with Rufus Jones saying the series may be revived in the future on another platform.",
"score": "1.4776456"
},
{
"id": "6762003",
"title": "Anna Home",
"text": " adapted by Home from another Dickinson novel followed. By 1975, she was exclusively an executive producer of children's drama, and in this role commissioned the long-running Grange Hill (1978-2008) which had been rejected by several ITV companies, including Yorkshire Television whose children's department was now headed by Joy Whitby, which had questioned why children should want to watch a drama about being at school. Grange Hill was initially a controversial series. \"As the press launched into us and No 10 was complaining loudly to the DG,\" Home recalled, \"the Department of Health became very interested – after all we were tackling just the issues they were concerned with, but better than they could.\"",
"score": "1.4767075"
},
{
"id": "10309545",
"title": "Andrew Sugerman",
"text": "\"You Are My Home\" Producer (2020) ; Home Executive Producer (2020) ; Wild Daze Executive Producer (2020) ; \"Foster Boy\" Producer (2019) ; \"Any Day\" Producer (2015) ; Crazy Kind of Love Executive Producer (2012) ; Judy Moody and the Not Bummer Summer Executive Producer (2011) ; \"Long Time Gone\" Executive Producer (2011) ; Conviction Producer (2009) ; Death Sentence Executive Producer.(2006) ; Premonition Executive Producer.(2006) ; Grilled Executive Producer (2005) ; Shopgirl Executive Producer (2004) ; Johnson Family Vacation Executive Producer (2003) ; The Whole Ten Yards Line Producer (2003) ; Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever Line Producer (2002) ; Boat Trip Producer (2002) ; ",
"score": "1.4764673"
},
{
"id": "4165066",
"title": "Home (2008 American film)",
"text": " Home is a 2008 American drama film written and directed by Mary Haverstick and starring Marcia Gay Harden, Marian Seldes, Michael Gaston and Eulala Scheel.",
"score": "1.473093"
},
{
"id": "3536453",
"title": "Home (1954 TV program)",
"text": " Each hour-long show is presented in a series of short segments which discuss topics in a depth typical of a magazine article. A segment may be either entertaining or informational. Topics typically relate to homemaking but may also include civic, cultural, and social issues and interviews with newsmakers. Twelve minutes of each broadcast are devoted to the promotion of consumer goods from the show's sponsors; these commercials often take place within the informational segments of the show itself. Instead of imitating the look of an actual house as cooking shows did, Home's producers made it obvious that it was taking place in a modern television studio. The $200,000 revolving set had a kitchen, a workshop, and an area to demonstrate the effects of weather on the sponsors' products. A garden area contained soil samples from each of the 48 U.S. states; an additional sample to represent Washington, D.C., was provided by Vice President Richard Nixon.",
"score": "1.4727736"
},
{
"id": "6288736",
"title": "Steve Porter (producer)",
"text": "Homegrown (2005) ; Planet P (with Funk Harmony Park) (2005) ; Porterhouse (2006) ; Porterhouse Volume 2 (2007) ; Essential Mix (2007) ",
"score": "1.4704617"
},
{
"id": "344356",
"title": "Home Sweet Home (1982 film)",
"text": " Home Sweet Home is a 1982 television film devised and directed by Mike Leigh, for the BBC, 'about postmen, parenthood, social workers and sex.' It was Leigh's second collaboration with Play for Today producer Louis Marks, and cinematographer Remi Adefarasin, (after Grown-Ups), and with composer Carl Davis – the musical score featured a quartet of basses – (Davis had also provided the music for 1977s The Kiss of Death). It stars Timothy Spall (working with Leigh for the first time), Eric Richard, Tim Barker, Kay Stonham, Su Elliot, Frances Barber, Sheila Kelley, and Lorraine Brunning. It was first broadcast on 16 March 1982. The film was shot on location in Hitchin, Hertfordshire and has a 90 minutes duration.",
"score": "1.4662669"
},
{
"id": "29476578",
"title": "Home (2020 film)",
"text": " Home is a 2020 internationally co-produced drama film written and directed by Franka Potente, in her directorial debut. It stars Jake McLaughlin, Kathy Bates, Aisling Franciosi, Derek Richardson, James Jordan, Lil Rel Howery and Stephen Root. It had its world premiere at the Rome Film Festival on October 20, 2020.",
"score": "1.4558761"
},
{
"id": "6762002",
"title": "Anna Home",
"text": " to queue up to get on it, and having done a Jackanory became a bit like having done your Desert Island Discs.\" Comedy actor Kenneth Williams, one of the most frequent participants in the series, recalled Home telling him: \"Never sound as if you're patronizing the young.\" Committed to children's drama output, Home revived domestically produced children's drama after a period in which the idiom had been dormant on the BBC's television channels. She was involved in the direction of such children's serials as Mandog (1972), adapted by Peter Dickinson from his own novel, because budgets did not allow her to contract more experienced people. The Changes (1975, made in 1973), a serial produced ",
"score": "1.4535514"
},
{
"id": "26876306",
"title": "Home (2006 film)",
"text": " Home is a 2006 documentary film about New York and the concept of \"home\" from the perspective of recent Irish Immigrant Alan Cooke, along with a number of notable New York City residents.",
"score": "1.4510491"
}
] |
Who was the producer of The Test?
|
[
"Harry S. Webb"
] |
producer
|
The Test (1935 film)
| 5,959,348 | 88 |
[
{
"id": "16541084",
"title": "The Test (Land of the Lost)",
"text": " \"The Test\" is the fifth episode of the second season of the 1970s American television series Land of the Lost. Written by Tom Swale and directed by Bob Lally, it first aired in the United States on October 4, 1975 on NBC.",
"score": "1.5583615"
},
{
"id": "13015852",
"title": "The Tested",
"text": " The Tested is a 2009 independent feature film written and directed by Russell Costanzo and produced by Melissa B. Miller of Shoebox Pictures. It is based on the award-winning short of the same name. Chosen to participant in the 2009 Narrative Independent Filmmaker Lab & Independent Film Week in New York City, the film is one of only ten narrative rough cuts chosen by the Lab for its artistic vision and outstanding promise.",
"score": "1.5048863"
},
{
"id": "13196777",
"title": "The Test (talk show)",
"text": " The series was revealed on January 9, 2013, when it was sold into 56% of the country. By April 2013, The Test was sold in over 90% of the country with Tribune Broadcasting's 17 owned stations serving as the series' anchor group in major markets. On April 1, 2014, it was announced that The Test had been canceled.",
"score": "1.5019668"
},
{
"id": "25215889",
"title": "The Test (1914 film)",
"text": " The Test is a 1914 silent film short directed by and starring Wallace Reid and costarring Dorothy Davenport and Frank Lloyd, later a famous director. Allan Dwan wrote the scenario. It was produced at the Nestor Film Company and released through Universal Film Manufacturing Company.",
"score": "1.4973977"
},
{
"id": "25453135",
"title": "The Test of Love",
"text": " The Test of Love is a 1999 American television drama film directed by Larry Peerce and starring Roma Downey. It was released by Carla Singer Productions and Hamdon Entertainment. In the United States, at its original airing it was distributed by Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS).",
"score": "1.4735427"
},
{
"id": "9994203",
"title": "The Test Dream",
"text": " \"The Test Dream\" is the 63rd episode of the HBO television series The Sopranos and the 11th episode of the show's fifth season. Written by series creator/executive producer David Chase and supervising producer Matthew Weiner, and directed by longtime series director Allen Coulter, it originally aired in the United States on May 16, 2004. This episode is unique in that it features an elaborate 20-minute dream sequence, alluded to in the title, featuring many actors from past seasons briefly reprising their roles.",
"score": "1.4713519"
},
{
"id": "13196776",
"title": "The Test (talk show)",
"text": " The Test is an American conflict resolution talk show that premiered on September 9, 2013, and aired on syndication. Hosted by Kirk Fox, The Test handles a variety of tests such as polygraph, DNA, and pregnancy. It resolves conflicts that are present between families, friends or various people.",
"score": "1.4501328"
},
{
"id": "27561569",
"title": "The Test of Donald Norton",
"text": "George Walsh - Wen-dah-ben, aka Donald Norton ; Tyrone Power Sr. - John Corrigal ; Robert Graves - Dale Millington ; Eugenia Gilbert - Lorraine ; Evelyn Selbie - Nee-tah-wee-gan ; Michael D. Moore - Wendahban, as a boy ; Virginia True Boardman ; John Francis Dillon ; Virginia Marshall ",
"score": "1.4385276"
},
{
"id": "26367321",
"title": "Pam Barnes (television producer)",
"text": " Barnes was Senior Producer of Test Australia: The National IQ Test in 2002.",
"score": "1.4322209"
},
{
"id": "7416624",
"title": "Kent Walton",
"text": " In the early 1970s, he was involved with British sexploitation movies and is credited as a producer of such films as Clinic Exclusive, aka Clinic Xclusive, aka With These Hands (1971). A co-founder of Pyramid Films, he jointly used a pseudonym, Elton Hawke, with his business partner Hazel Adair, the co creator of the soap opera Crossroads. He used other pseudonyms to keep this part of his life from gaining public attention, but it was revealed in a 1975 episode of the TV documentary series Man Alive.",
"score": "1.4068608"
},
{
"id": "16425683",
"title": "The Test (1916 film)",
"text": " The Test is a 1916 American silent drama film directed by George Fitzmaurice and starring Jane Grey, Lumsden Hare and Claude Fleming.",
"score": "1.4052432"
},
{
"id": "31495731",
"title": "The Beta Test Initiation",
"text": " The story and concept were created by series co-creator Chuck Lorre and writers Steven Molaro and Eric Kaplan. The teleplay was written by co-creator Bill Prady, and writers Dave Goetsch and Maria Ferrari, and was directed by Mark Cendrowski.",
"score": "1.4005665"
},
{
"id": "31151013",
"title": "Mark Tester",
"text": " Tester supports the use of genetically modified crops to reduce poverty. In 2002, he worked as a scientific advisor for a BBC1 drama about GM crops. He subsequently criticised the drama's directors, Alan Rusbridger and Ronan Bennett, stating that they had ignored his criticisms of the piece and produced a documentary \"to inflame uninformed anti-GM hysteria\". Rusbridger replied by claiming that Tester had changed his mind since he had been shown a copy of the piece's script the previous July, when, according to Rusbridger, his view of the piece was much less critical.",
"score": "1.3979253"
},
{
"id": "29940071",
"title": "The Test (2019)",
"text": " The Test is a 2019 fiction novella by Sylvain Neuvel. An Iranian takes a British immigration test consisting of 25 questions.",
"score": "1.3963227"
},
{
"id": "12552616",
"title": "Trade test colour films",
"text": " of a Rainbow (1967), about trout farms, was made by the New Zealand National Film Unit, while Network (1962) was made by the AEI, and No Claim Bonus (1963) was made by the COI. The Gold Miners was made by Films of Africa, and A Journey into the Weald of Kent (1959) and Beauty in Trust were made by the National Benzole Company with narrations by Sir John Betjeman. The trade test colour films are among the subjects of interest of the Test Card Circle, an organization devoted to studying and preserving the test cards used by television broadcasters. The static test cards were typically transmitted for periods before and after regular programming, originally to permit viewers to adjust their television sets.",
"score": "1.3950298"
},
{
"id": "5031287",
"title": "Desmond Tester",
"text": " After the Second World War, he moved to Australia and embarked in careers in radio, theatre, and television. As television broadcasting began in Australia, Tester soon found work with Channel Nine's What's My Line? and in a variety of children's programmes including Cabbage Quiz and Kaper Kops with Reg Gorman and Rod Hull. He spent fifteen years at Channel Nine, taking charge of children's programming, and became more involved behind the scenes in production and publicity. He later moved to Reg Grundy Productions, eventually leaving the industry entirely due to a dislike of the overall management culture. He compered \"Desmond and the Channel 9-Pins\" an Australian children’s television series which aired from 1957 to 1962 on Sydney station TCN-9. In 1961, Tester retired from appearing on-screen on the series, but continued to write, produce and direct the show. In 1974 he revived his stage acting career on the advice of Hayes Gordon and appeared in numerous productions including productions by playwrights Arthur Miller and John Ewing. He also had occasional minor roles in various films, such as Barry McKenzie Holds His Own (1974) and The Wild Duck (1983).",
"score": "1.3924246"
},
{
"id": "27597825",
"title": "Kenny Hotz",
"text": " In 2008, Hotz created the sitcom Testees for FX Networks, producing 13 shows centering on two roommates who work as guinea pigs for a mediocre product testing facility. The show produced 13 episodes and started airing in October 2008 on FX. Hotz stated that the inspiration of the series was Woody Allen's character Fielding Mellish in the film Bananas. The show starred actors Steve Markle (as Peter) and Jeff Kessel (as Ron). The show's title came from the name of the testing facility where both main characters worked: Testico. The premier episode starred Ron and Peter believing that Peter has become pregnant, although his condition is actually just a hormonal imbalance from the medical testing he underwent earlier in the episode. Tom Shales of the Washington Post said of the show upon its debut, \"the comedy doesn't push boundaries so much as trounce and trash them. Even the show's title is a trifle problematical for a family newspaper. There are few lines or situations that can be readily quoted here – but who wants jokes spoiled anyway? ... 'Testees' is wall-to-wall uproarious.\"",
"score": "1.3906165"
},
{
"id": "16425684",
"title": "The Test (1916 film)",
"text": "Jane Grey as Emma Tretman ; Lumsden Hare as Arthur Thome ; Claude Fleming as Freddie Wayne ; Carl Harbaugh as Richard Tretman ; Inez Buck as Thome's Sister ; Ida Darling ",
"score": "1.3893287"
},
{
"id": "26573173",
"title": "The Final Test",
"text": " The Final Test is a 1953 British sports film written by Terence Rattigan, directed by Anthony Asquith, and starring Jack Warner, Robert Morley, George Relph and Ray Jackson. A number of leading cricketers also appear including Denis Compton, Len Hutton and Cyril Washbrook. The film was produced by R.J. Minney for Act Films Ltd.",
"score": "1.389204"
},
{
"id": "28789610",
"title": "Rabbit Test (film)",
"text": " Rabbit Test is a 1978 American comedy film about the world's first pregnant man, directed and co-written by Joan Rivers and starring Billy Crystal in his film debut. This was the only directing effort by Joan Rivers, who also plays a nurse in a brief scene, while her daughter Melissa Rivers also has a bit part. Rivers' husband, Edgar Rosenberg, was producer. It was the only theatrical feature to be scored by the team of Mike Post and Pete Carpenter. Michael Keaton made his feature film debut in a small non-speaking role. The title is a reference to the Friedman test, commonly known as the rabbit test, a medical procedure used for several decades in the 20th century to determine pregnancy.",
"score": "1.3838627"
}
] |
Who was the producer of Me First?
|
[
"Fernando Ayala"
] |
producer
|
Me First (film)
| 5,132,170 | 78 |
[
{
"id": "7406552",
"title": "Me First (album)",
"text": " Me First is the first album by indie band The Elected, released in 2004 via Sub Pop. It is a mix between indie and country.",
"score": "1.6240878"
},
{
"id": "16217013",
"title": "Me First (film)",
"text": " Me First (Primero yo) is a 1964 Argentine drama film directed by Fernando Ayala, and written by Héctor Olivera and Luis Pico Estrada. It was entered into the 1964 Cannes Film Festival.",
"score": "1.4757851"
},
{
"id": "1116743",
"title": "The Second",
"text": "Gabriel Mekler – producer ; Bill Cooper – engineer ; Richard Podolor – engineer ; Gary Burden – art direction, cover design ; Henry Diltz – photography ",
"score": "1.4450486"
},
{
"id": "28332346",
"title": "You and Me (British TV series)",
"text": " The first producer in the format with Cosmo and Dibs was Richard Callanan who remained with the show for three series, leaving to join schools' television at Thames TV. His place was taken by Nicci Crowther, who later developed a career as an independent producer and film maker, until her early death in 2008. Sue Aron, Adrian Mills, Diane Morgan, Pat Farrington, Julie Callanan and Cas Lester were among the regular producers and directors. Jill Wilson, Noreen Hunter and Hilary Hardaker were the regular production assistants. Robert Checksfield was the studio Floor Manager who most frequently worked on the show. Assistant Floor Managers included Wendy Pedley, Garry Boon, Simone Dawson, Terry Pettigrew, ",
"score": "1.4356446"
},
{
"id": "13749261",
"title": "The Legendary Me",
"text": "Producer: Ian A. Anderson, John Turner ; Recording Engineer: Gef Lucena, Ron Geesin ; Jude Holmes, Steven Carr - executive producer ",
"score": "1.4282151"
},
{
"id": "32946427",
"title": "Robert Lovenheim",
"text": "Elvis and Me (1988)....producer ",
"score": "1.4112245"
},
{
"id": "31574242",
"title": "Me²",
"text": " The episode was originally broadcast on the British television channel BBC2 on 21 March 1988 in the 9:00 p.m. time slot. Both co-creators/writers, Grant and Naylor, consider \"Me²\" as one of the successes of the first series. Grant stating that it is one of his favourite shows and the idea of how you would react if you met yourself was an intriguing story. Despite coming 25th in a Red Dwarf Smegazine readers poll, with 0.9% of the votes, the episode was considered one of the better efforts from the first series.",
"score": "1.4079667"
},
{
"id": "12803959",
"title": "Lie to Me",
"text": " Samuel Baum was the original showrunner and head writer on Lie to Me. Brian Grazer, David Nevins, and Steven Maeda were executive producers. Katherine Pope, former president of NBC Universal's TV studio, signed on as a consulting producer, working on the final four episodes of the first season. Shawn Ryan, creator of The Shield and The Unit, took over as show runner for the second season. The show's theme song, Brand New Day, was performed by Ryan Star.",
"score": "1.402757"
},
{
"id": "25069105",
"title": "All of Me (1984 film)",
"text": " As of October 2015, NBC planned to develop a television series of All of Me with Betsy Thomas serving as writer and executive producer/showrunner of the show.",
"score": "1.4013078"
},
{
"id": "12722223",
"title": "Brent Miller (producer)",
"text": " be a lack of promotion by AXS. In 2016, he co-produced his debut documentary feature film Norman Lear: Just Another Version of You. The film was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Series, Miller's first. The film received recognition from Variety who said it as a \"sprightly, brightly assembled celebration of the veteran showrunner,\" Matt Zoller Seitz who called it \"a striking piece of work,\" and the San Francisco Chronicle who described it as \"an entertaining look at an influential figure.\" That same year, Miller co-executive produced the first season of the Epix documentary series America Divided and he served as executive producer for the second season. Miller introduced the idea of reimagining the 1975 CBS sitcom One Day at a Time ",
"score": "1.3913665"
},
{
"id": "13328847",
"title": "Norrie Paramor",
"text": " Although the term \"producer\" was not in circulation at the time Paramor started producing records (the usual term being Artiste and Repertoire Manager, or A&R man), he effectively began this role in 1952 when he became Recording Director for EMI's Columbia Records. As well as being producer for Cliff Richard and the Shadows, he produced records for Ruby Murray, Eddie Calvert, Michael Holliday, Helen Shapiro, Frank Ifield, Frankie Vaughan, the Mudlarks, the Avons, and Ricky Valance, among others. Per The Guinness Book of British Hit Singles, Paramor and George Martin – his opposite number at EMI sister label Parlophone – jointly held the record for having produced the most UK Number 1 hit singles until Martin produced \"Candle in the Wind 97\" for Sir Elton John, 18 years after Paramor died. This ignores The Beatles' second single \"Please Please Me\", produced by Martin, which was recognised as a number one hit by every other publicly available chart of the time, but not by Record Retailer and therefore not by British Hit Singles, which uses that chart as its source from 1960. In the late 1960s he left EMI to form his own production company.",
"score": "1.3898103"
},
{
"id": "29865886",
"title": "You? Me? Us?",
"text": " 'You? Me? Us?' is the ninth studio album by British singer-songwriter Richard Thompson released in April 1996 via Capitol Records. It was Thompson's fourth album for the label, his fifth with Mitchell Froom producing and his second to be nominated for a Grammy Award. Thompson's son from his first marriage (to Linda Thompson) Teddy sings backing vocals on disc 2.",
"score": "1.3898034"
},
{
"id": "8433540",
"title": "No – That's Me Over Here!",
"text": " The first two series were produced by Rediffusion. During his tenure as presenter and producer at Rediffusion, David Frost brought the writing team and cast together, all of them having been involved with him shortly before in The Frost Report. He used the same process in The Ronnie Barker Playhouse, which was the first sitcom anthology series to star the other Ronnie, Ronnie Barker. When Frost moved from Rediffusion to LWT in 1968, the future Pythons and two Ronnies followed him and continued to work for him there, as well as becoming involved in other LWT productions. Hence, in 1970, Frost had LWT revive No – That's Me Over Here! for another series, this time in colour (it had been produced in black and white in its Rediffusion incarnation), over which he once again presided.",
"score": "1.3833522"
},
{
"id": "6972852",
"title": "The Very Best of Me",
"text": "Producers: Jean Knight, Isaac Bolden, and Carl Marshall ; Associate producers: Jean Knight, Isaac Bolden, and Carl Marshall ; Recording studio: Gift Recording Studio/New Orleans, LA ",
"score": "1.3824226"
},
{
"id": "16217771",
"title": "Me and the First Lady",
"text": " Me and the First Lady is the second studio album by country music artists George Jones and Tammy Wynette, released on August 7, 1972, on the Epic Records label.",
"score": "1.3819628"
},
{
"id": "29324711",
"title": "Mike Downey (producer)",
"text": " of the key international trade papers serving the global film industry, alongside Variety, The Hollywood Reporter and Screen International. A decade later in 2000 Downey joined forces with fellow producer Sam Taylor, to create the UK-based independent production house Film and Music Entertainment (F&ME) as part of a public offering on the Frankfurt Neuer Markt. F&ME is based in Dublin, Ireland. His work as a film maker has seen projects developed with novelists James Ellroy, the late Gunter Grass, and Thomas Keneally (Schindler's List); IDA writer Rebecca Lenckiewicz, VICE Group founder and CEO Shane Smith, as well as directors like Volker Schloendorff, Mohsen Makhmalbaf, and Julien Temple; and ",
"score": "1.3686678"
},
{
"id": "5130664",
"title": "Remember Me (2019 film)",
"text": " Producer Atit Shah and his company Create Entertainment handled development, packaging, and production of the film in cooperation with Rosete's company Kamel Films based in Madrid, Spain.",
"score": "1.3673294"
},
{
"id": "9024193",
"title": "First Sessions",
"text": " As the name suggests, First Sessions marked the first recordings made by Jones after being signed with Blue Note Records. Label A&R Brian Bacchus put the singer with experienced engineer Jay Newland to record demos of around nine songs. Six of these were chosen for the sampler release First Sessions, while the remainder were set aside for consideration for her debut album Come Away with Me. Ultimately, most of the songs featured here ended up on Come Away with Me.",
"score": "1.3671751"
},
{
"id": "32933466",
"title": "Me Being Me",
"text": " Me Being Me is a second studio album by American rapper Frayser Boy from Memphis, Tennessee. It was released on July 12, 2005 via Hypnotize Minds with manufacturing and distribution by Asylum. Production of the album was handled by DJ Paul and Juicy J. It features guest appearances from Hypnotize Camp Posse, Paul Wall and Mike Jones.",
"score": "1.3640909"
},
{
"id": "29263490",
"title": "The Second Husband",
"text": "Tony Ahn as a producer ",
"score": "1.3580415"
}
] |
Who was the producer of Shine?
|
[
"Brendan O'Brien"
] |
producer
|
Shine (Trey Anastasio song)
| 5,745,791 | 53 |
[
{
"id": "8756009",
"title": "Shine Group",
"text": " Shine Group was an international distribution group.",
"score": "1.5971051"
},
{
"id": "11571040",
"title": "The Blackhouse Foundation",
"text": " Carol Ann Shine is a film producer. A few of her productions include ''Truth. Be. Told., Poses, Recover, Dirty Lies, The Comedy Underground Series, The Boy, and Blackbird.'' She has produced/co-produced 46 credits, written 1 credit, and was the production manager for 2 credits. She was also a cinematographer for 1 credit, and a second unit director or assistant director for 1 credit as well. Ryan Tarpley graduated from Lawrence University and Ohio State University. He is Chief Diversity Officer at Creative Artists Agency (CAA). He is an entertainment executive based out of New York, NY. He is on the Board of Directors at ",
"score": "1.5927174"
},
{
"id": "28379394",
"title": "Shine (compilation series)",
"text": " Released 16 November 1998",
"score": "1.5542297"
},
{
"id": "28379382",
"title": "Shine (compilation series)",
"text": " Released 1 April 1997",
"score": "1.5513"
},
{
"id": "28379388",
"title": "Shine (compilation series)",
"text": " Released 24 November 1997",
"score": "1.551229"
},
{
"id": "5541024",
"title": "Shine On (Riot album)",
"text": "Paul Orofino - producer, engineer, mixing ; Jeff Allen - executive producer ",
"score": "1.5510072"
},
{
"id": "28379391",
"title": "Shine (compilation series)",
"text": " Released 17 August 1998",
"score": "1.5497394"
},
{
"id": "4473244",
"title": "Eden Gaha",
"text": " Eden Gaha is an Australian producer based in Los Angeles. He is currently President of Shine America.",
"score": "1.5469882"
},
{
"id": "28379008",
"title": "Kenton Allen",
"text": " In January 2001, he was approached by Elisabeth Murdoch to become the founding creative director of the independent production company Shine. Allen was a key member of the launch team that secured the initial start-up financing. He quickly established the core creative divisions and overall creative strategy for the start-up company and recruited the core business affairs, finance, and creative personnel. He also established a talent incubator for comedy film directors in partnership with the UK Film Council and Film4.",
"score": "1.5465772"
},
{
"id": "14961492",
"title": "1996 in Australia",
"text": "Shine ",
"score": "1.5463512"
},
{
"id": "28379385",
"title": "Shine (compilation series)",
"text": " Released 1 September 1997",
"score": "1.5455422"
},
{
"id": "1399311",
"title": "Shine: The Hits",
"text": " mixing (6, 8, 12, 14) ; Jeff Frankenstein – additional producer (6), producer (8) ; Tommy Sims – producer (16) ; Kip Kubin – producer (17) ; Tony Miracle – producer (17) ; Wes Campbell – executive producer ; Lynn Nichols – executive producer ; Tom Lord-Alge – remixing (1) ; Joe Costa – recording (6, 8, 12, 14) ; Shawn McLean – recording (6, 8, 12, 14) ; Dan Rudin – recording (6, 8, 12, 14), engineer (16) ; Richie Biggs – additional engineer (6, 8, 12, 14) ; Jacquire King – additional engineer (6, 8, 12, 14) ; James Bauer – mix assistant (6, 8, 12, 14) ",
"score": "1.545255"
},
{
"id": "28379379",
"title": "Shine (compilation series)",
"text": " Released 11 November 1996",
"score": "1.540797"
},
{
"id": "28379376",
"title": "Shine (compilation series)",
"text": " Released 16 September 1996",
"score": "1.534955"
},
{
"id": "12214591",
"title": "Rich Ross",
"text": " Rich Ross became the Chief Executive Officer for Shine America in January 2013. He was responsible for the ongoing commercial strategy of the Shine Group in the United States, overseeing production, distribution and marketing of original programming across broadcast, cable and digital platforms.",
"score": "1.5341638"
},
{
"id": "5683320",
"title": "Shine (film)",
"text": " Shine is a 1996 Australian biographical psychological drama film based on the life of David Helfgott, a pianist who suffered a mental breakdown and spent years in institutions. The film stars Geoffrey Rush, Lynn Redgrave, Armin Mueller-Stahl, Noah Taylor, John Gielgud, Googie Withers, Justin Braine, Sonia Todd, Nicholas Bell, Chris Haywood, and Alex Rafalowicz. The film was directed by Scott Hicks. The screenplay was written by Jan Sardi. Shine had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival. In 1997, Geoffrey Rush was awarded the Academy Award for Best Actor at the 69th Academy Awards for his performance in the lead role.",
"score": "1.5312634"
},
{
"id": "3342439",
"title": "Johnny Capps",
"text": " Capps began his career at the BBC after graduating, working as a script editor on programmes such as Dangerfield. He would transition onto producing with the first series of As If. Along with Julian Murphy, Capps founded Shine Drama to develop television series. One of them was Merlin. The BBC had been keen on a family-oriented drama, based on the character of Merlin form Arthurian legend. Capps and Murphy, alongside Julian Jones and Jake Michie, created a version that was put into development in late 2006. This series went into production in March 2008, produced by Shine in association with BBC Wales, whose Head of Drama Julie Gardner was executive producer for the BBC. CGI special effects for the ",
"score": "1.5301278"
},
{
"id": "28379373",
"title": "Shine (compilation series)",
"text": " Released 15 July 1996",
"score": "1.5278969"
},
{
"id": "8756010",
"title": "Shine Group",
"text": " Shine was founded in 2001 by Elisabeth Murdoch following her departure from BSkyB the previous year. In 2006, Shine Group acquired Kudos, Princess Productions and Dragonfly to create the Shine Group, although they still operate as four separate entities. Shine acquired Reveille Productions in 2008. News Corporation (later 21st Century Fox, but assets are now split between The Walt Disney Company and Fox Corporation) acquired Shine Group in April 2011 for $415 million. US pension funds who are shareholders in News Corporation are suing the company accusing Murdoch of nepotism. In May 2014, 21st Century Fox and Apollo Global Management announced the negotiation of merging their respective production companies: FOX-owned Shine Group and Apollo-controlled Endemol and CORE Media Group. The deal was finalized later in the same year. On 17 December 2014, Shine Group announced the joint venture by 21st Century Fox with funds managed by affiliates of Apollo Global Management, LLC, combining Endemol, Shine and CORE Media into Endemol Shine Group. As part of the new structure, Former Endemol UK CEO, Lucas Church, has been appointed Chairman of Endemol Shine UK, whilst former Endemol UK Chief Operating Officer, Richard Johnston, becomes CEO of Endemol Shine UK.",
"score": "1.5162182"
},
{
"id": "9477212",
"title": "Shine TV",
"text": " Shine TV is a British media production company and part of the Banijay Group with offices in London and Manchester. Shine was founded in March 2001 by Elisabeth Murdoch, daughter of News Corporation CEO Rupert Murdoch. The company was 80% owned by Elisabeth Murdoch, 15% by Lord Alli, and 5% by BSkyB, which signed a deal guaranteeing to buy an agreed amount of Shine programming for two years.",
"score": "1.512733"
}
] |
Who was the producer of Trains of Winnipeg?
|
[
"Christine Fellows",
"Clive Holden",
"Jason Tait"
] |
producer
|
Trains of Winnipeg
| 6,028,537 | 61 |
[
{
"id": "5755889",
"title": "Trains of Winnipeg",
"text": " Trains of Winnipeg is a film and multimedia art project by Clive Holden, released in stages between 2001 and 2004. The final project included a series of 14 short films, designed as visual representations of Holden's poetry, as well as a soundtrack CD and a book. The short films were scored by Emily Goodden, Christine Fellows, Jason Tait and Steve Bates; additional contributors on the CD included John K. Samson and Leanne Zacharias, as well as an archival recording of Al Purdy. The film series won the New Vision Award at the 2005 Copenhagen International Documentary Festival.",
"score": "1.8420769"
},
{
"id": "5755891",
"title": "Trains of Winnipeg",
"text": "1) \"Trains of Winnipeg\" ; 2) \"Grain Train\" ; 3) \"18,000 Dead in Gordon Head\" ; 4) \"Death at Neepawa\" ; 5) \"Neighbours Walk Softly\" ; 6) \"Nanaimo Station\" ; 7) \"Condo\" ; 8) \"Bus North to Thompson with Les at the Wheel\" ; 9) \"Wind\" ; 10) \"Transcona\" ; 11) \"Babette\" ; 12) \"Nanoose\" ; 13) \"Necropsy of Al Purdy\" ; 14) \"Transience\" ; 15) \"Unbreakable Bones\" ",
"score": "1.5663587"
},
{
"id": "27297966",
"title": "Clive Holden",
"text": " Holden's best-known and publicized project to date is the award-winning \"film poem\" series Trains of Winnipeg, a collection of 14 short films featuring Holden's poetry with musical accompaniment by Christine Fellows, John K. Samson, Jason Tait, Steve Bates and Emily Goodden. Trains of Winnipeg was screened internationally, a.o. at the IFFR. In it is included the haunting short, 18000 Dead in Gordon Head, in which Holden recalls the shooting of a young girl in Gordon Head, a suburb of Victoria. The 18,000 in the title refers to the average number of murders a television viewer has seen by the time they reach the age of sixteen years.",
"score": "1.5556068"
},
{
"id": "12919880",
"title": "The Railrodder",
"text": " The Railrodder was produced by the National Film Board of Canada with principal photography being completed in 1964. A \"behind-the-scenes\" documentary short film that was released likely contains the only known footage of Keaton working behind-the-scenes on a film. The Railrodder was made with the cooperation of the Canadian National Railway, while filming also took place on Canadian Pacific Railway, Great Northern Railway and Pacific Great Eastern Railway lines. An acknowledgment of the cooperation of railroads was given as a final title credit.",
"score": "1.5466354"
},
{
"id": "5755890",
"title": "Trains of Winnipeg",
"text": "1) \"Trains of Winnipeg\" ; 2) \"18000 Dead In Gordon Head\" ; 3) \"Love in the White City\" ; 4) \"F-Movie\" ; 5) \"Burning Down the Suburbs\" ; 6) \"Nanaimo Station\" ; 7) \"The Jew & the Irishman\" ; 8) \"Saigon Apartments\" ; 9) \"Bus North to Thompson with Les at the Wheel\" ; 10) \"Condo\" ; 11) \"Neighbours Walk Softly\" ; 12) \"Unbreakable Bones\" ; 13) \"Active Pass\" ; 14) \"Hitler! (revisited)\" ",
"score": "1.5196999"
},
{
"id": "27973412",
"title": "March 1967",
"text": " T. Genda, a Sierra Leonean representative to the United Nations. Genda told reporters the next day that he was \"very surprised\" about the appointment and did not say whether he would accept. The Soo Line Railroad (originally the Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie Railroad), operated by the Canadian Pacific Railway in both Canada and the United States, permanently discontinued its passenger train operations as its last train, The Winnipegger departed St. Paul, Minnesota at 8:45 in the morning on the way back to Winnipeg, Manitoba. ; Died: ; Lalla Carlsen, 77, Norwegian singer and actress ; Pete Johnson, 62, American blues musician ",
"score": "1.5175006"
},
{
"id": "3080267",
"title": "Winnipeg Transit",
"text": " the Winnipeg Electric Street Railway Company (WESR). Passengers on that first trip included Mayor Hugh John Macdonald and the City Council, among others. The width of Winnipeg's main streets allowed both companies to operate simultaneously. Hurting WSR even more was a disastrous fire in 1893, in which the Company lost 68 horses. In court, Austin tried to fight for exclusive rights for street railways, going all the way to the Privy Council in London. In 1894, after losing his case, he sold almost all of the company's assets to the WESR for $175,000, and the two companies agreed to amalgamate on April 28. Horsecar operations ended the next day, except for the ",
"score": "1.5149238"
},
{
"id": "31617968",
"title": "Winnipeg RT",
"text": " on rapid transit, 25-year (1979–2004) veteran Transit Director Rick Borland quit the position and retired over the issue when one of Katz's advisors, Bryan Gray, criticized a report by Winnipeg Transit used to request funding for the busway. In November 2004, Katz visited Ottawa and rode the O-Train (now the Trillium Line). Katz commented \"And it's new, it's innovative -- it's the 21st century. There's no reason in my mind that we shouldn't explore this.\" Instead, Katz formed an ad hoc group, chaired by Councilor Wyatt (Transcona), in the same ward that New Flyer has its manufacturing plant, to complete a study ",
"score": "1.5131524"
},
{
"id": "3832557",
"title": "Greater Winnipeg Water District Railway",
"text": " market especially was booming by 1935. Later, the train carried lumber to pulp and paper mills. Passenger service was profitable into the early 1960s. The railway discontinued mixed trains, carrying both freight and passengers, in 1981 and today is freight-only. Gravel trains were discontinued in 1992, when a concrete manufacturer, Supercrete, shut down its pit at Ross, Manitoba. In 2013, Winnipeg officials folded the railway's operations into the city's Water and Waste Department. As a result, the railway has been assigned the task of maintaining and providing security for the aqueduct. It also takes workers and supplies needed for the aqueduct and hauls supplies to the water intake facility at Shoal Lake, returning with contaminated materials.",
"score": "1.5108786"
},
{
"id": "31588598",
"title": "Winnipeger",
"text": " In October 1904 the Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie Railway (Soo Line) and Canadian Pacific Railway began overnight passenger service between the Twin Cities and Winnipeg, Manitoba. The train consisted of a mail and baggage cars, two coaches, a sleeper and dining car. The train went by several names over its 62 years: Manitoba Express (1904–1909), Winnipeg Express (1919–1928) and the Winnipeger (1928–1967). It commonly was called the Winnipeg Flyer. Diesel locomotives replaced steam between Saint Paul and Thief River Falls, Minnesota from May 1951, and diesels took over the entire route in April of the following year. Originally numbered 109 and 110, the Winnipeger was renumbered 9 and 10 in the general renumbering of Soo Line passenger trains at the ",
"score": "1.5086374"
},
{
"id": "31588599",
"title": "Winnipeger",
"text": " of August 1952, but remained Trains 109 and 110 on Canadian Pacific. From January 1954, the Winnipeger was combined with Trains 13 and 14, the Soo-Dominion/Mountaineer, from Saint Paul to Glenwood, Minnesota, where the trains split, with the Soo-Dominion/Mountaineer continuing on to Canada via Portal, North Dakota. The Soo-Dominion terminated at Portal from late 1960 and came off entirely in December 1963, and through service to western Canada ran via Winnipeg on the Winnepeger. The last season of two-section operation was 1964, when between June 26–27 and September 8–9, the Winnipeger ran as one section to Glenwood, where a meal stop was taken, dining car service having been dispensed with by 1961. The train was switched into two sections for the remainder ",
"score": "1.4974874"
},
{
"id": "2689760",
"title": "Winnipeg–Churchill train",
"text": " The Winnipeg–Churchill train (formerly known as the Hudson Bay and, before that, Northern Spirits) is a semiweekly passenger train operated by Via Rail between Winnipeg and Churchill, Manitoba. It is the only dry-land connection between Churchill and the rest of Canada. The service, which runs through Manitoba and Saskatchewan, travels on the Canadian National Railway line north to The Pas, where it transfers to the Hudson Bay Railway, passing through Wabowden, Manitoba, with a spur from Thicket Portage to Thompson, and Gillam on its way to the Port of Churchill on Hudson Bay.",
"score": "1.4833385"
},
{
"id": "26804454",
"title": "Winnipeg arts and culture",
"text": " Winnipeg is home to a number of acclaimed filmmakers such as Guy Maddin, whose feature My Winnipeg is a stylized tribute to his hometown. Noam Gonick, whose feature on Winnipeg street gangs Stryker (2004) premiered at the 61st Venice Film Festival and Adam Smoluk, whose grocery store based caper-comedy Foodland played across Canada on Super Channel. Other Winnipeg filmmakers include animators Richard Condie and Cordell Barker, who often work with the National Film Board of Canada's Prairie Centre studio, as does documentary filmmaker John Paskievich. From 2005-2008, the Atelier national du Manitoba filmmaking and art project produced films and other media pertaining to the history and culture of Winnipeg and Manitoba.",
"score": "1.4729748"
},
{
"id": "12762981",
"title": "Culture of Manitoba",
"text": " Several prominent Canadian films were produced in Manitoba, including For Angela (1993); The Saddest Music in the World (2003); The Stone Angel (2007), based on the 1964 book of the same name; My Winnipeg (2007); and Foodland (2010). Guy Maddin, the writer and director of My Winnipeg, is a prominent Manitoban screenwriter and film director. Cordell Barker, considered to be one of Canada's best animators, is also Manitoban, whose most notable animated short is the Oscar-nominated The Cat Came Back (1988). Another prominent Manitoban animator, Richard Condie, is best known for his 1985 work The Big Snit, which was nominated for an Oscar and won the Genie Award for Best Animated Short, along with over a dozen international awards. Condie is a founding member of the Winnipeg Film Group. Several major American films were shot in Manitoba, among the most prominent of which are Capote (2005) and The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford (2007), both of which received Academy-Award nominations. Winnipeg-based Frantic Films has provided special effects for several American films, including Superman Returns (2006), Journey to the Center of the Earth (2008), and Duplicity (2009).",
"score": "1.4723756"
},
{
"id": "7565098",
"title": "Transcona, Winnipeg",
"text": " as part of the Unicity project laid out in the 1971 City of Winnipeg Act, whereupon it became a ward of the city and moved to first-past-the-post voting. At the time of its amalgamation into Winnipeg, the mayor was Harry Fuller and its final councilors were D. E. Perry, Walter Phillip, George E. Marshall, Charles J. Perry, William Dryden, and Albert J. Thompson. Today, the Canadian National Railway is still a major employer in the community. CNR 2747 is now on display at the corner of Plessis Road and Kildare Avenue in the Kiwanis Park courtesy of the Winnipeg Railway Museum.",
"score": "1.4700675"
},
{
"id": "26182803",
"title": "Law, government, and crime in Winnipeg",
"text": "Stryker (2004), directed by Noam Gonick, is film that depicts gang violence in Winnipeg's North End. ; Seven Times Lucky (2004), directed by Gary Yates and starring Kevin Pollak, is a crime drama film centring on a con man involved in a criminal scam. ; Strike! (2005) is a stage musical set during the 1919 Winnipeg general strike. It was adapted into a film in 2019, titled Stand! and directed by Robert Adetuyi. ; Yoga Hosers (2016), directed by Kevin Smith. Pop culture depictions of politics and/or crime in Winnipeg include: ",
"score": "1.4665644"
},
{
"id": "31611897",
"title": "Countess of Dufferin",
"text": " Boniface, now an electoral district of Winnipeg, Manitoba, arriving October 9, 1877, at a cost of $440. Upon arrival the locomotive was used on Government of Canada Contract No. 5, the first contract issued in the promised rail link that brought British Columbia into Confederation. The locomotive was used in the completion of Pembina branch to the U.S. border, linking Winnipeg with Minneapolis. Next it worked east from Winnipeg to the Lakehead in northwestern Ontario, connecting with contractors from eastern Canada. In 1883 ownership was transferred and it became Canadian Pacific No. 151. It then worked west from Winnipeg to Golden, British Columbia (Government of Canada Contract No. 15) where it was last used as a construction locomotive. In the mid-1880s, the locomotive ",
"score": "1.4659556"
},
{
"id": "27741842",
"title": "Inside Canada",
"text": " This Winnipeg-produced series began as a three-episode run in July 1973. Music was combined with comedy sequences with a Canadian focus. Reception to this initial run led to an eight-episode run a year later.",
"score": "1.4646145"
},
{
"id": "26182769",
"title": "Law, government, and crime in Winnipeg",
"text": " called Strike!, itself being adapted into a 2019 film directed by Robert Adetuyi, titled Stand!. Though it was not chartered until 1932, the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation would be born out of the 1919 labour unrest, as well as out of the Depression. Its successor, the New Democratic Party, has enjoyed much support in Winnipeg since the early 1960s. On July 27, 1971, the City of Winnipeg became a unicity by amalgamating the Town of Tuxedo; the rural municipalities of Charleswood, Fort Garry, North Kildonan, Old Kildonan; the cities of East Kildonan, West Kildonan, St. Vital, Transcona, St. Boniface, St. James-Assiniboia; ",
"score": "1.4628023"
},
{
"id": "8612536",
"title": "The Secret Railroad",
"text": " The Secret Railroad or Les Voyages du Tortillard in French, was a series produced by Societe Radio-Canada of 52 (or possibly 61) animated shorts made in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It was originally recorded in English at Place D'Youville in Montreal then subsequently dubbed into French. It was produced by Peter Saunders under the production company Films du Train Secret, and the participation of Les Société Radio-Canada and the Société de Développement de l'Industrie Cinématographique Canadienne. . It also aired in the United States on The Great Space Coaster in the early 1980s.",
"score": "1.4614036"
}
] |
Who was the producer of In the Family?
|
[
"Paulo Porto"
] |
producer
|
In the Family (1971 film)
| 807,577 | 67 |
[
{
"id": "15597674",
"title": "Family (1976 TV series)",
"text": " The initial showrunners of Family were Nigel McKeand and Carol Evan McKeand, who previously had been writers for The Waltons. After the fourth season, the McKeands departed and were replaced by Edward Zwick, who would go on to produce the acclaimed series thirtysomething, My So-Called Life and Once and Again.",
"score": "1.6156137"
},
{
"id": "26772863",
"title": "Perry Lafferty",
"text": " Perry Francis Lafferty (October 3, 1917 – August 25, 2005) was an American television producer and network television executive who produced several television programs, including the CBS programs All in the Family, M*A*S*H, Maude and The Mary Tyler Moore Show. With NBC, he produced the 1985 television movie An Early Frost, one of the first dramatic films to deal with the subject of HIV/AIDS.",
"score": "1.5471952"
},
{
"id": "4502360",
"title": "Miller-Boyett Productions",
"text": " Michael Warren started his career as the associate producer of The Partridge Family, where he met writer/Producer William S. Bickley. Then as an associate producer on Happy Days for its second season, later a story consultant with William Bickley, who was then a story editor. The two men produced Out of the Blue in 1979. Warren and Bickley later wrote for Happy Days and Perfect Strangers, before creating Family Matters, Getting By and Step by Step between 1989 and 1993, at that point Bickley and Warren became squarely producers instead of producer/writers, before officially ending their partnership around the time of the cancellation of Family Matters and Step by Step and joining the Miller-Boyett team. ",
"score": "1.5274891"
},
{
"id": "15597664",
"title": "Family (1976 TV series)",
"text": " Family is an American television drama series that aired on the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) television network from 1976 to 1980. Creative control of the show was split among executive producers Leonard Goldberg, Aaron Spelling, and Mike Nichols. A total of 86 episodes were produced.",
"score": "1.5147918"
},
{
"id": "9012879",
"title": "The Family (2003 TV series)",
"text": " The Family is a reality television series that aired on ABC spanning one season in 2003. It starred ten members from an Italian-American family, who were each fighting for a $1,000,000 prize. The show was hosted by George Hamilton.",
"score": "1.4872942"
},
{
"id": "4221378",
"title": "This Is Family",
"text": " This Is Family is produced by Boston-based production company Next Studios. The series is executive produced by cast members Joseph Azarian, Naseem Nossiff, David Azarian, and Sandra Richa, as well as Annmarie Richa as a co-executive producer. The series was greenlit on April 27, 2018, and premiered on September 28, 2018 on Prime Video. A second season premiered on March 15, 2019 on Prime Video. On April 14, 2019, cast member Joseph Azarian announced on Twitter that the show would return for a third season on September 27, 2019. On September 7, 2019, ahead of the season three premiere, the series was renewed for a fourth season. On September 15, 2019, Next Studios announced on Twitter that This Is Family would be a launch customer for the Sony PXW-FX9 cinema camera.",
"score": "1.4841483"
},
{
"id": "30797984",
"title": "Family Entertainment",
"text": "Glyn Johns – producer, engineer ; John Gilbert – producer ",
"score": "1.481418"
},
{
"id": "13121315",
"title": "All in the Family",
"text": " All in the Family is an American sitcom television series that was originally broadcast on the CBS television network for nine seasons, from 1971 to 1979. Afterwards, it was continued with the spin-off series Archie Bunker's Place, which picked up where All in the Family had ended and ran for four more seasons through 1983. Based on the British sitcom Till Death Us Do Part, All in the Family was produced by Norman Lear and Bud Yorkin. It starred Carroll O'Connor, Jean Stapleton, Sally Struthers, and Rob Reiner. The show revolves around the life of a working-class man and his family. The show ",
"score": "1.4745156"
},
{
"id": "16527148",
"title": "What Makes a Family",
"text": " The film was directed by Maggie Greenwald, with the screenplay written by Robert L. Freedman. The executive producers were Barbra Streisand, Whoopi Goldberg, Cis Corman, Craig Zadan and Neil Meron.",
"score": "1.4691743"
},
{
"id": "5656272",
"title": "Harve Brosten",
"text": "All in the Family (TV series) 1975-1977 ; The Jeffersons (TV series) 1975 ; Romance, Romance (produced for the Broadway stage by) ; Shamus (assistant to director, assistant to producer) 1973 ; The Anderson Tapes (assistant to producer) 1971 ",
"score": "1.4688032"
},
{
"id": "4502361",
"title": "Miller-Boyett Productions",
"text": "Garry Marshall (Henderson Productions) (1974–1984, most series produced through the end of the Miller-Milkis-Boyett era) ; Robert Stigwood (The Stigwood Group, Ltd.) (1979, Makin' It) ; Hal Sitowitz (Myrt-Hal Productions) (1981, Foul Play) ; William Bickley & Michael Warren (1984–1998; Perfect Strangers, Family Matters, The Family Man, Step By Step, Getting By) ; Valerie Harper (Tal Productions, Inc.) (1986–1987; Valerie) ; Robert Griffard & Howard Adler (1987–1999; Perfect Strangers, Going Places, Step By Step, Two of a Kind) ; David W. Duclon (1990–1998; Family Matters, On Our Own) ; Gregory Harrison (Catalina Television) (1990–1991; The Family Man) ; Suzanne de Passe (de Passe Entertainment) (1994–1995; On Our Own) ",
"score": "1.4671245"
},
{
"id": "10760096",
"title": "The Family (1971 TV series)",
"text": " The Family is a Canadian dramatic television miniseries which aired on CBC Television in 1971.",
"score": "1.4667604"
},
{
"id": "15597676",
"title": "Family (1976 TV series)",
"text": " Family became the subject of a 24-year legal dispute due to a lawsuit filed by writer Jeri Emmet in 1977. The claim was against Spelling Television and alleged that Spelling had stolen the idea for the show from a script that Emmet had submitted, titled \"The Best Years\". Spelling responded to the lawsuit with a statement explaining that he had conceived the idea in his kitchen with Leonard Goldberg, his professional partner. Next they pitched the idea to scriptwriter Jay Presson Allen to create the pilot. She had just completed writing the screenplay for the film Funny Lady, starring Barbra Streisand and directed ",
"score": "1.4662441"
},
{
"id": "15961012",
"title": "Tandem Productions",
"text": " later turned their focus on situation comedy. The first success in that genre was All in the Family, which was based on the British sitcom Till Death Us Do Part. Before the series made its debut on January 12, 1971, Yorkin and Lear shot two unsold pilots for the series: one in 1968 called Justice For All and the other in 1969 titled Those Were the Days. Production for the series began in late 1970, following the third pilot episode which was picked up by CBS. More successful shows were also produced by Tandem; they were Maude (1972–1978), Good Times (1974–1979), and finally Sanford and Son (1972–1977). In 1977, Viacom Enterprises secured domestic and international television syndication rights for All in the Family which hit off-network reruns in ",
"score": "1.4659107"
},
{
"id": "3036909",
"title": "The Man in the Family",
"text": " The Man in the Family is an American sitcom television series that aired on ABC from June 19 until July 31, 1991.",
"score": "1.4614861"
},
{
"id": "12817105",
"title": "Beryl Vertue",
"text": " America. These successes included Steptoe and Son, which became Sanford and Son in the US, and Till Death Us Do Part, which was turned into All in the Family. In 1975, she was a co-executive producer of the cinema version of The Who's rock opera Tommy, directed by Ken Russell and starring Roger Daltrey. In the 1980s, Vertue formed Hartswood Films, which has produced many comedies including Men Behaving Badly, Is It Legal?, and Coupling. The latter was produced by her daughter Sue Vertue and written by son-in-law Steven Moffat. She also served as executive producer of their dramatic series Sherlock.",
"score": "1.4590459"
},
{
"id": "15597671",
"title": "Family (1976 TV series)",
"text": " Many well-known (or soon-to-be well-known) actors and actresses appeared on the series, including Howard Hesseman, Ted Danson, Michael J. Fox, Tommy Lee Jones, James Woods, Michael Keaton, Kim Cattrall, Shelley Long, Henry Fonda, Mare Winningham, Helen Hunt, Dana Plato, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Annie Potts, Blair Brown, and Steve Guttenberg. Meredith Baxter's real-life mother, Whitney Blake, guest starred, as did David Birney, who was Baxter's husband at the time.",
"score": "1.4573088"
},
{
"id": "5722476",
"title": "List of production companies owned by the American Broadcasting Company",
"text": " Freeform Original Productions, the DBA of ProdCo, Inc. and formerly known as ABC Family Productions, is the in-house production company of ABC Family Worldwide Inc. for original scripted series. Programming executive Linda Mancuso died in December 2003. In early 2004, Disney Channel original programming leaders, executive vice president of original programming and production Gary Marsh and original movies VP Michael Healy takes over ABC Family's original movies unit. They move away from the planned romantic comedies to green light two telefilms, Crimes of Fashion and Head Rush. ProdCo was incorporated on 2007-8-14. Jayne Bieber was hired as vice president of production in 2010. As of June 2015, Bieber is Vice President, Production Management and Operations, ABC Family over seeing ProdCo. In October 2015, ABC Family, ABC Studios and ABC Signature signed a two-year production deal with McG's production banner, Wonderland Sound & Vision. Prior, McG had just put two series in at ABC Family. In January 2016, ABC Family changed its name to Freeform.",
"score": "1.4564595"
},
{
"id": "10907511",
"title": "The Family (2016 TV series)",
"text": " The Family is an American thriller television series. It was created by and executive produced by Jenna Bans, former ShondaLand regular writer. The series follows on the return of the mayor's young son, who was presumed dead after disappearing over a decade earlier. The series stars Joan Allen as Claire Warren, the ambitious and manipulative mayor of the fictional city Red Pines, Maine, and matriarch of the Warren family, who announces her candidacy for governor when her son Adam, played by Liam James, returns after having been kidnapped 10 years prior. The series premiered on Thursday, March 3, 2016, on ABC and concluded on Thursday, May 19, 2016. On May 12, 2016, the series was cancelled after one season.",
"score": "1.451004"
},
{
"id": "13121376",
"title": "All in the Family",
"text": " 1991, garnering higher ratings than the new series scheduled next to it, Norman Lear's sitcom Sunday Dinner. The latter was Lear's return to TV series producing after a seven-year absence, and was cancelled after the six-week tryout run due to being poorly received by audiences. On May 22, 2019, ABC broadcast Live in Front of a Studio Audience: Norman Lear's All in the Family and The Jeffersons, produced by Lear and Jimmy Kimmel and starring Woody Harrelson, Marisa Tomei, Jamie Foxx, Wanda Sykes, Ike Barinholtz, Kerry Washington and Ellie Kemper. A second Live in Front of A Studio Audience special was announced in early November 2019 to air on Wednesday December 18, this time pairing the show with Good Times.",
"score": "1.4484911"
}
] |
Who was the producer of The Easiest Way?
|
[
"Clara Kimball Young",
"Clara Kimball",
"Edith Matilda Clara Kimball"
] |
producer
|
The Easiest Way (1917 film)
| 801,960 | 78 |
[
{
"id": "13751140",
"title": "The Easiest Way",
"text": " The Easiest Way is a 1931 American pre-Code MGM drama film directed by Jack Conway. Adapted from the 1909 play of the same name written by Eugene Walter and directed by David Belasco, the film stars Constance Bennett, Adolphe Menjou, Robert Montgomery, Marjorie Rambeau, Anita Page, and Clark Gable",
"score": "1.7525222"
},
{
"id": "3083220",
"title": "Mabel Katz",
"text": " She is the author of The Easiest Way book series based on Ho'oponopono. The first book of the series was The Easiest Way; Solve Your Problems and Take The Road to Love, Happiness, Wealth and The Life of Your Dreams. In the book, she told her own story about finding her identity and freedom using this technique. The book has been translated into 15 languages. Other books in the series include The Easiest Way to Live, The Easiest Way Pocket Edition and The Easiest Way to Understanding Ho’oponopono that later became part of The Easiest Way and then was released as The Easiest Way Special Edition. In 2011, she wrote the fifth book of this series titled, Easiest Way to Grow.",
"score": "1.6579013"
},
{
"id": "13751146",
"title": "The Easiest Way",
"text": "Lynton Brent as Brockton Associate (uncredited) ; Jack Hanlon as Andy Murdock (uncredited) ; John Harron as Chris Swoboda, Laura's Suitor (uncredited) ; Dell Henderson as Bud Williams (uncredited) ; Hedda Hopper as Mrs. Clara Williams (uncredited) ; Charles Judels as Mr. Gensler (uncredited) ",
"score": "1.6380874"
},
{
"id": "13751154",
"title": "The Easiest Way",
"text": " Warner Archive Collection released the first Region 1 DVD on March 10, 2010.",
"score": "1.5982702"
},
{
"id": "10709412",
"title": "The Easy Way (Jimmy Giuffre album)",
"text": " The Easy Way is an album by American jazz composer and arranger Jimmy Giuffre which was released on the Verve label in 1959.",
"score": "1.5932608"
},
{
"id": "9111453",
"title": "The Easy Way (film)",
"text": " The Easy Way (Sans arme, ni haine, ni violence; ) is a 2008 French heist film directed by Jean-Paul Rouve, who also stars in the titular role as the real life thief Albert Spaggiari, who organized a break-in into a Société Générale bank in Nice, France in 1976. The original French title refers to the note Albert Spaggiari left in the bank after completing the robbery. Part of the movie was shot in Portugal at the Hotel Palácio Estoril, a 5-star hotel where some scenes of the James Bond film On Her Majesty's Secret Service were also shot.",
"score": "1.5738008"
},
{
"id": "27741745",
"title": "His Way (film)",
"text": " His Way is a 2011 television documentary film about Jerry Weintraub, an American film producer and former chairman and CEO of United Artists. The film was directed by Douglas McGrath. The film features interviews with Weintraub, Jane Morgan, George H. W. Bush, Barbara Bush, George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Julia Roberts, Elliott Gould, Ellen Barkin, James Caan, Matt Damon and Bruce Willis.",
"score": "1.568657"
},
{
"id": "13445948",
"title": "The Easy Way (Eddy Arnold album)",
"text": " The Easy Way is an album by American country music singer Eddy Arnold. It was released by RCA Victor in 1965. The album debuted on Billboard magazine's Top Country Albums chart on June 19, 1965, spent two weeks at No. 1, and remained on the chart for a total of 19 weeks. AllMusic gave the album a rating of four stars. Reviewer Greg Adams called it \"one of the most invigorating and enjoyable of his mid-'60s LPs.\"",
"score": "1.5633829"
},
{
"id": "5380602",
"title": "Easy Way (song)",
"text": " An accompanying music video for \"Easy Way\" was directed by Parris Stewart. It was released on January 29, 2020.",
"score": "1.5583087"
},
{
"id": "5723441",
"title": "The Hardest Way",
"text": " The Hardest Way is an album by the American garage punk band The Original Sins. It was released in 1989 by Psonik Records. The CD version of the album includes bonus tracks taken from the band's Australia-only extended play, Party's Over.",
"score": "1.5511112"
},
{
"id": "13751151",
"title": "The Easiest Way",
"text": " One foreign-language version was produced by MGM in French. It was titled Quand on est belle and starred Lili Damita in the part that Constance Bennett played in the English-language version.",
"score": "1.5508454"
},
{
"id": "30486158",
"title": "'Way Out (TV series)",
"text": " Source:",
"score": "1.5469105"
},
{
"id": "9111454",
"title": "The Easy Way (film)",
"text": " In 1977 in Nice, Albert Spaggiari is arrested by the police and brought to a judge's office for interrogation, but he manages to escape by jumping out of the window and riding off on a motorcycle with an accomplice. He travels to South America where he meets new faces including a mysterious journalist who wants to interview him about the heist and his whereabouts.",
"score": "1.5173466"
},
{
"id": "31205703",
"title": "Angela Martini",
"text": " In 2019, Angela Martini debuted as a producer in A Way Out (2018) and then produced The Fusion (2020).",
"score": "1.5144973"
},
{
"id": "13751153",
"title": "The Easiest Way",
"text": " According to MGM records the film earned $654,000 in the United States and Canada and $249,000 elsewhere resulting in a profit of $193,000.",
"score": "1.5121539"
},
{
"id": "10709415",
"title": "The Easy Way (Jimmy Giuffre album)",
"text": "Jimmy Giuffre – clarinet, tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone ; Jim Hall – guitar ; Ray Brown – bass ",
"score": "1.5113988"
},
{
"id": "13414312",
"title": "French Way",
"text": "The Way (2010) ",
"score": "1.5040853"
},
{
"id": "30807661",
"title": "Dave Way",
"text": " Dave Way is an American producer, mixer and audio engineer based in Los Angeles, California, United States. He has worked with Fiona Apple, Sheryl Crow, Kesha, Pink, Christina Aguilera, Macy Gray, Ringo Starr, Shakira, Phoebe Bridgers, John Doe, Savage Garden, Michael Jackson, Spice Girls, Norah Jones, Beck, Eric Clapton, Neil Young, Babyface, Ziggy Marley, Weird Al Yankovic, Paul McCartney, Mick Jagger, Stevie Wonder, Gwen Stefani, Chris Botti, Jakob Dylan, Andrew WK, Foo Fighters, TLC, Guy, Toni Braxton, Boyz II Men, Kool Moe Dee, Heavy D. & The Boyz, Ayumi Hamasaki, Ronan Keating and many more. He is a four-time Grammy Award-winner as well as a songwriter and is co-writer of the number one ",
"score": "1.5016875"
},
{
"id": "29624869",
"title": "Six Ways to Sunday",
"text": "Dorothy Aufiero – co-producer, ; Adam Bernstein – producer, ; David Collins – producer, ; Marc Gerald – co-producer, ; Charles Johnson – executive producer, ; Michael Naughton – producer, ; Chipp Sandground – co-executive producer, ; Jonathan Shoemaker – line producer, ; Todd Shuster – co-executive producer, ; Daniel Sollinger – executive producer, ; Michael Williams – co-producer ",
"score": "1.4994684"
},
{
"id": "30842953",
"title": "By Any Means (2008 TV series)",
"text": " After Long Way Round and Long Way Down, Boorman and producer Russ Malkin conceived By Any Means in late 2007. Travelling across 24 countries, the crew comprised only Boorman, Malkin and a cameraman, Paul \"Mungo\" Mungeam.",
"score": "1.4972365"
}
] |
Who was the producer of Hired!?
|
[
"Jam Handy",
"Henry Jamison Handy",
"Jamison Handy"
] |
producer
|
Hired!
| 308,450 | 30 |
[
{
"id": "7070595",
"title": "The Hire",
"text": "Starring Forest Whitaker, Mickey Rourke, and Adriana Lima ; Directed by Wong Kar-wai ; Written by Andrew Kevin Walker ; Featured the BMW 328i Coupé and the Z3 roadster The Driver is hired by a nervous manager to spy on a paranoid actor's wife. The Driver narrates while following the wife, describing the right methods to survey someone, as well as his fear of what he might learn of the wife's tragic life. He eventually discovers the wife is fleeing the country to return to her mother in Brazil, and that she's been given a black eye—likely by her husband. He returns the money for the job, refusing to tell the manager where the wife is, and tells the manager to never call him again before driving off.",
"score": "1.5187495"
},
{
"id": "13455454",
"title": "The Hired Man (film)",
"text": "Charles Ray as Ezry Hollins ; Charles K. French as Caleb Endicott (credited as Charles French) ; Robert Gordon as Walter Endicott (credited as Gilbert Gordon) ; Doris May as Ruth Endicott ; Lydia Knott as Mrs. Endicott ; William Fairbanks as Stuart Morley (credited as Carl Ullman) ",
"score": "1.5057802"
},
{
"id": "25499659",
"title": "The Price Is Right (American game show)",
"text": " or was fired, although Carey indicated in a later interview with Esquire that Dobkowitz was fired. As of 2011, the show uses multiple producers, all long-time staffers. Adam Sandler (not to be confused with the actor) is the producer and director of the show. Stan Blits, who joined the show in 1980 and Sue MacIntyre are the co-producers. Stan Blits is also the contestant coordinator for the show. In 2007, he wrote the book Come on Down (ISBN: 978-0061350115), that goes behind the scenes of the show. In the book he dispels the myth that contestants are chosen at random, and gives readers an inside look at how shows are planned ",
"score": "1.4996257"
},
{
"id": "7070599",
"title": "The Hire",
"text": "Starring Don Cheadle and F. Murray Abraham ; cameos by Ray Liotta, Robert Patrick, Clifton Powell and Dennis Haysbert as US agents ; Written and directed by Joe Carnahan ; Featured the BMW Z4 3.0i In an unnamed foreign country, a man carrying a mysterious briefcase survives an ambush en route to his destination. The Driver rescues and escorts the man while under helicopter attack. During the chase, the briefcase is struck by a bullet, causing it to leak grey fluid and the number on its display to begin counting down. The Driver manages to cause the helicopter to crash, but ",
"score": "1.4893186"
},
{
"id": "28166487",
"title": "Hire a Man",
"text": " The film was produced by Chinneylove Eze Productions Ltd.",
"score": "1.4781183"
},
{
"id": "31495526",
"title": "Husband for Hire",
"text": " Husband for Hire is a 2008 comedy television film that premiered on Oxygen Network on January 24, 2008. Husband for Hire was written and directed by Kris Isacsson, and it starred Nadine Velazquez, Tempestt Bledsoe, Mark Consuelos, Erik Estrada and Mario Lopez.",
"score": "1.4656038"
},
{
"id": "4317047",
"title": "He Hired the Boss",
"text": " He Hired the Boss is a 1943 American comedy film directed by Thomas Z. Loring and written by Irving Cummings Jr. and Ben Markson. The film stars Stuart Erwin, Evelyn Venable, Thurston Hall, Vivian Blaine, William T. Orr and Benny Bartlett. The film was released on April 2, 1943, by 20th Century Fox.",
"score": "1.4631671"
},
{
"id": "13455452",
"title": "The Hired Man (film)",
"text": " The Hired Man is a 1918 American silent comedy film written and directed by Victor Schertzinger. The film stars Charles Ray, Charles K. French, Robert Gordon, Doris May, Lydia Knott, and William Fairbanks. The film was released on January 27, 1918, by Paramount Pictures.",
"score": "1.4457533"
},
{
"id": "31102988",
"title": "Lucky Losers",
"text": " Producer Jan Grippo was a professional magician brought to Hollywood to teach Veronica Lake to be convincing doing card tricks in This Gun for Hire. He later became Leo Gorcey's agent and produced the Bowery Boys series. He performed the card and dice tricks seen in the film.",
"score": "1.4396526"
},
{
"id": "25499661",
"title": "The Price Is Right (American game show)",
"text": " previously stated. Previous producers have included Jay Wolpert, Barbara Hunter and Phil Wayne Rossi (Wayne's son). Michael Dimich assumed the director's chair in June 2011. Marc Breslow, Paul Alter, Bart Eskander, and Rich DiPirro each served long stints previously as director. Former associate directors Andrew Felsher and Fred Witten, as well as technical director Glenn Koch, have directed episodes strictly on a fill-in basis. Sandler began directing episodes in 2012, and became the official director in 2013. Aside from Barker, the show's production staff remained intact after Carey became host. FremantleMedia executive Syd Vinnedge was named the program's new executive producer, with Richards becoming co-executive producer after Dobkowitz's firing. Richards was ",
"score": "1.4381135"
},
{
"id": "1055764",
"title": "Christian Gerhartsreiter",
"text": " After settling in Greenwich, Connecticut, Gerhartsreiter assumed the identity of \"Christopher C. Crowe.\" He claimed to be a television producer from Los Angeles who worked on the 1980s remake of Alfred Hitchcock Presents. Christopher Crowe is the name of one of the producers of the series. He was hired by the brokerage firm S.N. Phelps and Company to work with the firm's computers. He was fired when it was discovered that the social security number he had given them belonged to serial killer David Berkowitz. He was employed by Nikko Securities Ltd. as a sales manager of corporate bonds until he was fired. He briefly worked for Kidder, Peabody & Co., but quit his job and abandoned the Christopher Crowe persona when he discovered that police were looking for him in connection with the disappearance of John and Linda Sohus.",
"score": "1.4318582"
},
{
"id": "7070598",
"title": "The Hire",
"text": "Starring Maury Chaykin and Kathryn Morris ; Directed by John Woo ; Written by David Carter, Greg Hahn and Vincent Ngo ; Featured the BMW Z4 3.0i The Driver is hired by the Federal Bureau of Investigation to help defuse a hostage situation. A disgruntled employee has kidnapped a CEO and has hidden her, demanding $5,088,042 for her release. The Driver delivers the money, writing the sum on his hand as instructed by the hostage taker, and is then ordered to burn the money. As he complies, the federal agents break in and attempt to subdue the man, who shoots himself in the head without revealing the woman's location. The Driver surmises the ransom amount is actually the woman's cellphone number, and tracks her location to the trunk of a sinking car. The woman is rescued and brought to the hospital to confront the kidnapper. It is revealed that she and the kidnapper were actually lovers, and the woman coldly berates the kidnapper before he dies.",
"score": "1.4313005"
},
{
"id": "13819819",
"title": "Michael Weisman",
"text": " 1989, Weisman was hired by CBS in California to produce the late-night talk show program, The Pat Sajak Show. In 2001, 12 years after Weisman was fired by Ebersol, the two men reunited to work together on the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City. Weisman returned to New York in 2004, serving as the executive producer for the syndicated daytime Jane Pauley Show for one season. In 2005, NBC Universal Television Group hired Weisman as the group’s first ever executive producer at large. His first assignment was working with new executive producer Jim Bell on Today. In 2007, Weisman returned to NBC Sports to serve as the Executive in Charge of Production of Football Night in America.",
"score": "1.4231629"
},
{
"id": "1694182",
"title": "Michael Grais",
"text": " From the Unknown for CBS and executive-produced the film Great Balls of Fire!, starring Dennis Quaid as Jerry Lee Lewis. In 1990, he co-wrote and produced Marked for Death starring Steven Seagal. In 1992, he produced Steven King’s Sleepwalkers, and co-wrote Cool World for director Ralph Bakshi. In 2000, he executive-produced Who Killed Atlanta's Children? for Showtime. Grais also oversaw production on the syndicated series The Immortal. Grais, a wild horse advocate, took a sabbatical from Hollywood in 2001 to move with his wife, singer/songwriter Jennifer Grais, to San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, for three years and begin writing the novel Christa's Luck, a YA ",
"score": "1.4223397"
},
{
"id": "7070596",
"title": "The Hire",
"text": "Starring Madonna ; Directed by Guy Ritchie ; Written by Joe Sweet and Guy Ritchie ; Featured the BMW M5 The Driver is chosen by a spoiled and shallow celebrity to drive her to a venue. Unbeknownst to her, her manager has actually hired the Driver to teach the celebrity a lesson. Pretending to escape her pursuing bodyguards, the Driver drives recklessly through the city, tossing the hapless celebrity all around the backseat. They eventually arrive at the venue, where she is thrown out of the car and photographed by paparazzi in an embarrassing end on the red carpet.",
"score": "1.4202316"
},
{
"id": "10510649",
"title": "Hey, Mr. Producer!",
"text": " Hey, Mr. Producer! was a concert honoring theatre producer Cameron Mackintosh, performed in June 1998 as a benefit for the Royal National Institute of the Blind (RNIB) and the Combined Theatrical Charities. Staged by Bob Avian, it was presented at the Lyceum Theatre in London on 7 – 8 June 1998, with the latter being a Royal Charity Gala in the presence of Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh. It featured performances from many of the hit musicals that Mackintosh has produced, including My Fair Lady, Oliver!, Little Shop of Horrors, The Fix, Godspell, Anything Goes, Song and Dance, The Boy Friend, Lauder, Five Guys Named Moe, Martin Guerre, Miss Saigon, The Phantom of the Opera, Follies, Oklahoma!, Carousel, Tom Foolery, Cats and Les Misérables, as well as a segment devoted to the work of Stephen Sondheim. The show was hosted by Julie Andrews and the ",
"score": "1.4198315"
},
{
"id": "15268831",
"title": "The Hired Hand",
"text": " The Hired Hand is a 1971 American western film directed by Peter Fonda, with a screenplay by Alan Sharp. The film stars Fonda, Warren Oates, and Verna Bloom. The cinematography was by Vilmos Zsigmond. Bruce Langhorne provided the moody film score. The story is about a man returning to his abandoned wife after seven years of drifting from job to job throughout the Southwestern United States. The embittered woman will only let him stay if he agrees to move in as a hired hand. Upon release, the film received a mixed critical response and was a financial failure. In 1973, the film was shown on NBC-TV in an expanded version, but soon drifted into obscurity. In 2001, a fully restored version was shown at various film festivals, gaining strong critical praise, and it was released by the Sundance Channel on DVD. It is now considered a classic Western of the period.",
"score": "1.4182211"
},
{
"id": "7070597",
"title": "The Hire",
"text": "Starring Stellan Skarsgård and Lois Smith ; Directed by Alejandro González Iñárritu ; Written by Alejandro González Iñárritu, Guillermo Arriaga and David Carter ; Featured the BMW X5 3.0i In a war-torn Latin-American country, war photographer Harvey Jacobs witnesses a massacre and is wounded trying to escape. The UN assigns the Driver to rescue Jacobs from hostile territory. Jacobs tells the Driver about the horrors he saw as a photographer, and his regrets for being unable to help any victims. He gives the Driver the film needed for a New York Times story and his dog tags, which are to be given to his mother. When they reach the border they are confronted by a guard, who becomes hostile when Jacobs is taking pictures and refuses to stop. The Driver drives through a hail of gunfire towards safety, but finds Jacobs has died in the escape. The Driver returns to America to visit Jacobs' mother, returning his dog tags and telling her that Jacobs had won the Pulitzer Prize.",
"score": "1.4119428"
},
{
"id": "25675621",
"title": "Robert Borden (TV producer)",
"text": "Outsourced (executive producer - 2010-2011) ; George Lopez (executive producer - 2002-2007) ; The Drew Carey Show (producer - 1995-1996) ; The Brian Benben Show (executive producer - 1998-2000) ; Pride & Joy (producer - 1995) ",
"score": "1.4047086"
},
{
"id": "15888304",
"title": "This Gun for Hire (TV film)",
"text": " This Gun for Hire is a 1991 American TV movie. It is an adaptation of A Gun for Sale by Graham Greene which had been filmed several times previously, notably with Alan Ladd in 1942. It was directed by Lou Antonio for the USA Network. It starred Robert Wagner who in 2000 said it was one of his favorite roles.",
"score": "1.4025536"
}
] |
Who was the producer of Shine?
|
[
"Luna Sea",
"Lunacy"
] |
producer
|
Shine (Luna Sea song)
| 5,745,770 | 56 |
[
{
"id": "8756009",
"title": "Shine Group",
"text": " Shine Group was an international distribution group.",
"score": "1.5971051"
},
{
"id": "11571040",
"title": "The Blackhouse Foundation",
"text": " Carol Ann Shine is a film producer. A few of her productions include ''Truth. Be. Told., Poses, Recover, Dirty Lies, The Comedy Underground Series, The Boy, and Blackbird.'' She has produced/co-produced 46 credits, written 1 credit, and was the production manager for 2 credits. She was also a cinematographer for 1 credit, and a second unit director or assistant director for 1 credit as well. Ryan Tarpley graduated from Lawrence University and Ohio State University. He is Chief Diversity Officer at Creative Artists Agency (CAA). He is an entertainment executive based out of New York, NY. He is on the Board of Directors at ",
"score": "1.5927174"
},
{
"id": "28379394",
"title": "Shine (compilation series)",
"text": " Released 16 November 1998",
"score": "1.5542297"
},
{
"id": "28379382",
"title": "Shine (compilation series)",
"text": " Released 1 April 1997",
"score": "1.5513"
},
{
"id": "28379388",
"title": "Shine (compilation series)",
"text": " Released 24 November 1997",
"score": "1.551229"
},
{
"id": "5541024",
"title": "Shine On (Riot album)",
"text": "Paul Orofino - producer, engineer, mixing ; Jeff Allen - executive producer ",
"score": "1.5510072"
},
{
"id": "28379391",
"title": "Shine (compilation series)",
"text": " Released 17 August 1998",
"score": "1.5497394"
},
{
"id": "4473244",
"title": "Eden Gaha",
"text": " Eden Gaha is an Australian producer based in Los Angeles. He is currently President of Shine America.",
"score": "1.5469882"
},
{
"id": "28379008",
"title": "Kenton Allen",
"text": " In January 2001, he was approached by Elisabeth Murdoch to become the founding creative director of the independent production company Shine. Allen was a key member of the launch team that secured the initial start-up financing. He quickly established the core creative divisions and overall creative strategy for the start-up company and recruited the core business affairs, finance, and creative personnel. He also established a talent incubator for comedy film directors in partnership with the UK Film Council and Film4.",
"score": "1.5465772"
},
{
"id": "14961492",
"title": "1996 in Australia",
"text": "Shine ",
"score": "1.5463512"
},
{
"id": "28379385",
"title": "Shine (compilation series)",
"text": " Released 1 September 1997",
"score": "1.5455422"
},
{
"id": "1399311",
"title": "Shine: The Hits",
"text": " mixing (6, 8, 12, 14) ; Jeff Frankenstein – additional producer (6), producer (8) ; Tommy Sims – producer (16) ; Kip Kubin – producer (17) ; Tony Miracle – producer (17) ; Wes Campbell – executive producer ; Lynn Nichols – executive producer ; Tom Lord-Alge – remixing (1) ; Joe Costa – recording (6, 8, 12, 14) ; Shawn McLean – recording (6, 8, 12, 14) ; Dan Rudin – recording (6, 8, 12, 14), engineer (16) ; Richie Biggs – additional engineer (6, 8, 12, 14) ; Jacquire King – additional engineer (6, 8, 12, 14) ; James Bauer – mix assistant (6, 8, 12, 14) ",
"score": "1.545255"
},
{
"id": "28379379",
"title": "Shine (compilation series)",
"text": " Released 11 November 1996",
"score": "1.540797"
},
{
"id": "28379376",
"title": "Shine (compilation series)",
"text": " Released 16 September 1996",
"score": "1.534955"
},
{
"id": "12214591",
"title": "Rich Ross",
"text": " Rich Ross became the Chief Executive Officer for Shine America in January 2013. He was responsible for the ongoing commercial strategy of the Shine Group in the United States, overseeing production, distribution and marketing of original programming across broadcast, cable and digital platforms.",
"score": "1.5341638"
},
{
"id": "5683320",
"title": "Shine (film)",
"text": " Shine is a 1996 Australian biographical psychological drama film based on the life of David Helfgott, a pianist who suffered a mental breakdown and spent years in institutions. The film stars Geoffrey Rush, Lynn Redgrave, Armin Mueller-Stahl, Noah Taylor, John Gielgud, Googie Withers, Justin Braine, Sonia Todd, Nicholas Bell, Chris Haywood, and Alex Rafalowicz. The film was directed by Scott Hicks. The screenplay was written by Jan Sardi. Shine had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival. In 1997, Geoffrey Rush was awarded the Academy Award for Best Actor at the 69th Academy Awards for his performance in the lead role.",
"score": "1.5312634"
},
{
"id": "3342439",
"title": "Johnny Capps",
"text": " Capps began his career at the BBC after graduating, working as a script editor on programmes such as Dangerfield. He would transition onto producing with the first series of As If. Along with Julian Murphy, Capps founded Shine Drama to develop television series. One of them was Merlin. The BBC had been keen on a family-oriented drama, based on the character of Merlin form Arthurian legend. Capps and Murphy, alongside Julian Jones and Jake Michie, created a version that was put into development in late 2006. This series went into production in March 2008, produced by Shine in association with BBC Wales, whose Head of Drama Julie Gardner was executive producer for the BBC. CGI special effects for the ",
"score": "1.5301278"
},
{
"id": "28379373",
"title": "Shine (compilation series)",
"text": " Released 15 July 1996",
"score": "1.5278969"
},
{
"id": "8756010",
"title": "Shine Group",
"text": " Shine was founded in 2001 by Elisabeth Murdoch following her departure from BSkyB the previous year. In 2006, Shine Group acquired Kudos, Princess Productions and Dragonfly to create the Shine Group, although they still operate as four separate entities. Shine acquired Reveille Productions in 2008. News Corporation (later 21st Century Fox, but assets are now split between The Walt Disney Company and Fox Corporation) acquired Shine Group in April 2011 for $415 million. US pension funds who are shareholders in News Corporation are suing the company accusing Murdoch of nepotism. In May 2014, 21st Century Fox and Apollo Global Management announced the negotiation of merging their respective production companies: FOX-owned Shine Group and Apollo-controlled Endemol and CORE Media Group. The deal was finalized later in the same year. On 17 December 2014, Shine Group announced the joint venture by 21st Century Fox with funds managed by affiliates of Apollo Global Management, LLC, combining Endemol, Shine and CORE Media into Endemol Shine Group. As part of the new structure, Former Endemol UK CEO, Lucas Church, has been appointed Chairman of Endemol Shine UK, whilst former Endemol UK Chief Operating Officer, Richard Johnston, becomes CEO of Endemol Shine UK.",
"score": "1.5162182"
},
{
"id": "9477212",
"title": "Shine TV",
"text": " Shine TV is a British media production company and part of the Banijay Group with offices in London and Manchester. Shine was founded in March 2001 by Elisabeth Murdoch, daughter of News Corporation CEO Rupert Murdoch. The company was 80% owned by Elisabeth Murdoch, 15% by Lord Alli, and 5% by BSkyB, which signed a deal guaranteeing to buy an agreed amount of Shine programming for two years.",
"score": "1.512733"
}
] |
Who was the producer of De Laatste Dagen van een Eiland?
|
[
"Ernst Winar"
] |
producer
|
De Laatste Dagen van een Eiland
| 5,840,369 | 67 |
[
{
"id": "29584020",
"title": "De Laatste Dagen van een Eiland",
"text": " De Laatste Dagen van een Eiland is a 1942 Dutch film directed by Ernst Winar.",
"score": "1.9819713"
},
{
"id": "31927548",
"title": "Ruud van Hemert",
"text": " Ruud van Hemert was the son of television producer Willy van Hemert, and followed in his father's footsteps, making two television films for the VPRO, TV-Eiland (1965), and Pepijn op wieletjes (\"a children's film for and about naughty children\" conceived by Hans Andreus, followed by a few other children's shows, with Harrie Geelen. A breakthrough was the (stylistically experimental) documentary Oranje Vrijstaat, which had controversial politician Roel van Duijn as a central figure. His career took off when he cooperated with Wim T. Schippers, Gied Jaspars, and Wim van der Linden on such shows as De Fred Hachéshow (1971), Barend is weer bezig (1972–1973), and Van Oekel's Discohoek (1974), a ",
"score": "1.6818624"
},
{
"id": "29584021",
"title": "De Laatste Dagen van een Eiland",
"text": "Max Croiset ; Jules Verstraete ; Aaf Bouber ; Jeanne Verstraete ; Coen Hissink ; Daan Van Olleffen ; Marie Faassen ; Hedwig Flemming ",
"score": "1.6708465"
},
{
"id": "3461844",
"title": "Theo van Gogh (film director)",
"text": "Bad (A \"lesbian road movie\"). Production was planned for 2005 ; Duizend en één dag (\"A Thousand and One Days\"). A drama series about young Muslims struggling with their faith. Although this project had not even reached pre-production, Van Gogh had already found a broadcaster for the series: Dutch Muslim Broadcasting Organisation NMO. ",
"score": "1.6202613"
},
{
"id": "5613143",
"title": "Anna Frijters",
"text": " Frijters was discouraged from maintaining her interest in filmmaking after the critical and commercial backlash of Leentje van de Zee, though her husband, François Frijters, made a Newsreel film called Inhuldiging van het standbeeld van Guido Gezelle (Inauguration of the Statue of Guido Gezelle) in 1930. However, Frijters wrote a short comedy screenplay called De verloofde uit Canada (The Fiancé from Canada), which revolved around a working-class man who returned home from Canada and discovered that his fiancée Betty no longer loved him and was married to someone else. The main character was played by a comedian, Lowieke Staal.",
"score": "1.616422"
},
{
"id": "7089158",
"title": "Rob Houwer",
"text": " Robert Piet Houwer (born 13 December 1937) is a Dutch film producer. Houwer frequently collaborated with Paul Verhoeven and produced most of his Dutch films. Turkish Delight (1973), after the book by Jan Wolkers, became the most frequently visited film in Dutch cinema and still holds that place today. However, Houwer and Verhoeven shared a very antagonistic relationship that came to a definitive end in 1983. Houwer's later films did not enjoy the same artistic and commercial successes he had in his early career. In fact, three films which he produced are considered among the worst in Dutch cinema: De gulle Minnaar (1990), De Zeemeerman (1996) and Het woeden der gehele wereld (2006). He was appointed the Order of Orange-Nassau.",
"score": "1.6046956"
},
{
"id": "4795240",
"title": "Johan van der Keuken",
"text": " 1996: Produced the film Amsterdam Global Village (245 min.). ; 1997: Produced two films, (1) Amsterdam Afterbeat (16 min.); and (2) To Sang Fotostudio (35 min.). During the filming of the latter, van der Keuken was himself the subject of a documentary film Leven Met Je Ogen/Living with Your Eyes. ; 1998: Produced the film Last Words - My Sister Yoka (1935-1997)/Laatste woorden: Mijn zusje Joke (1935-1997) (50 min.). ; 2000: Produced two films, (1) De grote vakantie/The Long Holiday (145 min.); and (2) Temps/Travail (10 min.). ; 2001: Produced the film For The Time Being (10 min). ; 2002: Onvoltooid tegenwoordig (The Present) opens at the International Film Festival Rotterdam 2002. ",
"score": "1.6035092"
},
{
"id": "14907393",
"title": "Dick Dolman",
"text": "In 1981, Dolman asked cabinet member Til Gardeniers in writing, if the \"original was true, that the minister wanted to distribute fines\" following possible surreptitious advertising made by the television comedy duo, Van Kooten en De Bie in their alter egos, Jacobse and Van Es. Dolman signed his question with their fictional Tegenpartij. ; There was an interview with Dolman in the first issue of Playboy in 1983. ",
"score": "1.6029153"
},
{
"id": "5263317",
"title": "Thekla Reuten",
"text": "1996: Verhalen uit de bijbel, ‘de man op de ezel' (Director: Rein van Schagen) ; 1997: Arends (Director: Jelle Nesna) ; 1998: Baantjer, episode De Cock en de moord op de heks (Director: Pollo de Pimentel) ; 1998: Tate's Voyage (Director: Paula van der Oest) ; 1998: Het 14e kippetje (Director: Hany Abu-Assad) ; 1998: Wij, Alexander (Director: Rimko Haanstra) ; 1999: De rode zwaan (Director: Martin Lagestee) ; 1999: Klokhuis (Director: Niek Barendsen and Barbera Bredero) ; 1999: Kruimeltje (Director: Maria Peters) ; 1999: Moët und Chandon (Director: Marc de Cloe) ; 2000: Iedereen beroemd! (Director: Dominique Deruddere) ; 2000: De zwarte Meteoor (Director: Guido Pieters) ; 2001: ",
"score": "1.5957862"
},
{
"id": "15703236",
"title": "Tom Van Landuyt",
"text": " and 2001 he worked with the Belgian theatre director Ivo van Hove, in a production (Rent) of the Dutch theatrical producer Joop van den Ende in Amsterdam. In 2009, he wrote, performed, and produced a Dutch album called Man Zo Nu En Dan. That same year he produced and directed the music video \"Blanke Maagd\" and \"Vrijheid\". In 2013, he founded the theatre company Naastdeburen with his wife, Dutch actress Angela Schijf. In 2015 he produced his first play Kreutzersonate, Als het verlangen maar stopt, an adaptation of the novel of the Russian writer Leo Tolstoy. The play was a co-production with t,arsenaal Mechelen.",
"score": "1.5948424"
},
{
"id": "4795239",
"title": "Johan van der Keuken",
"text": " van 't Hoff\" camera. ; 1988: Produced the award-winning film Het Oog Boven de Put/The Eye Above the Well (90 min.). ; 1989: Was cameraman for Noshka van der Lely's The Mountain World Non-World. ; 1989-1990: Produced the film The Mask (55 min.). ; 1990-1991: Produced the award-winning film Face Value (120 min.). ; 1992-1993: Produced the film Brass Unbound (106 min.) in collaboration with Rob Boonzajer Flaes. ; 1993: Produced the film Sarajevo Film Festival (14 min.). ; 1994: Produced three films, (1) Tony's birthday (9 min.); (2) the award-winning Lucebert: tijd en afscheid/Lucebert: Time and Farewell (52 min.); and (3) On Animal Locomotion (15 min.), in collaboration with Willem Breuker. ",
"score": "1.5813651"
},
{
"id": "1405588",
"title": "Ed van der Elsken",
"text": " Upon moving back to Amsterdam in 1955, he recorded members of the Dutch avant garde COBRA, including Karel Appel whom he later filmed (Karel Appel, componist korte versie, 1961, 4 min. 16 mm black & white). He separated from and divorced Ata Kando. He then traveled extensively, to Bagara 1957 (now in Central African Republic), and to Tokyo and Hong Kong in 1959 to 1960, with Gerda van der Veen (1935–2006) also a photographer, whom he married (25 September 1957). He filmed for Welkom In Het Leven, Lieve Kleine the homebirth of their second child, Daan, in the old-fashioned, working-class Nieuwmarkt in Amsterdam. This is an early example of cinema production with a small shoulder-mounted camera synced with sound. He continued in motion imagery his subjective stance in which the camera operator interacts live from behind the camera with subject, obviating the need for the intrusion of an interviewer or presenter, and recording the immediate experience. His style was immediately influential on the television of Hans Keller, Roelof Kiers and others.",
"score": "1.5756309"
},
{
"id": "12447160",
"title": "Kinderen geen bezwaar",
"text": " Gerard van Doorn (Alfred van den Heuvel) and Maud Zegers (Anne-Mieke Ruyten) are a married couple. They met each other through a personal advertisement (hence the title, Kinderen geen bezwaar, which translates to Children no objection). They live with two children from previous marriages: Gerard's son Daan (Joey van der Velden) and Maud's daughter Julia (Céline Purcell). Maud works as a psychotherapist and Gerard is a homemaker. As such, Gerard doesn't fit the stereotypical profile of Dutch men and Maud often ridicules him for being unmanly.",
"score": "1.5740128"
},
{
"id": "29905780",
"title": "Coen Hissink",
"text": "De Laatste Dagen van een Eiland (1942) ; De man zonder hart (1937) ; Klokslag twaalf (1936) ; Merijntje Gijzens Jeugd (1936) ; Op hoop van zegen (1934) ; De cabaret-prinses (1925) ; Amsterdam bij nacht (1924) ; Frauenmoral (1923) ; The Man in the Background (1922) ; Alexandra (1922) ; De bruut (1922) ; Menschenwee (1921) ; De zwarte tulp (1921) ; Blood Money (1921) ; Schakels (1920) ; Pro domo (1918) ; Het proces Begeer (1918) ; Levensschaduwen (1916) ; Het geheim van den vuurtoren (1916) ; Het wrak van de Noorzee (1915) ; Ontmaskerd (1915) ; De vrouw Clasina (1915) ; Fatum (1915) ; De vloek van het testament (1915) ; Een telegram uit Mexico (1914) ",
"score": "1.5727147"
},
{
"id": "8006457",
"title": "Margreet ter Woerds",
"text": " Trouw, the Volkskrant, De Morgen, The Agrarisch Dagblad daily paper and multiple week and trade magazines. Ter Woerds has, as a producer, researcher and documentary maker, many television productions for national and international to her name, for programmes such as Netwerk, IKON, VRT, VTM, ZDF, NDR, Schweizer Fernsehen, Channel 4, BBC, TV2-Norway, Al Jazeera International, National Geographic Channel and Discovery Channel. She also set up a production bureau in Russia. Apart from that she made multiple information and recruitment films for the NGO's Aids Foundation East West (AFEW) and downside up, which is committed to the improvement of children with down syndrome in the Russian Federation. Nowadays Ter Woerds is ",
"score": "1.5655499"
},
{
"id": "25684365",
"title": "Dirk de Villiers",
"text": " made his first internationally acclaim movies Glenda and Die diamantjagters. In 1978, he made euthanasia-oriented drama titled Besluit om te sterf. Meanwhile, de Villiers founded Roodepoort Amateur Theater Organization (RATO). Some of his popular feature films include: Geheim van Nantes, Kalahari Harry, Die Spaanse Vlieg, Daan en Doors op die dieggins, My broer se bril, Tant Ralie se losieshuis, Die lewe sonder jou, Die drie Van der Merwes, Met liefde van Adéle, My naam is Dingetjie, Witblits en Peach Brandy, Dingetjie en Idi, Die wit sluier en Kaalgat tussen die daisies. Apart from cinema, de Villiers also made popular television serials such as Arende, Meeulanders and ",
"score": "1.5647376"
},
{
"id": "25589723",
"title": "Louis van Gasteren",
"text": " Van Gasteren trained as an electrician. He worked for the Dutch Polygoon newsreel company in Haarlem, Netherlands in 1949. In 1951 he started his own film production company Spectrum Film. He made his debut with Brown Gold, a film about cocoa and chocolate, in 1952. In 1983 Van Gasteren won the Dutch Film Critics Award for best documentary as well as the Golden Calf for best picture for Hans: Het Leven Voor De Dood (Hans, Life Before Death). He received the Golden Calf a second time in 2003 for his documentary The Price of Survival. Van Gasteren was a visiting professor in the United States at UCLA and Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts at Harvard University. Van Gasteren lived in Amsterdam and was married to Joke Meerman. At the end of his life he was the oldest active filmmaker in the Netherlands.",
"score": "1.5626416"
},
{
"id": "11012974",
"title": "Schanulleke",
"text": " From 1986 until 1993 Schanulleke received her own comic strip. The first two stories, \"Eiko, de wijze boom\" and \"Schanulleke in de dierentuin\" were drawn by Willy Vandersteen himself and were long stories. He also gave her a sidekick: the clown doll Duddul. Later his studio employees, Eric De Rop and Patty Klein, continued the series, but as a gag-a-day comic. The series have been published in Okki and Suske en Wiske Weekblad.",
"score": "1.5621703"
},
{
"id": "30442873",
"title": "Hans de Weers",
"text": " Hans de Weers (17 April 1966) is a Dutch television- and film producer. Apart from box office hits like Oysters at Nam Kee's and New Kids Turbo he is most notable for producing the film Antonia's Line that enjoyed critical success and several awards, including the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 68th Academy Awards.",
"score": "1.5599028"
},
{
"id": "1405597",
"title": "Ed van der Elsken",
"text": " 8’ 08″ ; 1972: Dleren Op Het Land (Animals in the countryside). 35mm, black-white. Sound: silent. 1’ 00″ ; 1972: Kogelstootster (Shot-putter). 35mm, colour. Sound: silent. 1’ 05″ ; 1973: Tom Ükker. 35mm, colour. Sound: silent. 0’ 32″ ; 1973: Edam. 16mm, colour. Sound: silent. 8’ 52″ ; 1973: Het Prins Bernhard Fonds Helpt (The Prince Bernhard Fund helps) I, II, III. Commissioned by: Prins Bernhard Fonds. 35mm, colour. Sound: optical. 3’ 50″ ; 1974: Slootje Springen (Ditch jumping). 35mm. colour. Sound: silent. 0’ 43″ ; 1976: Touwtrekken (Tug-of-war). Commissioned by: Nederlandse Touwtrekkersbond. Technical assistant: Anneke van der Elsken-Hilhorst. .Super 8. colour. ",
"score": "1.5586421"
}
] |
Who was the director of City of Beautiful Nonsense?
|
[
"Adrian Brunel",
"Adrian Hope Brunel"
] |
director
|
City of Beautiful Nonsense (1935 film)
| 3,743,818 | 87 |
[
{
"id": "4504061",
"title": "City of Beautiful Nonsense (1935 film)",
"text": " City of Beautiful Nonsense is a 1935 British drama film directed by Adrian Brunel and starring Emlyn Williams, Sophie Stewart and Eve Lister. The film is based on the best-selling 1909 novel of the same name by E. Temple Thurston, which had previously been filmed as a silent by Henry Edwards in 1919. The plot deals with a young woman who is in love with a penniless composer, but believes she must marry a wealthy man to please her father and only realises after various tribulations that she should follow her heart rather than her head.",
"score": "1.9168155"
},
{
"id": "4503914",
"title": "The City of Beautiful Nonsense (1919 film)",
"text": " City of Beautiful Nonsense is a 1919 British silent film drama directed by Henry Edwards, who also starred in the film with Chrissie White. The film is based on the best-selling 1909 novel of the same name by E. Temple Thurston and is a tale of a woman intending to marry for financial gain and security, who realises at the last minute that to be true to herself and to have the prospect of a happy future she must instead marry for love. A sound version of the same story was made in 1935 by Adrian Brunel. The film appears to have been well received and popular with audiences and has been described as \"the most talked about British film of 1919\" and \"technically on a par with the current Hollywood imports\". A contemporary review in The Bioscope admired Edwards' \"poetic embellishments\" and \"symbolistic touches\".",
"score": "1.876971"
},
{
"id": "4503915",
"title": "The City of Beautiful Nonsense (1919 film)",
"text": "Henry Edwards as John Grey ; Chrissie White as Jill Dealtry ; Henry Vibart as Thomas Grey ; Gwynne Herbert as Mrs. Grey ; James Lindsay as Skipworth ; Douglas Munro as Chesterton ; Stephen Ewart as Mr. Dealtry ; Teddy Taylor as Tommy Dealtry ",
"score": "1.7576069"
},
{
"id": "4504062",
"title": "City of Beautiful Nonsense (1935 film)",
"text": "Emlyn Williams as Jack Grey ; Sophie Stewart as Jill Dealtry ; Eve Lister as Amber ; George Carney as Chesterton ; Marie Wright as Dorothy Grey ; Eric Maturin as Robert Downing ; J. Fisher White as Thomas Grey ; Daisy Dormer as Mrs. Deakin ; Hubert Harben as Mr. Dealtry ; Margaret Damer as Mrs. Dealtry ; Dorothy Vernon as Mrs. Rowse ",
"score": "1.6610317"
},
{
"id": "5494434",
"title": "This Beautiful City",
"text": " This Beautiful City is a Canadian drama film directed by Ed Gass-Donnelly. It premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2007 and had a general theatrical release in 2008. The film depicts the lives of five disparate characters in Downtown Toronto. Johnny (Aaron Poole) is a recovering crack cocaine addict trying to convince his prostitute girlfriend Pretty (Kristin Booth) to move with him to a new city so they can make a clean break from their old lives, while Harry (Noam Jenkins) and Carol (Caroline Cave) are a wealthy couple. Events are set in motion when Carol falls from the balcony of her condo in an apparent suicide attempt, landing just metres away from Johnny and Pretty in the alleyway below. She survives, but Peter (Stuart Hughes), a police detective, finds her and the group's lives begin to intertwine.",
"score": "1.573714"
},
{
"id": "8367759",
"title": "The Beautiful City (1925 film)",
"text": " The Beautiful City is a 1925 American drama film directed by Kenneth Webb and starring Richard Barthelmess, Dorothy Gish, and William Powell. For their mother's sake, a man takes the blame for a robbery committed by his brother and his brother's gangster boss.",
"score": "1.5627792"
},
{
"id": "1364310",
"title": "E. Temple Thurston",
"text": " Thurston's most successful books include The City of Beautiful Nonsense (1909) and The Flower of Gloster (1911), a story about a canal journey in England. Two film versions of The City of Beautiful Nonsense were made: a silent version in 1919, and a sound version in 1935. In 1929, a play he had adapted from his book Portrait of a Spy was banned by the Lord Chamberlain. Based on the WWI exploits of Dutch spy Mata Hari, the play had been set to open at the London Coliseum until the ban was announced a couple of weeks before. Since the book itself had attracted little controversy, Temple Thurston suspected that the establishment had had some late thoughts about offending the French, who had executed the spy.",
"score": "1.5421159"
},
{
"id": "8367760",
"title": "The Beautiful City (1925 film)",
"text": "Richard Barthelmess as Tony Gillardi ; Dorothy Gish as Mollie ; William Powell as Nick Di Silva ; Frank Puglia as Carlo Gillardi ; Florence Auer as Mama Gillardi ",
"score": "1.5028498"
},
{
"id": "8367761",
"title": "The Beautiful City (1925 film)",
"text": " Mordaunt Hall gave a generally unfavorable review in The New York Times, calling The Beautiful City \"quite a disappointing production. ... the story would have to be greatly improved to make it entertaining.\" However, he did note that, \"William Powell makes the villainy as impressive as possible.\"",
"score": "1.4820633"
},
{
"id": "2096453",
"title": "A Beautiful Life (2008 film)",
"text": " A Beautiful Life is a 2008 American drama film directed by Alejandro Chomski and starring Jesse Garcia and Angela Sarafyan. It was released by New Films International, adapted from the play Jersey City by Wendy Hammond. The film received a 0% score on the review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes.",
"score": "1.4756737"
},
{
"id": "5065760",
"title": "Bruce Weber (photographer)",
"text": " with Bruce ultimately assembling the footage of travel, recording sessions, and interviews into his second feature, Let's Get Lost (1988). The film debuted in Venice (where it won the Cinecritica award) and was subsequently nominated for a Grand Jury Award at Sundance, and for an Oscar for Best Documentary Feature. Chop Suey, a kaleidoscopic portrait of the wrestler Peter Johnson, was released in 2001, and the impressionistic anti-war film A Letter to True in 2004. His work-in-progress Robert Mitchum feature, Nice Girls Don't Stay for Breakfast was screened at the New York Film Festival in 2017. He has also directed seven short films: Beauty Brothers, Parts I-IV (1987), Backyard Movie (1991), Gentle Giants (1994), The Teddy Boys of the Edwardian Drape Society (1995), Wine and Cupcakes (2007), The Boy Artist (2008), and Liberty City is Like Paris to Me (2009).",
"score": "1.4479847"
},
{
"id": "1364307",
"title": "E. Temple Thurston",
"text": " a yeast merchant, brewer, research chemist, and commercial traveller before finally becoming a reporter. His first novel, The Apple of Eden was issued in a rewritten form in 1905, but it was not until the success of The City of Beautiful Nonsense, published by Newnes in 1909, that he found some kind of stability. In November 1924, Temple Thurston's second marriage ended. Joan Katherine (née Cann), whom he had married a year after his first divorce, told the divorce court that they had lived happily together until 1922, when her husband had engaged a private secretary, Emily Cowlin. Objecting to the fact that the two of them were ",
"score": "1.4374182"
},
{
"id": "1364313",
"title": "E. Temple Thurston",
"text": "The City of Beautiful Nonsense (1919) ; The Garden of Resurrection (1919) ; Sunken Rocks (1920) ; David and Jonathan (1921) ; Enchantment (1921) ; The Blue Peter (1928) (Scenario by Vivian Thompson) ",
"score": "1.4350638"
},
{
"id": "27171607",
"title": "Steve Cosson",
"text": "book-writer and director of The Abominables at Children's Theatre Company (2018) ; writer and director of The Undertaking at BAM Next Wave Festival (2016), US tour, Theatre de la Ville, Paris ; director of José Rivera's Another Word for Beauty, world premiere at the Goodman Theatre (2016) ; writer/director, Rimbaud in New York at the Brooklyn Academy of Music (2016) ; director of Michael Friedman and Bess Wohl's musical Pretty Filthy (2015) ; the Off-Broadway revival of The Belle of Amherst, starring Joely Richardson (2014) writer/director of The Great Immensity (2014), music by Michael Friedman, created in residence with the Princeton Environmental Institute and the Princeton Atelier ; co-writer and director of This Beautiful City, which premiered in 2009 to excellent reviews at ",
"score": "1.4297594"
},
{
"id": "25117553",
"title": "A City Is Beautiful at Night",
"text": " The film is based on the eponymous book by Richard Bohringer, an autobiography mixing reality and imagination, Africa and travel, drugs and alcohol, actor and musician, family and love, Richard is revealed..",
"score": "1.4277042"
},
{
"id": "13070861",
"title": "City of Joy",
"text": " The 1992 film adaption was directed by Roland Joffé and starred Patrick Swayze.",
"score": "1.4236808"
},
{
"id": "32785763",
"title": "Asghar Farhadi",
"text": " At the start of his career, Farhadi made numerous short 8 mm and 16 mm films in the Isfahan branch of the Iranian Young Cinema Society, before moving on to writing plays and screenplays for IRIB. He also directed such TV series as A Tale of a City and co-wrote the screenplay for Ebrahim Hatamikia's Low Heights. In 2003, Farhadi made his feature film debut with Dancing in the Dust. He followed with The Beautiful City, released in 2004. His third film, Fireworks Wednesday, won the Gold Hugo at the 2006 Chicago International Film Festival.",
"score": "1.4188163"
},
{
"id": "7931301",
"title": "City of Women",
"text": " Tedious Pretension\". Russian film director Andrei Tarkovsky, in Rome that year for the pre-production of Nostalghia, noted in his diary that City of Women was a fiasco: \"At the Cannes Festival the papers said that Fellini's last film was a total disaster, and that he himself had ceased to exist. It's terrible, but it's true, his film is worthless.\" Released by New Yorker Films in the United States on 8 April 1981, the film garnered generally favorable reviews but little box-office success. Daniel Talbot of New Yorker Films offered an explanation for the public's lack of interest: \"Here, it played in less than fifty theatres, and ",
"score": "1.408524"
},
{
"id": "9963641",
"title": "Peter Wells (writer)",
"text": "Foolish Things (1980) ; Little Queen (1984) ; Jewel's Darl (1985) ; My First Suit (1985) ; Newest City on the Globe: Art Deco Napier (1985). Auckland: Moving Image Centre. ; Newest City on the Globe (1985). Written and directed by Peter Wells. Produced and edited by Stewart Main. Auckland: TVNZ. ; A Death in the Family. Film for television with Stewart Main. ; Drama on Film. Wellington: New Zealand Film Commission. ; The Mighty Civic (1988) Documentary co-directed by Wells and Stewart Main. Wellington: New Zealand Film Commission. ; A Taste of Kiwi (1990) ; Desperate Remedies (1993). Written by Wells and co-directed by Wells and Main. Isambard Productions. ; Naughty Little Peeptoe, with Garth Maxwell. ; One of Them Written by Wells and directed by Main. ; Georgie Girl (2001) ",
"score": "1.4069643"
},
{
"id": "30624225",
"title": "City (TV series)",
"text": " social coordinator, a stereotypically beautiful airhead spoiled by her wealthy family; Lance Armstrong (Sam Lloyd), the creepy statistician; and Victor Sloboda (James Lorinz), a dumb security guard, who in one episode thought a bandit had stolen the entire supply of White-Out for use in processing records for illegal immigrants. His solution to the problem: painting his entire body in correction fluid in order to \"keep his eyes\" on the supply! Liz and the gang all answered to Ken Resnick (Stephen Lee), the totally powerless, monumentally rotten Deputy Mayor. Running the newsstand/lunch counter at City Hall was Sean (Shay Duffin), an acerbic Irishman. Chuck (Rodney Ueno), an aggressive Asian mail clerk, was also part of the cast, but his character was dropped after the pilot.",
"score": "1.4069283"
}
] |
Who was the director of The Sisters?
|
[
"Christy Cabanne",
"William Christy Cabanne"
] |
director
|
The Sisters (1914 film)
| 5,955,665 | 93 |
[
{
"id": "25046782",
"title": "The Sisters (1938 film)",
"text": " In May 1937, Miriam Hopkins and Kay Francis were originally announced as female stars. In December 1937 Warners announced the film would be made the following year from a script by Milton Krims. In April 1938 Irene Dunne was announced for the lead. By this stage Anatole Litvak was attached to direct and Kane Bryan was to play one of the sisters. Then in May, Warners said that Dunne had been replaced by Bette Davis. Following Jezebel, Bette Davis was dismayed to be assigned to Comet Over Broadway, a melodrama in which she would portray a Broadway actress who sacrifices her career to care for her ne'er-do-well husband when he ",
"score": "1.533756"
},
{
"id": "13337291",
"title": "Mary Jo Catlett",
"text": " of the television sitcom M*A*S*H. In 1987, Catlett directed a production of Dan Goggin's Nunsense after meeting with Goggin and discussing the character of Sister Mary Regina. It was staged at the Mark Two Dinner Theatre in Orlando, Florida. Catlett decided to play Sister Mary as well, taking on a dual role as both director and performer. She was partially inspired to direct the show after witnessing directors' unfair treatment of her castmates in previous productions. She said, \"I have worked with many directors who were tyrannical. You get afraid to do anything because he'll yell, 'Don't do that!' It makes you crazy... as a director, I believe that there can be a democracy.\"",
"score": "1.520251"
},
{
"id": "14638973",
"title": "The Sisters (2005 film)",
"text": " The Sisters is a 2005 film starring Maria Bello, Mary Stuart Masterson, and Erika Christensen as the title characters; it also stars Alessandro Nivola, Rip Torn, Eric McCormack, Steven Culp, Tony Goldwyn and Chris O'Donnell. The film was written by Richard Alfieri (based on his own play) and directed by Arthur Allan Seidelman. The Sisters is inspired by Anton Chekhov's 1901 play Three Sisters. It tells the story of three sisters and a brother, their family dysfunctions, and the siblings dealing with their ups and downs after the death of their father.",
"score": "1.5011662"
},
{
"id": "5411924",
"title": "Fintan Connolly",
"text": " directed the documentaries Sisters (1998), Priests (1998), Out of Nowhere (2000, asylum seekers), Ainé's Journey (2000) and Singleton (2002). Connolly made his feature film directorial debut with Flick in 2000 in conjunction with producer Fiona Bergin. The film starred David Murray, Isabelle Menke, David Wilmot (actor), Gerard Mannix Flynn, Catherine Punch and Alan Devlin. The plot focuses on two small-time drug dealers going about their business in Dublin. Connolly wrote the film's script with little expectation of it being made. He shot the film in 18 days with no budget. The movie had its world premiere at the 44th Murphy's Cork Film Festival ",
"score": "1.5006189"
},
{
"id": "6663537",
"title": "Sisters (2006 film)",
"text": " Sisters is a 2006 independent horror film directed by Douglas Buck. A remake of the 1972 Brian De Palma film of the same name, it stars Stephen Rea, Lou Doillon, and Chloë Sevigny in the leading roles, with Dallas Roberts and JR Bourne playing supporting characters.",
"score": "1.4986231"
},
{
"id": "7503416",
"title": "The Sisters Rosensweig",
"text": " Released on May 20th, 2021, there was a livestreamed production of the play to benefit the Actors' Fund, the Theater Development Fund's Wendy Wasserstein Project, and the Steppenwolf Theater Company. Directed by Anna D. Shapiro, the Company's artistic director, it featured Lisa Edelstein, Kathryn Hahn, and Tracee Chimo Pallero as the three sisters. It also featured Jason Alexander, Kathryn Newton and James Urbaniak.",
"score": "1.4863166"
},
{
"id": "2685380",
"title": "Sisters Under the Skin",
"text": " Sisters Under the Skin was directed by David Burton, and was the first picture Elissa Landi made for Columbia after being fired by 20th Century Fox. The film was produced under the working title Excursion to Paradise. Robert Kalloch, Columbia Pictures' newly-hired chief costume designer, designed Elissa Landi's wardrobe.",
"score": "1.4805796"
},
{
"id": "14638974",
"title": "The Sisters (2005 film)",
"text": "Maria Bello - Marcia Prior Glass ; Erika Christensen - Irene Prior ; Elizabeth Banks - Nancy Pecket ; Eric McCormack - Gary Sokol ; Chris O'Donnell - David Turzin ; Mary Stuart Masterson - Olga Prior ; Tony Goldwyn - Vincent Antonelli ; Alessandro Nivola - Andrew Prior ; Rip Torn - Dr. Chebrin ; Steven Culp - Dr. Harry Glass ",
"score": "1.4785955"
},
{
"id": "25046775",
"title": "The Sisters (1938 film)",
"text": " The Sisters is a 1938 American drama film produced and directed by Anatole Litvak and starring Errol Flynn and Bette Davis. The screenplay by Milton Krims is based on the 1937 novel of the same title by Myron Brinig.",
"score": "1.4783978"
},
{
"id": "4755555",
"title": "Sisters of '77",
"text": " Sisters of '77 was created by filmmakers Cynthia Salzman Mondell and Allen Mondell and executive produced by Ed Delaney and Circle R Media, in association with Media Projects Inc. Salzman Mondell participated in the 1977 conference as a relay runner helping to carry a torch from Seneca Falls, New York, the site of the first women's rights convention in the United States, to Houston for the 1977 National Women's Conference. The film incorporates actual footage of the conference and modern-day interviews with movement leaders and women who attended.",
"score": "1.4752375"
},
{
"id": "10482395",
"title": "Sister Mary Explains It All",
"text": " The project was filmed in Toronto in association with Columbia TriStar Television. The theme was originally covered in Christopher Durang's controversial 1979 stage play. In updating the character of Sister Mary, Durang read through 15 earlier drafts of the screenplay and discussed changes with Brickman and the producers. The original film title was Sister Mary, but Durang felt the proffered title was too generic, preferring the original theatrical title. For the film, Keaton was Brickman's choice for the role, which was cast against type, and she accepted the part because she thought she couldn't do it. The Catholic League objected to the depiction of Catholicism in the film and took out a full-page advertisement in Variety to protest its broadcast. William A. Donohue, the president of the Catholic League, called for a boycott of Viacom, Showtime's parent company.",
"score": "1.4664941"
},
{
"id": "9823320",
"title": "Sisters (1972 film)",
"text": " Sisters (released as Blood Sisters in the United Kingdom) is a 1972 American psychological horror film directed by Brian De Palma and starring Margot Kidder, Jennifer Salt, and Charles Durning. The plot focuses on a French Canadian model whose separated conjoined twin is suspected of a brutal murder witnessed by a newspaper reporter in Staten Island, New York City. Co-written by De Palma and Louisa Rose, the screenplay for the film was inspired by the Soviet conjoined twins Masha and Dasha Krivoshlyapova and features narrative and visual references to several films by Alfred Hitchcock. Filmed on location in Staten Island, the film prominently features split-screen compositions (also present in subsequent De Palma films such as Carrie), and was scored by frequent Hitchcock collaborator Bernard Herrmann. Released in the spring of 1973, Sisters received praise from critics who noted its adept performances and prominent use of homage. It marked the first thriller for De Palma, who followed it with other shocking, graphic thrillers, and went on to become a cult film in the years after its release.",
"score": "1.4663324"
},
{
"id": "5980539",
"title": "Sisters of Death (film)",
"text": " Sisters of Death is a 1977 American mystery slasher film written by Peter Arnold and Elwyn Richards, and directed by Joseph Mazzuca. The film stars Arthur Franz and Claudia Jennings. Seven years after a sorority member is killed during a game of russian roulette, the victim's father lures the remaining sisters to his estate where he begins killing them. Sisters of Death was theatrically released in 1977, though it was filmed in 1972.",
"score": "1.4620442"
},
{
"id": "3300304",
"title": "Sisters (2015 film)",
"text": " Sisters is a 2015 American comedy film directed by Jason Moore, written by Paula Pell and is the second collaboration between Tina Fey and Amy Poehler following the film Baby Mama (2008). The rest of the cast consists of Maya Rudolph, Ike Barinholtz, James Brolin, John Cena, John Leguizamo, and Dianne Wiest. The film centers on adult sisters Kate, an irresponsible single mother, and Maura, a kindhearted nurse and recent divorcee, who are summoned back to their childhood home by their parents to clean out their bedroom before the house gets sold. Upset and angry that all their childhood memories are going to be gone, Kate convinces Maura to have one last wild party at the house, but things soon get out of control. The film was released on December 18, 2015 by Universal Pictures, received mixed reviews, though most critics praised the chemistry of the lead actresses, and grossed $105 million on a production budget of $33 million.",
"score": "1.4472337"
},
{
"id": "7503415",
"title": "The Sisters Rosensweig",
"text": " It premiered at the Greenwich Theatre in 1994, where it was directed by Michael Blakemore and the sisters were played by Janet Suzman, Maureen Lipman, and Lynda Bellingham. The play transferred to the Old Vic in September 1994",
"score": "1.4468222"
},
{
"id": "16573803",
"title": "The Sisters Brothers (film)",
"text": " In 2011, it was announced that the film rights to the novel The Sisters Brothers had been sold to John C. Reilly's production company, and Reilly was set to play one of the brothers. Four years later, French director Jacques Audiard announced on the radio station RTL that he would direct the film, his first English-language feature. On 25 April 2016, Deadline Hollywood reported that Joaquin Phoenix had joined the project. In February 2017, Variety reported that Jake Gyllenhaal had also been cast, later announcing that Riz Ahmed joined as well. In May, Variety stated that Annapurna Pictures would also produce and co-finance the film, alongside Why Not Productions, with Megan Ellison serving as an executive producer on the project. The film started shooting in early June 2017 in the Spanish city Almería, and continued the shoot throughout the summer in Tabernas, Navarre and Aragon.",
"score": "1.4420455"
},
{
"id": "9823330",
"title": "Sisters (1972 film)",
"text": " allusions to works by Alfred Hitchcock have also been noted by critics such as Bruce Kawin, who wrote in 2000: \"Sisters... makes intelligent reference to Rope (1948), Rear Window (1954), Psycho (1960), and even The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920). The film ends with a shot of a detective looking through binoculars at what might be called the scene of the crime, intently but fruitlessly watching a couch that no one will ever incriminate themselves with by picking up. From start to finish, Sisters is charged with scenes of looking—from seeing a murder through a window to seeing another person's memories in one's own mind.\"",
"score": "1.441077"
},
{
"id": "13942182",
"title": "Fiach Mac Conghail",
"text": " Mac Conghail was the artistic director at the Project Arts Centre from 1992 to 1999. He was the Director of Ireland's participation at the Expo 2000 world fair and acted as Cultural Programme Commissioner during the Irish Presidency of the European Union in 2004. With his brother Cuan, he established the production company Brother Films in 1996. Mac Conghail was a special adviser to the Minister for Arts, Sport and Tourism John O'Donoghue from 2002 to 2005. In 2005, he was appointed as Director of the Abbey Theatre. When Mac Conghail announced his 2016 programme, \"Waking the Nation\", for the centennial year of the 1916 Rising, a storm ensued. Only one of the ten plays on the programme was written by a woman and only three directed by women. This sparked a campaign called \"Waking the Feminists\" to demand gender equality in theatre. Mac Conghail acknowledged that he had \"failed to check his privilege\".",
"score": "1.439656"
},
{
"id": "15344012",
"title": "The Lemon Sisters",
"text": " The Lemon Sisters is a 1990 American comedy-drama film from Miramax Films directed by Joyce Chopra and written by Jeremy Pikser. The film stars Diane Keaton, Carol Kane and Kathryn Grody. The film was both a commercial and critical failure after being shelved for more than a year with extensive revisions.",
"score": "1.4389062"
},
{
"id": "14836094",
"title": "The Sisters (1914 film)",
"text": " The Sisters is a 1914 American short drama film directed by Christy Cabanne.",
"score": "1.4388764"
}
] |
Who was the director of Those Who Love?
|
[
"Manning Haynes",
"Horace Manning Haynes"
] |
director
|
Those Who Love (1929 film)
| 5,987,762 | 72 |
[
{
"id": "1262307",
"title": "Those Who Love (1929 film)",
"text": " Those Who Love is a 1929 British drama film directed by H. Manning Haynes and starring Adele Blanche, William Freshman and Carol Goodner. It was based on the novel Mary Was Love by Guy Fletcher. Anna Neagle made her debut in the film, playing a small part.",
"score": "1.7026161"
},
{
"id": "15717689",
"title": "Those Who Love (1926 film)",
"text": " Those Who Love is a 1926 silent film, produced in Australia, about the son of a knight who falls in love with a dancer. Only part of the film survives today and it is held by the National Film and Sound Archive.",
"score": "1.6380453"
},
{
"id": "29506351",
"title": "Those We Love",
"text": " Those We Love is a 1932 American pre-Code film directed by Robert Florey. It was adapted by F. Hugh Herbert from the play by George Abbott and S.K. Lauren. The film was independently produced and distributed.",
"score": "1.618329"
},
{
"id": "1262308",
"title": "Those Who Love (1929 film)",
"text": "Adele Blanche ... Mary / Lorna ; William Freshman ... David Mellor ; Lawson Butt ... Joe ; Carol Goodner ... Anne ; Hannah Jones ... Babe ; Dino Galvani ... Frenchman ; Anna Neagle ... Minor role ",
"score": "1.6114163"
},
{
"id": "15717691",
"title": "Those Who Love (1926 film)",
"text": "Marie Lorraine as Lola Quayle ; William Carter as Barry Manton ; Robert Purdie as Sir James Manton ; Sylvia Newland as Bebe Doree ; George Dean as Parker ; Kate Trefle as Lady Manton ; Big Bill Wilson as Ace Skinner ; Charles Beetham as Austin Mann ; Reginald Reeves as Sir Furneaux Reeves ; Jackie Williamson as Peter ; Nellie Ferguson as nurse ; Howard Harris as doctor ; Edith Hodgson ; Herbert Walton ",
"score": "1.5888345"
},
{
"id": "15717695",
"title": "Those Who Love (1926 film)",
"text": " The film was given a vice-regal premiere in September 1926 attended by Governor Sir Dudley de Chair, whose daughter Elaine had a part in the film. Dr McDonagh had been J. C. Williamson's surgeon and the film was distributed commercially by J. C. Williamson Ltd It performed well at the box office, with Phyllis McDonagh later claiming the movie earned twice its cost. Gregory Balcombe of Union Theatres said his company distributed the film to help the local industry, although it should not have cost more than £1,000.",
"score": "1.5818412"
},
{
"id": "15717694",
"title": "Those Who Love (1926 film)",
"text": " house in the Sydney suburb of Drummoyne built by convicts. Two wings were set aside for the convalescent home and another section was turned into a film studio. The McDonaghs originally hired P.J. Ramster to direct but were unhappy with his work and replaced him with Paulette. The interiors were shot mostly at the home in Drummoyne, with additional scenes filmed at the Bondi studios of Australasian Films and exteriors done around Sydney. Shooting took four weeks in all. A number of days were lost when the cast and crew's eyes were damaged from the lights, and their cinematographer fell ill with influenza.",
"score": "1.5337104"
},
{
"id": "13923721",
"title": "Those Who Love (novel)",
"text": " Those Who Love is a biographical novel of John Adams, as told from the perspective of his wife, Abigail Adams. It was written by American author Irving Stone.",
"score": "1.5207188"
},
{
"id": "30663018",
"title": "For Those We Love",
"text": " For Those We Love is a 1921 American silent romantic drama film produced by and starring Betty Compson and Lon Chaney. Directed by Arthur Rosson, the film was distributed by Goldwyn Pictures. It is now considered to be a lost film.",
"score": "1.4891031"
},
{
"id": "16039815",
"title": "Those Who Dance",
"text": " Those Who Dance is a 1930 American Pre-Code crime film produced and distributed by Warner Bros., directed by William Beaudine, and starring Monte Blue, Lila Lee, William \"Stage\" Boyd and Betty Compson. It is a remake of the 1924 silent film Those Who Dance starring Bessie Love and Blanche Sweet. The story, written by George Kibbe Turner, was based on events which actually took place among gangsters in Chicago.",
"score": "1.4593543"
},
{
"id": "16506883",
"title": "Those Who Dance (1924 film)",
"text": " Those Who Dance is a 1924 American silent drama film produced by Thomas H. Ince and directed by Lambert Hillyer. Released by Associated First National, the film stars Blanche Sweet, Bessie Love, and Warner Baxter. It is based on a story by George Kibbe Turner. Warner Bros. later inherited First National in a merger and remade the film in 1930 as Those Who Dance, which exists at the Library of Congress. It is not known whether the 1924 film currently survives, and it may be a lost film.",
"score": "1.4469409"
},
{
"id": "11152287",
"title": "The Man Who Knew Love",
"text": " The Man Who Knew Love (Spanish: El hombre que supo amar) is a 1976 Spanish biographical film based on the life of San Juan de Dios (Saint John of God). It was directed by Miguel Picazo, an acclaimed Spanish director of the '60s, and stars Timothy Dalton, Antonio Ferrandis, José María Prada, and Victoria Abril. The film marked Picazo's return to making feature films after few years of working for television. It was shot in summer 1976 but wasn't released until two years later (on August 10, 1978). The Man Who Knew Love was financed by the religious order of the Brothers of San Juan de Dios, who had originally commissioned the film and who also supported its general distribution in Spain. Still, The Man Who Knew Love failed at the box office.",
"score": "1.4444133"
},
{
"id": "8330590",
"title": "The Ones I Love",
"text": " The music video for \"The Ones I Love\" was released on 26 February 2016.",
"score": "1.4388919"
},
{
"id": "12544675",
"title": "For Those I Loved",
"text": " For Those I Loved (French: Au nom de tous les miens) is a drama film from 1983 with Michael York, about a Polish Jewish Holocaust survivor who emigrated to the United States in 1946. It was directed by Robert Enrico for Les Productions Mutuelles Ltée.",
"score": "1.4315385"
},
{
"id": "16491605",
"title": "Joseph Behar",
"text": " Joseph Behar (also credited as Joe Behar), (30 September 1926 – 26 June 2021 ) was an American television director. He was known for directing the game show Let's Make a Deal, as well as the serials The Greatest Gift (producer and director), First Love, From These Roots, Days of Our Lives, and General Hospital.",
"score": "1.41963"
},
{
"id": "32788193",
"title": "The Spy Who Loved Me (film)",
"text": " a director. The producers approached Steven Spielberg, who was in post-production for Jaws, but ultimately decided against him. The first director attached to the film was Guy Hamilton, who directed the previous three Bond films as well as Goldfinger, but he left after being offered the opportunity to direct the 1978 film Superman, although Richard Donner took over the project. Eon Productions later turned to Lewis Gilbert, who had directed the earlier Bond film You Only Live Twice. With a director finally secured, the next hurdle was finishing the script, which had gone through several revisions by numerous writers. The initial villain ",
"score": "1.4105936"
},
{
"id": "29298585",
"title": "Lee Frost (director)",
"text": " Lee Frost was a film director, producer, cinematographer, editor and occasional actor. He directed a string of exploitation movies including Love Camp 7, Chain Gang Women, Chrome and Hot Leather, The Thing with Two Heads, The Black Gestapo, Dixie Dynamite and Private Obsession.",
"score": "1.4103324"
},
{
"id": "10056863",
"title": "John Erman",
"text": " John Erman (August 3, 1935 – June 25, 2021) was an American television director and producer. He was nominated for ten Primetime Emmy Awards, winning once for the film Who Will Love My Children? (1983). He also won two Directors Guild of America Awards for the miniseries Roots (1977) and the film An Early Frost (1985).",
"score": "1.4068072"
},
{
"id": "16491607",
"title": "Joseph Behar",
"text": "Days of Our Lives - director (1965-1988) ; First Love (1954-1955) ; From These Roots - director (1958-1961) ; General Hospital - director (1996-2006) ; The Greatest Gift (1953-1954) ; The Young and the Restless ",
"score": "1.4047122"
},
{
"id": "15717693",
"title": "Those Who Love (1926 film)",
"text": " we knew what we were about, he let us have our head. We had a down-to-earth approach. We thought well ahead and planned the details meticulously. We knew talent wasn't enough if it was half baked.\" The McDonaghs formed a production company, MCD Productions, and started pre-production. Isobel was to star, Phyllis was to do production design and publicity, and Paulette would help with direction. Before filming commenced, their father died of a heart attack. Their mother was a trained nurse and a group of Sydney doctors suggested she open a convalescent home for their use. The family moved into \"Drummoyne House\", a 22 ",
"score": "1.3965154"
}
] |
Who was the director of Chi?
|
[
"Anne Wheeler"
] |
director
|
Chi (2013 film)
| 810,035 | 98 |
[
{
"id": "8613258",
"title": "Psi Chi",
"text": " After Cousins retired as executive director, Kay Wilson (born September 21, 1939) took over as executive officer (the title changed, but her position still functioned as executive director) from October 1991 until her death in June 2003, of cancer.",
"score": "1.5197203"
},
{
"id": "8613259",
"title": "Psi Chi",
"text": " When Kay Wilson died in 2003, the national council reviewed the position of executive officer and decided to split the position's function into two positions: \"rector\" (a new position with broader outreach and strategic planning functions) and \"executive officer\" (the position with office management functions that had been in place since the beginning). A search began in 2003, and Virginia Andreoli Mathie, PhD, who had been a professor of psychology at James Madison University (Virginia), was hired as the first executive director in the newly created position. She began on July 1, 2004, and served until June 30, 2008. Dr. Mathie was responsible for coordinating with other psychological organizations, long-term strategic planning, and assisting universities applying for a Psi Chi chapter.",
"score": "1.5094209"
},
{
"id": "27455099",
"title": "Chi Chi LaRue",
"text": " Larry David Paciotti (born November 8, 1959) is an American director of pornographic films. He appears as the drag-diva persona Chi Chi LaRue, and has also been credited as director under the names \"Lawrence David\" and \"Taylor Hudson\".",
"score": "1.492355"
},
{
"id": "33119474",
"title": "Chung Chi College",
"text": "Andrew Chi-Fai CHAN (1977) - Head of Shaw College (2010–present) ; Kin-Man CHAN (1983) - associate professor, one of the founders of Occupy Central ; Norman Tak-Lam CHAN (1976) – chief executive of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (2009–present) ; Pamela Wong-Shui CHAN (1968) – chief executive of the Hong Kong Consumer Council (1985–2007) ; Victor Wai-Kwong CHAN (1983) - former Head of Chung Chi College (2014-2015) ; Yiu-Nam CHAN (1962) - former professor of Chinese Language and Literature ; Yuk-Shee CHAN (1975) - former President of Lingnan University (2007-2012) ; Man-Yee CHEUNG (1968) - former Director of Broadcasting in Hong ",
"score": "1.4832909"
},
{
"id": "8613257",
"title": "Psi Chi",
"text": " Ruth Hubbard Cousins (born May 21, 1920) was one of the society's most famous executive directors, serving for more than 33 years (December 1958 – October 1991). She died on January 11, 2007.",
"score": "1.482842"
},
{
"id": "15493715",
"title": "Chi Muoi Lo",
"text": " County, Jr.. Chi was very smart with his money, brought 2 houses in the 90's, one in Los Angeles and one in Philadelphia. Chi invested his money in stock market. One of the few actors in Hollywood who were very smart with his wealth. Sold both houses in 2008 and 2017 for a huge profits. Chi is the founder of Actor's Consortium and served as its artistic director from July 2002 through May 2005. Chi is the owner of Allen Edelman Management since 2002 (Valued 1.5 million). Chi's clients include Karen Malina White (Lean On Me, Malcom & Eddie, Monster: The Jefferey Dahmer Story), Steven Krueger (Yellowjackets, The Originals and Roswell: New Mexico), Tyler Christopher (General Hospital and Days ",
"score": "1.47798"
},
{
"id": "30514341",
"title": "University of Maryland Human–Computer Interaction Lab",
"text": "Ben Shneiderman, founding director (1983-2000), ACM CHI Academy member,, member of the National Academy of Engineering, six honorary doctorates ; Kent Norman, founding member, Directory of the Laboratory for Automation Psychology ; Jenny Preece, lab member, ACM CHI Academy member, former Dean of the College of Information Studies at the University of Maryland, 2005-2015 ; Ben Bederson, lab member and former director, ACM CHI Academy member, known for foundational work in zoomable interfaces ; Allison Druin, lab member and former director, ACM CHI Academy member, ACM CHI Social Impact Award winner, known for foundational work in participatory design with children and designing interactive technology for and with children, former lab director ; Catherine Plaisant, associate director, ACM CHI Academy member, senior research scientist ; Jen Golbeck, lab member, former lab director ; Niklas Elmqvist, lab director from 2016 ; Don Hopkins, former student and pie menu creator ; Gary Marchionini, former lab member (now at University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, since 1998) ",
"score": "1.4697315"
},
{
"id": "26908342",
"title": "Ien Chi",
"text": " Ien Chi (born June 1, 1991) is a Korean American filmmaker, speaker, and the former Creative Director of Jubilee Media. He is the director of the short film \"Tick Tock\", which won the Best Picture and Best Director awards at Campus MovieFest 2011, the world's largest student film festival. It is currently the most viewed and highest rated film of Campus MovieFest of all time. The film went viral and collectively has approximately 1.7 million views online and has been featured on Gizmodo and The Guardian, among other publications. Chi has led the team at Jubilee Media to create several YouTube shows such Middle Ground that has collectively gotten over 750 million views online.",
"score": "1.4593105"
},
{
"id": "26886807",
"title": "Chi Psi",
"text": " The President of Chi Psi is known as the #7. The first #7 was elected in 1879, thirty-eight years after the founding of Chi Psi. The #7's are: The Executive Director of Chi Psi is known as the #23. The first #23 was appointed in 1921. The #23's are:",
"score": "1.4518108"
},
{
"id": "9373405",
"title": "Chi Wen-jong",
"text": " Transportation Bureau. Chi returned to the Ministry of Transportation and Communications in 2008 as the director of the Department of Railways and Highways. By 2010, he was named the director of the Department of Aviation and Navigation. He remained head of Aviation and Navigation through 2012. By 2013, Chi was appointed Maritime and Port Bureau director-general. From this position, Chi commented on the practice of ship inspection as the Ministry of Transportation and Communications considered increasing the frequency of such inspections in 2014. The Ocean Researcher V sunk in October of that year, and Chi was called upon to discuss details of the shipwreck and subsequent investigation. In October 2014, Chi commented ",
"score": "1.4477956"
},
{
"id": "11128091",
"title": "Fredrick Chien",
"text": " In June 1972, Chien was appointed as the 7th Director-General of the Government Information Office (GIO) by Premier Chiang Ching-kuo, succeeding James Wei. On June 11, 1974, Chien presided over the opening ceremony of the 20th Asian Film Festival held in Taipei. The festival was attended by nearly 400 performers, directors, and producers. As the masters of ceremonies, Chien proclaimed that \"[w]e (Asian countries) have no wish to take a back seat in any phase of film-making\" and that \"[w]e shall produce more and better films not only for entertainment but also for education.\" As the Director-General of the GIO, Chien hosted the 10th and 11th Golden Bell Awards in 1974 and 1975. Chien traveled abroad seven times as Director-General, with four ",
"score": "1.4447173"
},
{
"id": "7723817",
"title": "Camp Chi",
"text": " Chi was founded in 1921 as the Chicago Hebrew Institute by the Jewish Community Centers of Chicago. In the 1940s and beyond, the camp was supported by fundraising efforts by the Jewish Auxiliary and the Institute Woman's Club via luncheons. In the 1950s, the camp had a summer population of 1500 children between the ages of 5 and 16, and it provided for free summer events and trips to Jewish elderly. It moved to its present site in Lake Delton, Wisconsin in 1957 and became a co-ed camp. The 600 acre facility features summer cabins, two pools, tennis courts, a horseback riding stable, athletic fields, a large winterized gymnasium facility, a year-round conference center and miles of magnificent trails. The director of Camp Chi is Jon Levin.",
"score": "1.427207"
},
{
"id": "15493716",
"title": "Chi Muoi Lo",
"text": " Our Lives) and Richard Whiten (The Island, Two and Half Men, The Morning Show). Chi is the Owner of Black Hawk Entertainment, Inc (Valued at 3.5 million). Chi is producing \"Life in Threes\" which he has also written. He is also producing a 7-episode series called \"Mastering The Business Of Acting\". The series features a number of experienced members film industry, including actors, producers, and directors. Guest appearances include: Casting director John Frank Levey (ER, Shameless, West Wing), top agent Todd Eisner (A3 Artists Agency, APA, Innovative Artists Talent & Literacy Agency, Inc.), episodic director Nancy Hower (Teachers, Quick Draw) and award-winning actress Karen Malina White (Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story, The Proud Family: Louder and Prouder, Mom, Malcolm ",
"score": "1.4160459"
},
{
"id": "9414145",
"title": "Melissa Chiu",
"text": " Chiu worked as an independent curator for several years at the beginning of her career. From 1993-1996, she joined the University of Western Sydney Collection at the University of Western Sydney as a curator. in 1996, Chiu collaborated with a group of Asian Australian artists, performers, filmmakers and writers to establish Gallery 4A, a nonprofit contemporary art center devoted to promoting dialogue in the Asia-Pacific region. Chiu was founding Director of Gallery 4A, later renamed the 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art. In 2001 she was the curator during the Center's transition to a two-story city owned heritage building in Sydney’s Chinatown. Chiu was appointed Asia Society's Museum Director in 2004 after serving as the curator of contemporary Asian and Asian American art—the first curatorial post of its kind in an American ",
"score": "1.4140581"
},
{
"id": "8613260",
"title": "Psi Chi",
"text": " Beginning July 1, 2008, Martha S. Zlokovich, PhD, from Southeast Missouri State University and a former Psi Chi national president, began serving as Psi Chi's second executive director.",
"score": "1.4115056"
},
{
"id": "26348111",
"title": "Charles Chi",
"text": " Charles Chi is an entrepreneur, venture investor, and served as Chancellor of Carleton University from 2011 to 2017.",
"score": "1.4107285"
},
{
"id": "32984668",
"title": "Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky Institute of Eastern Christian Studies",
"text": "Andriy Chirovsky (1986–2002), Founding Director ; Andrew Onuferko (2002–2006), Acting Director ; Stephen Wojcichowsky (2007–2013), Director ; Alexander Laschuk (2013–2014), Interim Director ; Peter Galadza (2014–2017) Acting Director, (2017–2020) Director ; Alexander Laschuk (2020–present), Interim Executive Director ",
"score": "1.4083483"
},
{
"id": "7416208",
"title": "Gregory J. Harbaugh",
"text": "Museum Director and COO of Sun 'n Fun Fly-in, Inc., Lakeland, FL 2001-2006 ; CEO/President of the Sigma Chi Foundation, Evanston, IL 2006-2016 ; Currently Founder/Chairman/CEO of InnerSpace Consultants ",
"score": "1.4082961"
},
{
"id": "13341165",
"title": "Schive Chi",
"text": " Chi was the chairman of the Taiwan Stock Exchange before being named a minister. He had previously led the Council of Economic Planning and Development, Taiwan Academy of Banking and Finance, and the Department of Economics at the National Taiwan University.",
"score": "1.4054866"
},
{
"id": "11274209",
"title": "Ray Chi",
"text": " Ray Chi (born 1974 in Okemos, Michigan; lives in Milwaukee, Wisconsin) is an American architect, cellist, film and video editor, and furniture designer. He collaborated with Sarah Price and Chris Smith on the editing of the award-winning documentary American Movie. That project would lead to the collaborative creation of ZeroTV.com, a precursor to YouTube and MySpace. Other film work includes Sarah Price's Caesar's Park, The Ice Cream Social, Studying the Lie, and a documentary based on Chicago's Hubbard Street Dance Company. Before earning a master's degree in architecture from the Southern California Institute of Architecture he studied at Harvard and the University of Michigan. Chi has had exhibitions in New York, Los Angeles, and has a furniture line called FURNICHI, which is regarded as functional conceptual sculpture. In 2005, he was named Artist of the Year by the city of Milwaukee. He currently teaches at the Milwaukee Institute of Art and Design and The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. As of November 2007, he had his first child, Xander.",
"score": "1.4029582"
}
] |
Who was the director of The Happy Family?
|
[
"Maclean Rogers"
] |
director
|
The Happy Family (1936 film)
| 5,931,107 | 59 |
[
{
"id": "1046382",
"title": "The Happy Family (1952 film)",
"text": " The Happy Family is a 1952 British comedy film directed by Muriel Box and starring Stanley Holloway, Kathleen Harrison and Naunton Wayne. The plot of the film centres on resistance by a family to the disruption caused by the construction of the Festival of Britain. It is also known in the U.S. by the alternative title Mr. Lord Says No. It was an adaptation of a play The Happy Family by Michael Clayton Hutton.",
"score": "1.589592"
},
{
"id": "26673071",
"title": "Happy Family (2010 film)",
"text": " Happy Family is a 2010 Italian comedy film directed by Gabriele Salvatores. It was inspired by Luigi Pirandello's Six Characters in Search of an Author. The film won the Best Editing award at the 2010 Nastro d'Argento ceremony.",
"score": "1.5874312"
},
{
"id": "2018405",
"title": "Come On Get Happy: The Partridge Family Story",
"text": " Come On, Get Happy: The Partridge Family Story is a 1999 American made-for-television biographical film about the 1970–1974 television series The Partridge Family, focusing on star David Cassidy and co-star Danny Bonaduce through the four years the show was on. Directed by David Burton Morris and written by Jacqueline Feather, the 90-minute film premiered on November 13, 1999 at 8:00pm on ABC.",
"score": "1.5381799"
},
{
"id": "30813704",
"title": "Monster Family",
"text": " Monster Family (also known as Happy Family) is a 2017 computer animated horror comedy film directed and produced by Holger Tappe, and co-written by David Safier. It is based on David Safier's children's book Happy Family. The film stars Emily Watson, Nick Frost, Jessica Brown Findlay, Celia Imrie, Catherine Tate, and Jason Isaacs. The film was both a critical and financial failure: it was unanimously panned by critics, who criticized its voice acting, animation, writing and humor. It was also a box office bomb, only grossing $26.4 million against a $30 million budget. A sequel, Monster Family 2, was released in 2021.",
"score": "1.5011945"
},
{
"id": "30719353",
"title": "Garry Marshall",
"text": " Garry Kent Marshall (November 13, 1934 – July 19, 2016) was an American screenwriter, actor, film director and producer. He started his career in the 1960s writing for I Love Lucy, and The Dick Van Dyke Show before he developed Neil Simon's 1965 play The Odd Couple for television in 1970. He gained fame for creating Happy Days (1974-1984), Laverne and Shirley (1976-1983), and Mork and Mindy (1978-1982). He is also known for directing Overboard (1987), Beaches (1988), Pretty Woman (1990), Runaway Bride (1999) and the family films The Princess Diaries (2001), and The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement (2004). He also directed the romantic comedy ensemble films Valentine's Day (2010), New Year's Eve (2011), Mother's Day (2016).",
"score": "1.4981855"
},
{
"id": "26512843",
"title": "The Happy Family (1936 film)",
"text": " The Happy Family is a 1936 British comedy film directed by Maclean Rogers and starring Hugh Williams, Leonora Corbett and Max Adrian. The film was based on the play French Salad by Max Catto. The plot concerns a mother and father who, in order to shock their extended family out of their idle, spendthrift ways, pretend to have lost all their money.",
"score": "1.4924502"
},
{
"id": "30058367",
"title": "The Happy Family (band)",
"text": " The Happy Family were an early-1980s post punk band from Scotland, featuring Momus and members of Josef K.",
"score": "1.478973"
},
{
"id": "28120749",
"title": "Happy Families (1989 TV series)",
"text": " Happy Families is a British children's television series made in the late 1980s based on the Happy Families series of books by Janet and Allan Ahlberg. Happy Families ran for two series, 24 episodes in all (since each story was split over two episodes), and was shown on Children's BBC in 1989 and 1990.",
"score": "1.4789579"
},
{
"id": "25680744",
"title": "Charlotte Coleman",
"text": " Bond; director: Roy Battersby) ; The Comic Strip Presents... ... Patsy in \"Gregory: Diary of a Nutcase\"; 13 May 1993 (director: Peter Richardson) ; The Bill ... Sharon Palmer in \"Happy Families\" (8.93); 19 November 1992, ITV (director: Andrew Higgs) ; Inspector Morse ... Jessica White in \"Happy Families\" (6.2); 11 March 1992, Zenith Entertainment for ITV (director: Adrian Shergold) ; Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit ... Jess; 10–24 January 1990 (writer: Jeanette Winterson; director: Beeban Kidron) ; Freddie and Max ... Freddie Latham; 12 November – 18 December 1990 (director: John Stroud) ; The Insurance Man ... Seamstress; 22 February 1986, BBC (Writer: Alan Bennett; director: Richard Eyre) ; Danger: Marmalade at ",
"score": "1.4716502"
},
{
"id": "13665462",
"title": "Happy Families (1985 TV series)",
"text": " The series centred on Guy's attempts to find his four sisters – also played by Saunders – for a family reunion.",
"score": "1.4698234"
},
{
"id": "28120750",
"title": "Happy Families (1989 TV series)",
"text": " Each tale is about a family of characters – typically father, mother, son and daughter, but this varies. The cast played several different characters throughout the series with many recurring roles for the main cast including Milton Johns, Annette Badland and Elizabeth Estensen.",
"score": "1.4677128"
},
{
"id": "1046390",
"title": "The Happy Family (1952 film)",
"text": " The film was released in the year following the real Festival of Britain which had taken place successfully in 1951. It was given a working title of South Bank Story which was later changed to The Happy Family.",
"score": "1.4672229"
},
{
"id": "5963629",
"title": "Jerry Paris",
"text": " television, including The Partridge Family and Here's Lucy (including the famous third season opener featuring Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton), but he worked most notably on Happy Days, where he directed 237 of the show's 255 episodes. Imitating Hitchcock, he appeared uncredited in at least one episode of every season. Paris also directed episodes of Laverne & Shirley, The Odd Couple, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, The Ted Knight Show, and Blansky's Beauties. He returned to directing feature films in 1985's Police Academy 2: Their First Assignment and 1986's Police Academy 3: Back in Training. In all, he is credited with directing episodes of 57 TV titles and as an actor in 105 titles.",
"score": "1.4660304"
},
{
"id": "1727337",
"title": "Mark Illsley",
"text": " Mark Illsley (born June 4, 1958) is a film director best known for writing and directing the film Happy, Texas, which starred William H. Macy and Steve Zahn, and directing Bookies. Illsley was raised in Santa Rosa, California where he made films as a teen with a Super-8 camera. He graduated from the USC School of Cinema-Television in 1981, where he met and started working relationship with Kevin Reynolds. Happy, Texas triggered a bidding war that played out at the 1999 Sundance Film Festival, with Harvey Weinstein and Miramax beating out other suitors, which included Fox Searchlight, Paramount Classics and New Line Cinema. He married his wife Jill Zimmerman on September 29, 2001. They divorced in 2016. They have two boys named Rowan and Reed.",
"score": "1.4653556"
},
{
"id": "13665461",
"title": "Happy Families (1985 TV series)",
"text": " Happy Families is a rural comedy drama written by Ben Elton which was a BBC series first broadcast in 1985. It recounts the tale of the dysfunctional Fuddle family. It stars Jennifer Saunders as Granny Fuddle, Dawn French as the Cook and Adrian Edmondson as her imbecilic grandson Guy.",
"score": "1.4578414"
},
{
"id": "28368527",
"title": "Happy Families (books)",
"text": " A children's TV series based on the books, also called Happy Families, was produced by the BBC in the late 1980s.",
"score": "1.4562159"
},
{
"id": "1847173",
"title": "One Happy Family",
"text": " The show has aired on Decades in the past.",
"score": "1.4525559"
},
{
"id": "29620940",
"title": "Happy Family (2002 film)",
"text": " Happy Family is a 2002 Hong Kong romantic comedy film directed by Herman Yau and starring Nick Cheung, Candy Lo and Kenny Bee.",
"score": "1.4514999"
},
{
"id": "1046387",
"title": "The Happy Family (1952 film)",
"text": " them out. At the appointed hour, Filch demands they leave the house but they refuse. They are joined by Maurice Hennessey, an ambitious BBC broadcaster hoping to use the case as a springboard to greater career success. He begins a running commentary on the events to the outside world. Filch brings in a large number of police who attempt to storm the shop, but are driven off by missiles and flour bombs. After the assault descends into chaos, Filch launches a prolonged siege in the hope of starving them out. The Lords soon become a cause célèbre, with support coming in from across ",
"score": "1.4471955"
},
{
"id": "13665464",
"title": "Happy Families (1985 TV series)",
"text": "Jim Broadbent as Dalcroix ; Hugh Laurie as Jim ; Una Stubbs as Mother Superior ; Christine Edmunds as Maxine ; Ceri Jackson as Sister Ophelia ; Claudette Williams as Jill ; Rik Mayall as Nazi pastor ; Chris Barrie as Sammy ",
"score": "1.443726"
}
] |
Who was the director of The Only Woman?
|
[
"Sidney Olcott"
] |
director
|
The Only Woman
| 1,387,057 | 96 |
[
{
"id": "29196809",
"title": "The Only Woman",
"text": " The Only Woman is a 1924 American silent drama film produced by Joseph M. Schenck for Norma Talmadge Productions and distributed by First National. It was directed by Sidney Olcott with Norma Talmadge as the leading woman.",
"score": "1.6281686"
},
{
"id": "9403256",
"title": "Greta Schiller",
"text": " by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. They also directed International Sweethearts of Rhythm (1986), about African American women musicians performing in the 1930s to 1940s; Tiny & Ruby: Hell Divin' Women (1988), and Paris Was a Woman (1996). Paris Was a Woman, about creative lesbians in 1920s Paris, was a labor of love for the two filmmakers, taking 5 years to produce and breaking house records. Schiller directed Maxine Sullivan: Love to Be In Love (1990), Woman of the Wolf (1994), The Man Who Drove With Mandela (1998), I Live At Ground Zero (2002), and The Marion Lake Story: Defeating the Mighty Phragmite (2014). She produced and directed No Dinosaurs in Heaven (2010), about the problem of creationists infiltrating science education.",
"score": "1.5112548"
},
{
"id": "11238799",
"title": "Women's cinema",
"text": " director: Sarah Polley ; 2006 Marie Antoinette, starring Kirsten Dunst; director: Sofia Coppola ; 2007 Feminine, Masculine (2007), director: Sadaf Foroughi ; 2007 Across the Universe; director: Julie Taymor ; 2007 The Savages; director: Tamara Jenkins ; 2007 Never Forever; director: Gina Kim ; 2008 Frozen River; director: Courtney Hunt ; 2008 The Headless Woman; director: Lucrecia Martel ; 2008 The Beaches of Agnes; director: Agnes Varda ; 2008 Wendy and Lucy; director: Kelly Reichardt ; 2009 The Hurt Locker; director: Kathryn Bigelow The first female to win an Oscar for direction. ; 2009 Bright Star; director: Jane Campion ; 2009 Fish Tank; director: Andrea Arnold ; 2009 White Material; director: Claire Denis ",
"score": "1.5051821"
},
{
"id": "3950899",
"title": "Lorraine Senna",
"text": " As a television director, her credits include Dynasty, Emerald Point N.A.S., Trapper John, M.D., Fame, Falcon Crest, Homefront, Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman, Babylon 5, Northern Exposure, Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman, Picket Fences and The Sopranos. She is the only woman who ever directed any episode of \"The Sopranos.\" From 1978 to 1982, she was an assistant director on a few television films and the series Knots Landing, making her head directorial debut on that series. From 1996 to 2005, she directed a number of television films, beginning with Our Son, the Matchmaker. In 2006, she released her first theatrical film Paradise, Texas. The following year, she released the film Americanizing Shelley, her last credit to date.",
"score": "1.4958911"
},
{
"id": "29414759",
"title": "Women Make Movies",
"text": " In 1983, Debra Zimmerman became the executive director of WMM.",
"score": "1.4761316"
},
{
"id": "32814114",
"title": "Francine Parker",
"text": " culture on television.\" Parker was the eleventh woman to join the Directors Guild of America when she was inducted as a member in 1971. She taught film directing at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California, for 18 years. She also taught acting at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in Pasadena, California. She helped found and became president of the Women for Equality in Media. As president, she led 1971 a march on the American Film Institute for its lack of women in AFI programs that were partially funded by the National Endowment for the Arts. The AFI responded. The number of women admitted to the AFI's Center for Advance Film Studies rose from zero in 1969 to seven women by 1973.",
"score": "1.4747592"
},
{
"id": "4305301",
"title": "The Man Who Had Power Over Women",
"text": " The original director was Silvio Narizzano who left the project prior to shooting. The screenwriters were Chris Bryant and Allan Scott, who were so upset with subsequent changes made they requested their names be taken off the film.",
"score": "1.4731181"
},
{
"id": "4169103",
"title": "Federal Women's Film Program",
"text": " Enough is Enough (1996), Directed by Nicole Giguere,. Alternate Route (1997), directed by Denise Withers Taking Charge (1996), directed by Claudette Jaiko",
"score": "1.4655266"
},
{
"id": "7792816",
"title": "Alliance of Women Directors",
"text": " all the genres, in front and behind the camera, women are vastly underrepresented.\" Speaking as an AWD board member, director Jacqui Barcos told The Huffington Post on the lack of women-directed films at Cannes, \"complex dramas [...] tend to be difficult to finance in the U.S. If they are complex, the only way to get them financed is to have a big-name director, because then the investors are assured it'll be a masterpiece. And many of the most talented female directors are still relatively unproven, so investors don't want to take a chance.\" Similarly, Barcos told Variety that it was important to demonstrate that \"a woman director can deliver a commercially successful film that is outside the romantic comedy ghetto\".",
"score": "1.461039"
},
{
"id": "11055239",
"title": "Stephanie Rothman",
"text": " reason why many producers wouldn't agree to meet me. If that sounds exaggerated, remember that I worked in the American film industry from 1965 to 1974, and some of those years I was the only woman directing feature films.\" She later elaborated: \"I couldn't get any work in television. No one would even meet me... When it came to feature films, I was once invited by an executive at MGM to go and meet her, which was in the days when there were very few female filmmakers at all. I went and met her and she said to me, 'We were in a story ",
"score": "1.454821"
},
{
"id": "11238789",
"title": "Women's cinema",
"text": "1980 The Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter (documentary); director: Connie Field; selected for preservation in the National Film Registry ; 1980 Europa Europa; director: Agnieszka Holland ; 1981 Eight Minutes to Midnight: A Portrait of Dr. Helen Caldicott; director: Mary Benjamin; Academy Award nomination for best feature documentary ; 1981 The Decline of Western Civilization; director: Penelope Spheeris ; 1981 36 Chowringhee Lane; director: Aparna Sen ; 1981 The German Sisters; director: Margarethe von Trotta ; 1982 Fast Times at Ridgemont High; starring Sean Penn; director: Amy Heckerling ; 1983 Yentl; director: Barbra Streisand; The first woman to win a Golden Globe for direction ; 1983 The Gold Diggers (1983 film); director: Sally ",
"score": "1.4504124"
},
{
"id": "26934826",
"title": "Women in film",
"text": " Amy Pascal is the Sony studio chief and is the only female head of a major studio. In 1988, Pascal joined Columbia Pictures; she left in 1994 and went to work for Turner Pictures as the president of the company. In her first years at Columbia she worked on films such as Groundhog Day, Little Women, and A League of Their Own. When Pascal first started her career she was the Vice President of production at 20th Century Fox in 1986–1987. Before Pascal joined Fox, she was a secretary for Tony Garnett who was an independent producer with Warner Bros.",
"score": "1.4438934"
},
{
"id": "29196811",
"title": "The Only Woman",
"text": " Mordaunt Hall of The New York Times wrote, \"Although the actual plot of Norma Talmadge's latest film vehicle. The Only Woman, is not unfamiliar, the story contains several interesting situations which are effectively pictured.\"",
"score": "1.4432973"
},
{
"id": "15256324",
"title": "Betty Thomas",
"text": " was a departure from Thomas's experience on Hill Street Blues or her subsequent television directing. Wayne Rice, the film's producer and screenwriter, said that Thomas was chosen to direct due in part to the film's plot in which a man is on a hapless quest to find the perfect woman would be considered inherently sexist without a female director. Three years following the release of Only You Thomas directed The Brady Bunch Movie (1995), a satirical vision of the 1970s television series The Brady Bunch. The Brady Bunch Movie was a box office hit with domestic ticket sales of $46,576,136, nearly quadrupling its $12 million budget and making it at the time one of the highest-grossing films directed by a ",
"score": "1.4428728"
},
{
"id": "14172791",
"title": "Original Six (directors)",
"text": " Although DGA v. WB/CPI was dismissed, the threat of legal action and the accompanying publicity still may have been a \"galvanizing event\". Filing of the suit was followed by an increase in the number of women employed as directors. When they founded the WSC, the Original Six presented statistics showing that only 0.5 percent of all directing assignments for films and TV shows were going to women. Following the court case, the percentage of women directing television episodes increased, reaching a peak of women directing 16% of television shows in 1995. The number of women film directors has also risen, albeit erratically. Since 2007 Stacy L. Smith, Founder and Director of the Annenberg Inclusion Initiative at the ",
"score": "1.4404187"
},
{
"id": "30235219",
"title": "Nancy Malone",
"text": " Malone in 1977 was awarded one of the first Crystal Awards by Women in Film for outstanding women who, through their endurance and the excellence of their work, have helped to expand the role of women within the entertainment industry. Later, in 1991 and 1992, she was nominated for Emmy Awards for directing episodes of the television series Sisters and The Trials of Rosie O'Neill. She finally won the award in 1993 for producing the televised retrospective Bob Hope: The First 90 Years. She was also a lifetime member of The Actors Studio, as well as a board member for The Alliance Of Women Directors, composed of female directors who are alumnae of the American Film Institute's Directing Workshop for Women.",
"score": "1.4404052"
},
{
"id": "14645995",
"title": "Susan Bay",
"text": " In 1979, Bay and other members of the Original Six, a group of women directors, created the Women's Steering Committee of the Director's Guild of America, to protest against gender discrimination in Hollywood and support female employment on film and television sets at the directing level. Bay was a production consultant on \"The Good Mother\" (1988), which was directed by Leonard Nimoy. In 1998, Susan Bay was the executive producer for the documentary film Liza Lou, on the glass bead artist Liza Lou. She has also worked on documentaries about Twyla Tharp and the magazine Mother Jones. In 2007, Bay directed the American ",
"score": "1.440054"
},
{
"id": "33154191",
"title": "Tamar Simon Hoffs",
"text": " city Chicago. It screened at Sundance Film Festival, Deauville American Film Festival and at the Chicago International Film Festival, where it won the coveted Lincoln Award and commendation from Illinois Governor James R. Thompson. In 1980, Hoffs was chosen to participate in the prestigious AFI Directing Workshop for Women. Her directorial debut was the short comedy, The Haircut (Universal Studios, 1983), starring John Cassavetes, an official selection of the 1983 Cannes Film Festival, (Un Certain Regard), Toronto International Film Festival, Telluride Film Festival and Sundance Film Festival, and receiving a commendation from Robert Redford, Sundance Institute. In 1987, Hoffs became the first woman to receive the triple director/writer/producer credit on a ",
"score": "1.4369793"
},
{
"id": "28053856",
"title": "Directing Workshop for Women",
"text": " major motion pictures. Haag managed to expand the number of students to nineteen, thus including some well known actresses as well as at least one minority woman. The nineteen women admitted were: Maya Angelou (writer), Karen Arthur (actress), Ellen Burstyn (actress), Juleen Compton (writer, director, actress), Lee Grant (actress), Nessa Hyams (casting director), Margot Kidder (actress), Joanna Lee (writer), Lynne Littman (producer), Kathleen Nolan (actress), Julia Phillips (producer), Susan Martin (actress/producer), Marjorie Mullen (script supervisor), Giovanna Nigro (producer, writer, director), Susan Oliver (actress), Gail Parent (writer), Marion Rothman (editor), Lily Tomlin (actress, comedian), and Nancy Walker (actress). Despite the limited funds, the DWW enjoyed enough notoriety to ",
"score": "1.4368715"
},
{
"id": "10221577",
"title": "3 Women",
"text": " 3 Women is a 1977 American avant-garde drama film written, produced, and directed by Robert Altman and starring Shelley Duvall, Sissy Spacek and Janice Rule. It depicts the increasingly bizarre, mysterious relationship between a woman (Duvall) and her roommate and co-worker (Spacek) in a dusty California desert town. The story came directly from a dream Altman had, which he adapted into a treatment, intending to film without a screenplay. 20th Century Fox financed the project on the basis of Altman's past work, and a screenplay was completed before filming. 3 Women premiered at the 1977 Cannes Film Festival, and earned positive reviews from critics, who particularly praised the performances of the cast (especially that of Duvall). Interpretations of the film are centered around its use of psychoanalysis and discussion of identity. It was not a strong box office success despite Hollywood studio financing and distribution. After its theatrical release, the film was unavailable on home video for almost thirty years, until it was released by The Criterion Collection in 2004.",
"score": "1.4348085"
}
] |
Who was the director of The Gamble?
|
[
"Tom Ricketts"
] |
director
|
The Gamble (1916 film)
| 5,927,641 | 61 |
[
{
"id": "26647237",
"title": "The Gamblers (1970 film)",
"text": " The Gamblers is a 1970 American drama film directed by Ron Winston and starring Suzy Kendall, Don Gordon and Pierre Olaf. Its plot involves a confidence trickster who goes for a trip of a luxury cruise liner, where he is himself conned out of his money. It is loosely based on Fyodor Dostoyevsky's 1866 novel The Gambler. Its alternative title was Kockari.",
"score": "1.6009376"
},
{
"id": "7477666",
"title": "The Gambler (1974 film)",
"text": " The Gambler is a 1974 American crime drama film written by James Toback and directed by Karel Reisz. It stars James Caan, Paul Sorvino and Lauren Hutton. Caan's performance was widely lauded and was nominated for a Golden Globe.",
"score": "1.5870967"
},
{
"id": "4089892",
"title": "The Gamble (1988 film)",
"text": " The Gamble (originally titled La partita) is a 1988 Italian comedy film directed by Carlo Vanzina. It was shot in Rome and Venice. The film is based on the novel with the same name written by Alberto Ongaro. It was generally panned by critics.",
"score": "1.5797241"
},
{
"id": "7477677",
"title": "The Gambler (1974 film)",
"text": " In August 2011, Paramount Pictures announced a remake of the 1974 film The Gambler with the original producers, Irwin Winkler and Robert Chartoff. Intended as a new directorial project for Martin Scorsese, it was reported that Leonardo DiCaprio was attached as the star and William Monahan would write the screenplay. In a 2011 interview, screenwriter James Toback gave the story of the original film's autobiographical background and development, and criticized the announcement of the remake. Scorsese left the project and filmmaker Todd Phillips was in talks to take over as of August 2012. In September 2013, Mark Wahlberg and director Rupert Wyatt expressed interest in remaking the film. The film was released on December 25, 2014.",
"score": "1.5768511"
},
{
"id": "1770386",
"title": "Eleanor Gamble",
"text": " Eleanor Acheson McCulloch Gamble (March 2, 1868 – August 30, 1933) was an influential American psychologist from the late 19th century through the early 20th century. Gamble published most of her work on audition and memory influenced by Georg Elias Müller, Edward B. Titchener, Mary Whiton Calkins, and Ernst Heinrich Weber. Despite her chronic eye conditions she was successful in editing volumes of textbooks, her own papers, and directing many master's degree students. She earned her undergraduate degree from Wellesley College in 1889. She went on to obtain her doctorate from Cornell University in 1898. She held several teaching positions over the course of her career and was a member of several influential organizations including the American Psychological Association (APA). Gamble was a distinguished and well-liked professor at Wellesley College for more than two decades, and by 1930 she was the head of the Department of Philosophy and Psychology following the death of Mary Whiton Calkins. At the time of her death she was professor of psychology and director of the psychological laboratory at Wellesley College.",
"score": "1.5679266"
},
{
"id": "25195401",
"title": "The Gamble (1971 film)",
"text": " The Gamble is a 1971 Iranian film directed by Zakaria Hashemi.",
"score": "1.5577712"
},
{
"id": "10488564",
"title": "The Gambler (2014 film)",
"text": " The Gambler is a 2014 American crime drama film directed by Rupert Wyatt. The screenplay by William Monahan is based on the 1974 film The Gambler, written by James Toback, which, in turn, is loosely based on Fyodor Dostoevsky's novel of the same name. The remake, starring Mark Wahlberg as the title character, premiered on November 10, 2014, at the AFI Fest, and was theatrically released in the United States on December 25, 2014. It features the final film performances of George Kennedy and Alvin Ing before their respective deaths in 2016 and 2021.",
"score": "1.5510758"
},
{
"id": "10488572",
"title": "The Gambler (2014 film)",
"text": " In August 2011, Paramount Pictures announced a remake of the 1974 film The Gambler with the original producers, Irwin Winkler and Robert Chartoff. Intended as a directorial project for Martin Scorsese, it was reported that Leonardo DiCaprio was attached as the star and William Monahan would write the screenplay. In a 2011 interview, screenwriter James Toback gave the autobiographical story of the original film's background and development, and criticized the idea of his film being remade. Scorsese left the project and filmmaker Todd Phillips was in talks to take over as of August 2012. In September 2013, actor Mark Wahlberg and director Rupert Wyatt expressed interest in making the film.",
"score": "1.548893"
},
{
"id": "7477672",
"title": "The Gambler (1974 film)",
"text": " director Karel Reisz. Reisz did not want to use De Niro and cast James Caan instead. \"Caan became a great Axel Freed, although obviously different from the character De Niro would have created\", wrote Toback later. It was filmed at a time when leading actor James Caan was battling his own addiction to cocaine. Caan says the film is one of his favorites. \"It's not easy to make people care about a guy who steals from his mother to pay gambling debts.\" Some see the film as a loose adaptation of the short 1866 novel The Gambler by Fyodor Dostoyevsky.",
"score": "1.5374646"
},
{
"id": "28819882",
"title": "The Gambler (film series)",
"text": " Gambler V: Playing for Keeps is the fifth installment of The Gambler series and the first not directed by Dick Lowry, with Jack Bender taking the helm. The movie premiered on October 2, 1994.",
"score": "1.530461"
},
{
"id": "5072822",
"title": "The Gamblers (1950 film)",
"text": "Louis de Funès: Piotr Petrovitch Shvokhniev ; Jacques Morel: Uteshitelny Stepan Ivanovich ; Pierre Gallon: Alexandr Mikhailovich Glov jr. ; Jacques Grello ; Daniel Lecourtois: Ikhariev ; Alexandre Rignault: Krugel ; Henri Rollan: Mikhail Alexandrovich Glov sr. ; Jean-Marc Tennberg ",
"score": "1.5266802"
},
{
"id": "4381765",
"title": "The Gambler (1997 film)",
"text": " The Gambler is a 1997 drama film directed by Károly Makk and starring Michael Gambon, Jodhi May and Polly Walker. It is set around the writing of the 1866 novel The Gambler by Fyodor Dostoyevsky. The film was notable for its casting of Luise Rainer. The Oscar-winning actress had not made a film in fifty-four years prior to her appearance in this one.",
"score": "1.5266092"
},
{
"id": "10994737",
"title": "Gambling (film)",
"text": " Gambling is a 1934 American crime film directed by Rowland V. Lee and written by Garrett Graham. It is based on the 1929 play Gambling by George M. Cohan. The film stars George M. Cohan, Wynne Gibson, Dorothy Burgess, Theodore Newton, Harold Healy and Walter Gilbert. The film was released on November 3, 1934, by Fox Film Corporation.",
"score": "1.524066"
},
{
"id": "30363920",
"title": "The Gambler (1958 film)",
"text": " The Gambler (French: Le joueur) is a 1958 French-Italian drama film directed by Claude Autant-Lara and starring Gérard Philipe, Liselotte Pulver and Françoise Rosay. It is an adaptation of Fyodor Dostoevsky's 1866 novel The Gambler. The film's sets were designed by the art director Max Douy. It was shot at the Billancourt Studios in Paris. It was made in Eastmancolor.",
"score": "1.5201199"
},
{
"id": "10994738",
"title": "Gambling (film)",
"text": "George M. Cohan as Al Draper ; Wynne Gibson as Maizie Fuller ; Dorothy Burgess as Dorothy Kane ; Theodore Newton as Ray Braddock ; Harold Healy as Ben Connolly ; Walter Gilbert as Insp. Freelock ; Cora Witherspoon as Mrs. Edna Seeley ; Joseph Allen Sr. as Joe ; Percy Ames as Mr. B ; Six Spirits of Rhythm as Speciality Number ",
"score": "1.5200505"
},
{
"id": "31102988",
"title": "Lucky Losers",
"text": " Producer Jan Grippo was a professional magician brought to Hollywood to teach Veronica Lake to be convincing doing card tricks in This Gun for Hire. He later became Leo Gorcey's agent and produced the Bowery Boys series. He performed the card and dice tricks seen in the film.",
"score": "1.5196183"
},
{
"id": "7477671",
"title": "The Gambler (1974 film)",
"text": " The film was the first produced screenplay by James Toback. Toback had worked as an English lecturer at the City College of New York and had a gambling problem. He originally wrote The Gambler as a semi-autobiographical novel but halfway through started envisioning it as a film and turned it into a screenplay. Toback completed it in 1972 and showed it to his friend Lucy Saroyan, who introduced Toback to Robert De Niro. Toback became enthused about the possibility of De Niro playing the lead. He showed the script to his literary agent who gave it to Mike Medavoy who ",
"score": "1.511478"
},
{
"id": "1690950",
"title": "Harold B. Franklin",
"text": "Gambling (1934) directed by Rowland V. Lee, starring George M. Cohan, Wynne Gibson, Dorothy Burgess ; The Villain Still Pursued Her (1940) directed by Edward F. Cline, starring Billy Gilbert, Anita Louise, Margaret Hamilton Franklin is credited as producer in the following:",
"score": "1.497483"
},
{
"id": "16153155",
"title": "1974 in film",
"text": "The Gambler, directed by Karel Reisz, starring James Caan, Lauren Hutton, Paul Sorvino ; Gavaznha (The Deer) – (Iran) ; General Idi Amin Dada: A Self Portrait (Général Idi Amin Dada: Autoportrait), a documentary film by Barbet Schroeder – (France/Switzerland) ; Ginger in the Morning, starring Sissy Spacek ; The Girl from Petrovka, starring Goldie Hawn, Hal Holbrook, Anthony Hopkins ; The Godfather Part II, directed by Francis Ford Coppola, starring Al Pacino, Robert Duvall, Robert De Niro, John Cazale, Diane Keaton, Talia Shire, Michael V. Gazzo, Lee Strasberg ; Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla, directed by Jun Fukuda – (Japan) ; Going Places (Les Valseuses), directed by ",
"score": "1.4957936"
},
{
"id": "410554",
"title": "The Gambling Man",
"text": " Producer Ray Marshall bought the film rights to several of the period works of Catherine Cookson, beginning in 1989 with The Fifteen Streets, which had been turned into a successful stage play. These productions, sponsored by Tyne Tees Television, were very popular and drew between ten and fourteen million viewers each.",
"score": "1.4939618"
}
] |
Who was the director of Senior Year?
|
[
"Jerrold Tarog",
"Jerrold Viacrucis Tarog"
] |
director
|
Senior Year (film)
| 5,719,217 | 71 |
[
{
"id": "15655870",
"title": "Phil Savage",
"text": " Savage was named the executive director for the Senior Bowl in May 2012 where he served until May 2018. During that time he worked as the color analysis for the Crimson Tide Sports Network.",
"score": "1.4491463"
},
{
"id": "8145715",
"title": "David Zeiger",
"text": " young filmmakers from the UCLA and University of Southern California film schools to spend the 1999/2000 school year filming. After 9 months, production was completed on graduation day in June 2000, and the result was Senior Year, a 13-part series, which was first broadcast in the U.S. on PBS in January 2002. It was also shown in Europe on Planète+ and was a premiere series on the U.S. English/Spanish cable network Sí TV in 2004. Entertainment Weekly commented, \"Others have tried to document high school life, but this 13-part series succeeds where those drier efforts failed. High school is a time for experimentation, and finally, a truly experimental filmmaker is there.\"",
"score": "1.4307203"
},
{
"id": "31899499",
"title": "Rustburg High School",
"text": " The Hugh T. Pendleton award of excellence continues to be awarded at the annual end-of-year awards ceremonies, given by the faculty to the most outstanding senior. Pendleton was succeeded by then-middle school principal C. Benjamin Arthur, who held the job from 1997 until his retirement in 2002. E. Denton Sisk replaced Arthur in 2002 after serving as an assistant principal, and the school's next principal, Clayton F. Stanley, took over from him in 2011, serving until 2017. Among his other previous positions, Stanley was a teacher and assistant football coach at RHS during the 1990s. Clayton Stanley was promoted to Director of Personnel in 2017, and Amy Hale took over. Amy Hale was an assistant principal at Rustburg before taking the role as Principal.",
"score": "1.4266648"
},
{
"id": "29293705",
"title": "Methodist College Belfast",
"text": " The Senior Chorus consisted of every pupil from Fourth Form to Upper Sixth; they performed choral works at some events throughout the year. The last performance of the Senior Chorus was at the 2014 Easter Concert, after which it was dissolved. The Chorus' duties have since been taken over by the smaller Senior Choir. This tradition had been established over many years. When Henry Willis was Director of Music at Methody from 1957–66, large scale choral works were undertaken by the Senior School, which continued under William McCay. Dr Joe McKee OBE was Director of Music from 1991 to 2002, and he arranged for the Senior Chorus to sing in public performances outside the College. With the Director of Music, Ruth McCartney MBE, the Senior Chorus learned one large-scale choral work each year, starting ",
"score": "1.415245"
},
{
"id": "13246583",
"title": "Senior Year (2010 film)",
"text": " In 2010, as Senior Year was being made, the ABS CBN News Channel tapped Tarog to be part of AmBisyon 2010, a series in which directors would use short films to narratively present the various problems that would face whoever won the Presidency in the Philippine Presidential Election of 2010. Tarog's entry, covering the area of \"education\", was the short film \"Faculty\", subtitled \"A prequel to Senior Year.\" The Ms. Joan character from Senior Year makes her first appearance in this short, which explains why the character, who used to be a College teacher, had become a high school teacher by the time she was shown in Senior Year. Faculty became a viral hit on various social networks, and the popularity of the short film became part of the marketing for its longer, more fleshed-out sequel.",
"score": "1.4019661"
},
{
"id": "13223340",
"title": "Senioritis",
"text": " the Office of Measurement and Evaluation, University of Pittsburgh, July 1975. The Director's Report for Senior Semester Program 1974-75 by Dr. Lester F. Jipp can be found at ERIC ED 157 165. The College Board, the National Youth Leadership Council, and other youth-serving organizations suggest that there are many ways schools can help young people make the most of their senior year instead of succumbing to the temptation to take it easy once graduation is assured. Giving young people opportunities to make their academic work more meaningful through service-learning, or other forms of experiential education, can increase students' academic aspirations.",
"score": "1.4017973"
},
{
"id": "25187466",
"title": "Westchester Academy for International Studies",
"text": " Director to take the vacant Spring Woods principal position. Kathy Menotti was named Interim Director, with Kristin Nash accepting the position as assistant director of the middle school. On October 3, 2016, Kathy Menotti stepped down as interim director, and was replaced by Dr. Pamela Butler, who was the school's first director.Dr. Valerie Muniz (Now Hernandez) was chosen as the new permanent director of WAIS in May 2017. Kathy Menotti retired from her original position of assistant director of the Middle School in early 2017. Her replacement was chosen as Pamela Redd from Meadow Wood Elementary. Currently, the middle school director is Victoria Andrews, while the high school director is Alexia Greiner, while the IB Career Related Programme Coordinator is Sara Sebesta Camano and the IB Diploma Programme Coordinator is Jesus Tachiquin.",
"score": "1.398639"
},
{
"id": "13604854",
"title": "Baltimore Polytechnic Institute",
"text": " ranked 1552 nationally and 44 in Maryland as a \"Silver Medal School\" by U.S. News and World Report. In 2004, Dr. Barney Wilson, a 1976 Poly graduate, became Baltimore Polytechnic Institute's first African-American director. In August 2010, assistant principal Matthew Woolston, was appointed interim director. Later on during the year, Jacqueline Williams was appointed as interim director for the 2011–2012 school year. By the end of the school year – and after a two-year, nationwide search – Williams became the first female director of the institution. Williams worked her way through the Poly ranks from student (Class of 1981), to teacher, then department head, to assistant principal, and to dean of students, before appointment to her current position as director.",
"score": "1.395644"
},
{
"id": "13246576",
"title": "Senior Year (2010 film)",
"text": " Senior Year is a 2010 Philippine coming-of-age film written, scored, edited and directed by Jerrold Tarog. It follows ten students of a private Catholic school in Manila, as they go through the many transitions that come with their final year in high school.",
"score": "1.3952805"
},
{
"id": "32020706",
"title": "Joseph Blatchford",
"text": " the five-year rule as one way to help assemble his own team, just as Jack Vaughn had done when he became director in 1966. \"The loudest and most outraged of political partisanship came in 1971 when Blatchford used an important Peace Corps policy, generally ignored by his predecessor, to terminate nearly one hundred staff members, including twenty-seven country directors. The rule was instituted to ensure that the agency would never suffer the fate of other government bureaucracies: premature calcification resulting from an aged and spent permanent staff.\" Author P. David Searles says that Shriver's concerns about finding \"competent overseas directors\" proved groundless.",
"score": "1.3932278"
},
{
"id": "15419562",
"title": "Marcellin College, Bulleen",
"text": " the Director of Students and Assistant Principal (Student Wellbeing) on a fortnightly basis, and once a month and/or when required with the Senior SRC Executive and College Captains. SRC Executive consists of the College Captain, Vice Captains and House Captains. The Senior SRC executive meets with the Director of Students and Assistant Principal (Student Wellbeing) on a fortnightly basis. Leadership opportunities are also offered in the areas of Liturgy, Chess, Debating, Science, Languages, Visual Arts, Performing Arts (Drama & Music), Publications and Sport. 2008 saw the introduction of various Academic Captains including LOTE and various Performing Arts Captains. This was also the year for the first World Youth Day Captain in conjunction with the World Youth Day event held in the same year with the position being called the Liturgy Captain for future years.",
"score": "1.3916769"
},
{
"id": "15693286",
"title": "Usdan Summer Camp for the Arts",
"text": " chairman of the Department of Music Education at New York University, who was appointed Usdan's education director. Together, this team attracted a faculty of prominent artists and teachers from the country's leading conservatories and universities—a tradition that continues to this day. It was Suzanne who coined the phrase in the early days of Usdan that remains a camp mantra to this day: \"Lose yourself for the summer. Find yourself for a lifetime.\" Mr. McKinley continued to serve as executive director until his retirement in 1983, when he was followed by Dale Lewis. Mr. Lewis served the camp for 32 years, before stepping down in 2015. He was succeeded by Usdan's current executive director, Lauren Brandt Schloss. In 2008, Usdan celebrated its 40th season. In 2018, the Camp celebrated its 50th anniversary summer.",
"score": "1.3908987"
},
{
"id": "9170684",
"title": "New York University Press",
"text": "Arthur Huntington Nason, 1916–1932 ; no director, 1932–1946 ; Jean B. Barr (interim director), 1946–1952 ; Filmore Hyde, 1952–1957 ; Wilbur McKee, acting director, 1957–1958 ; William B. Harvey, 1958–1966 ; Christopher Kentera, 1966–1974 ; Malcolm C. Johnson, 1974–1981 ; Colin Jones, 1981–1996 ; Niko Pfund, 1996–2000 ; Steve Maikowski, 2001–2014 ; Ellen Chodosh, 2014–present ",
"score": "1.3884199"
},
{
"id": "5538250",
"title": "List of Punahou School alumni",
"text": " Theatre from June 2013 ; '74 Deborah Susan Rosen (USC)—Senior VP at Universal Studios, Executive VP at Paramount Pictures, casting director of Hill Street Blues, second unit director of Weird Science '74 Jim Simpson (Boston)—Professor of Theater at Yale, Obie Award-winning director; spouse of actress Sigourney Weaver ; '75 Sarah Robinson (California College of Arts)—art department for ten films including Casino Royale, Die Another Day, The World Is Not Enough ; '78 Don King (Stanford)—surfing photographer and cinematographer ; '79 Tom Boyle (Oregon)—surfing cinematographer, director, and producer ; '80 Rod Lurie (West Point)—creator of Commander in Chief, Line of Fire, portraying the first Jewish U.S. president and the first woman U.S. President ; '80* Kevin McCollum (Cincinnati)—Broadway producer of Tony ",
"score": "1.3817922"
},
{
"id": "29266918",
"title": "Pentecostal Collegiate Institute (Rhode Island)",
"text": " Dr. Albert R. Archibald, S.T.D. (1855- ) an ordained Methodist clergyman, and graduate of Boston University, served as interim principal for the 1916-1917 academic year. Winchester resigned in 1916, and moved to Berkeley, California to continue her studies at the Pacific School of Religion.",
"score": "1.3815858"
},
{
"id": "12230199",
"title": "Chaminade-Madonna College Preparatory School",
"text": " Marianist Hall (which contains the department chair offices). In 1998, Robert Minnaugh announced his retirement. Longtime assistant principal Ann McGrath was named the interim principal through the 1997/1998 school year. Under some criticism, Patrick Snay was appointed principal in the summer of 1999. Under his leadership, the school's focus turned to the development of a sports program. This included the construction of a multimillion-dollar sports complex, increased scholarship availability and other improvements that led to an award-winning program. In addition, the Learning Center was established to help students suffering from learning disabilities. In 2002, Fr. John Thompson, S.M., was appointed president of the school. His ",
"score": "1.3809512"
},
{
"id": "27573514",
"title": "WNAS",
"text": " Assistant Principal Marvin Oakes guided WNAS through its formative years. Robert Willman, an English teacher, assumed the management role in 1954. Jerry Weaver served as the general manager from 1960 to 1969, followed later by Lee Kelly who held this post from 1973 to 2013. Jason Flener, former assistant principal for NAHS, and a former WNAS student staff member, replaced Kelly beginning in the 2013–2014 school year. Since the beginning of the 2017–18 school year, Brian Sullivan has been the general manager. Floyd Central's program is currently headed by Brian Shaw, now in his first year.",
"score": "1.3800434"
},
{
"id": "27249844",
"title": "Eight Schools Association",
"text": " financial officer William Bardel was hired as executive director. Administrators' tenures were set at three years. In 2009, Shanahan was succeeded by Duffy and Bardel was succeeded by former Hotchkiss head Robert \"Skip\" Mattoon. In 2011 Shanahan succeeded Mattoon as executive director. A group photo in The Lawrence of the 2006 participants shows Choate head Edward Shanahan, Deerfield head Eric Widmer, Deerfield head-elect Margarita Curtis, Hotchkiss head Robert Mattoon, Lawrenceville head Elizabeth Duffy, Northfield Mount Hermon head Thomas Sturtevant, Phillips Andover head Barbara Landis Chase, Phillips Exeter principal Tyler Tingley, and St. Paul's Rector William Matthews. In January 2007, the aims of ESA were ",
"score": "1.3771341"
},
{
"id": "2547424",
"title": "Jack and Jill School",
"text": " Cecilia del Castillo-Lopez continues to oversee the schools' financial affairs. Her daughter serves as President while her grandson serves as Vice-President of Finance and Administration. The Director of Academic Affairs oversees all schools and provides support in terms of curriculum and resources. The school year 2010-11 marks the transitional year when Mrs. Lopez relinquished the decision-making tasks to the president and the current director.",
"score": "1.3762059"
},
{
"id": "12442568",
"title": "Timothy C. Senior",
"text": " Senior was ordained to the priesthood by John Cardinal Krol on May 18, 1985, and then served as parochial vicar at Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Parish in Feasterville until 1988. He earned Master of Divinity and Master of Arts in pastoral theology degrees from St. Charles Seminary in 1988. Senior briefly taught religion at Archbishop Kennedy High School in Conshohocken (1988–89) before pursuing full-time graduate studies at Boston College, where he received a master's degree in social work and master's degree in business administration in 1992. During his studies, he was also executive assistant to the Secretary for Social Services in the Archdiocese of Boston (1991–92). On ",
"score": "1.375003"
}
] |
Who was the director of Victory?
|
[
"Mikhail Doller",
"Mikhail Ivanovich Doller",
"Vsevolod Pudovkin",
"Vsevolod Illarionovich Pudovkin",
"Wsewolod Illarionowitsch Pudowkin"
] |
director
|
Victory (1938 film)
| 3,060,498 | 64 |
[
{
"id": "6921090",
"title": "California Victory 2006",
"text": " A list of all of the Victory offices with their accompanying field director.",
"score": "1.7164339"
},
{
"id": "6603095",
"title": "LGBTQ Victory Fund",
"text": " Victory Fund from his position as the director of the Gay & Lesbian Leadership Council at the Democratic National Committee from to rebuild the nearly-bankrupt organization. He is credited by Tammy Baldwin with helping grow the visibility and size of the organization. He stepped down in 2003. Former Victory Fund board member Chuck Wolfe was named executive director in 2003. Under his leadership, the organization's budgets grew exponentially. In 2008, 80 of the group's 111 endorsed candidates won their elections. In 2009, Victory Fund donated $40000 to the election of Annise Parker as mayor of Houston. In electing an out lesbian as its chief ",
"score": "1.6960537"
},
{
"id": "7687081",
"title": "Victory Gardens Theater",
"text": " Chay Yew was named Artistic Director in 2011. In February 2012, Yew granted the original Playwrights Ensemble 'alumni' status and introduced a new ensemble of playwrights. Yew announced his departure from Victory Gardens in December 2019. On May 5, 2020, then-executive director Erica Daniels was named Victory Gardens' executive artistic director. The Playwrights Ensemble announced their collective resignation in protest on May 22, citing a lack of transparency in Victory Gardens' search for a new Artistic Director. On June 8, in response to the resulting community backlash and the ongoing George Floyd protests, Daniels stepped down from her positions as Executive Director and Executive Artistic Director. The board of directors' chairman Steve Miller also stepped down from his position, but remained on the board. The current Acting Managing Director of Victory Gardens is Roxanna Conner, and the current Board Chair is Charles E. Harris, II.",
"score": "1.693003"
},
{
"id": "29370700",
"title": "Victory Pictures Corporation",
"text": " Victory Pictures Corporation was a California-based film production and distribution company that operated from 1935–39. It was owned by Sam Katzman and specialised in making low-budget movies, predominantly Westerns. It made two serials and 30 films, including some of the Western series of Bob Steele and Tim McCoy. It also made eight films based on the works of Peter B. Kyne. The studio plant caught fire in 1937, causing $50,000 worth of damage.",
"score": "1.6893781"
},
{
"id": "15443283",
"title": "John Cromwell (director)",
"text": " Twenty years later, Cromwell filmed his screen version, Victory (1940), for Paramount with Fredrick March as the recluse Hendrik Heyst and Betty Field as Alma, and Cedric Hardwicke as the pathological Mr. Jones (also serving as narrator). Cromwell’s professional relationship with March had commenced on Broadway in 1925 when he directed March in Kay Horton’s Harvest. Cromwell was dissatisfied with some of the casting in Victory, particularly with that of British actor Cedric Hardwicke : \"Then [there was] Mr. Hardwicke, whom I knew—or thought I knew—pretty well. I don’t know what the hell happened to him. He just conked out on me entirely, and I felt he gave no indication what the part ",
"score": "1.6691619"
},
{
"id": "15443282",
"title": "John Cromwell (director)",
"text": " As early as 1919, Cromwell had taken a keen interest in novelist Joseph Conrad’s psychological drama Victory: An Island Tale (1915), concerning an English expatriate who attempts to withdraw as a recluse to a small Indonesian island. His solitary existence is undone when he rescues a young woman, leading to the infiltration of his sanctuary by a gang of sociopaths, with tragic results. Cromwell personally contacted Conrad shortly after publication of Victory to obtain production and dramatic rights to the work, only to discover that permission had been bestowed on producer Laurence Irving and McDonald Hastings, respectively. Cromwell directed a version of their adaptation in the United States in the 1920s that quickly ",
"score": "1.6543449"
},
{
"id": "8611295",
"title": "Chay Yew",
"text": " in The Collision Project at The Alliance Theatre in Atlanta, Georgia. He wrote a documentary play 17 based on the actual lives of Atlanta’s racially diverse teenagers. Chay Yew was the Artistic Director of Victory Gardens Theater in Chicago from 2011 to 2020. During his tenure, out of 43 productions, 18 plays received world premieres of which one went to Broadway, four were produced off-Broadway at the Public, Soho Rep, and Signature Theatre, while others were presented regionally, and abroad at Donmar Warehouse and Bush Theatre in London. For his leadership, he was awarded the Iris Award for Outstanding Commitment to Connecting Chicago ",
"score": "1.6252539"
},
{
"id": "32977330",
"title": "Victory Ford",
"text": " Victory was once the most celebrated up-and-coming fashion designer in the business, until the New York Times trashed her new Fall collection and subsequently she lost her financial backing, forcing her to fire all of her employees and work from her house. She must now pick up the pieces of her shattered life and rebuild her career, as she relies on her friends and the man in her life, businessman Joe Bennett (Andrew McCarthy), to help her get back on her feet.",
"score": "1.6249211"
},
{
"id": "7774089",
"title": "New Victory Theater",
"text": " runway down the middle of the auditorium for his strippers, the most famous of whom was Gypsy Rose Lee. In 1942, it became a movie theater called The Victory, named to support the war effort during World War II. In 1972, as the neighborhood gradually declined, it became the first theater on 42nd Street to exhibit XXX pornographic films. In the early 1990s, the Victory returned to legitimate theater, using its stage space as a venue for offering plays by non-profit companies. It presented the En Garde Arts company's production of the play Crowbar in 1990 and in 1991 the Theater for a New Audience ",
"score": "1.5913773"
},
{
"id": "1867455",
"title": "Victory (2013 film)",
"text": " Actor turned debutant director Nanda Kishore, son of yester-year actor Sudheer, announced his maiden project and titled it as \"Victory\". He roped in Sharan as the main protagonist who tasted big success from Rambo released in 2012. One of the unit members reported that the film would be a comic-caper and would engage the audience for its complete length. Model-turned-actress Asmita Sood who was a Miss India finalist in 2011, was signed up for her first Kannada film to play the lead role opposite Sharan.",
"score": "1.5888531"
},
{
"id": "12655678",
"title": "A. V. T. Shankardass",
"text": " Shankardass worked in theatre as a director in London and Edinburgh. He then directed the films Praying for Pay, The Commuters and The Stepmother, before becoming involved in film production. He was also a screenwriter with Tomahawk Entertainment and Warner Bros for five years. Shankardass became C. E. O. and Managing Director of film finance corporation Victory in 1998, handling tax efficient and equity funding, matched with debt structure in various countries. Films financed included K-19 The Widowmaker (Harrison Ford), Femme Fatale (Antonio Banderas), Fly Boys (James Franco), Johnny Was (Vinnie Jones), and Ball & Chain (Kal Penn). In 2000 he managed a takeover of the company, and in 2005 Victory conducted ",
"score": "1.585238"
},
{
"id": "12295181",
"title": "Desert Victory",
"text": " Desert Victory is a 1943 film produced by the British Ministry of Information, documenting the Allies' North African campaign against Field Marshal Erwin Rommel and the Afrika Korps. This documentary traces the struggle between General Erwin Rommel and Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, from the German's defeat at El Alamein to Tripoli. The film was produced by David MacDonald and directed by Roy Boulting who also directed Tunisian Victory and Burma Victory. Like the famous \"Why We Fight\" series of films by Frank Capra, Desert Victory relies heavily on captured German newsreel footage. Many of the most famous sequences in the film have been excerpted and appear with frequency in History Channel and A&E productions. The film won a special Oscar in 1943 and the 1951 film The Desert Fox: The Story of Rommel took sections of the film for its battle footage. ",
"score": "1.5811057"
},
{
"id": "25441182",
"title": "Victory (1940 film)",
"text": " Victory is a 1940 American adventure film directed by John Cromwell and starring Fredric March, Cedric Hardwicke, and Betty Field. It was based on the popular 1915 novel by Joseph Conrad. On the eve of the American entry into World War II, the often-filmed Conrad story of a hermit on an island invaded by thugs was refashioned into a clarion call for intervention in the war in Europe, at the height of American isolationism.",
"score": "1.5759957"
},
{
"id": "13065056",
"title": "Victory (Bethel Music album)",
"text": "Eric Allen – artist direction, director ; Jacob Arnold – drums ; Cory Asbury – vocals ; Josh Baldwin – vocals ; Daniel Bashta – vocals ; Andrew Bergthold – background vocals, keyboards, pre-production, programming ; Jordan Borgart – creative director ; Kyle Briskin – background vocals ; Robby Busick – production manager ; Ed Cash – acoustic guitar, background vocals, electric guitar, keyboards, mandolin, mixing, producer, programming ; Franni Cash – background vocals ; Martin Cash – background vocals, drum programming, percussion ; Scott Cash – acoustic guitar, background vocals, electric guitar ; Chris Estes – director ; Alton ",
"score": "1.570753"
},
{
"id": "7687077",
"title": "Victory Gardens Theater",
"text": " The company's initial home was the Northside Auditorium Building, 3730 N. Clark Street in Chicago, originally a Swedish social club. Its second production—a country-western musical co-produced with commercial producers called The Magnolia Club by Jeff Berkson, John Karraker and David Karraker — was the company's first hit. Marcelle McVay was the first Managing Director. In 1975, director Dennis Začek staged The Caretaker by Harold Pinter, beginning a relationship that led to Začek being named artistic director in 1977. Key on-going collaborators worked with the company for the first time in the Clark Street space, including actor William L. Petersen, Marcelle McVay, director Sandy Shinner, and playwrights Steve Carter and Jeffrey Sweet. McVay, who is married to Začek, subsequently became managing director and Shinner later became associate artistic director.",
"score": "1.5697594"
},
{
"id": "15424639",
"title": "Victory (1996 film)",
"text": " Victory is a 1996 French-German drama suspense film written and directed by Mark Peploe and starring Willem Dafoe, Irène Jacob, Sam Neill and Rufus Sewell. It is based on the 1915 novel of the same name by Joseph Conrad. The novel had been adapted into film on multiple previous occasions, including a 1919 silent version directed by Maurice Tourneur and featuring Jack Holt, Seena Owen, Lon Chaney Sr., and Wallace Beery; the 1930 William Wellman directed Dangerous Paradise starring Nancy Carroll, Richard Arlen and Warner Oland; and the 1940 version featuring Fredric March, Betty Field, and Sir Cedric Hardwicke.",
"score": "1.5657163"
},
{
"id": "6199274",
"title": "Brian Bond (activist)",
"text": " director of the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund to rebuild the nearly-bankrupt organization. He is credited by Tammy Baldwin with helping grow the visibility and size of the organization. He left the organization in 2003. Bond was later hired by Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean to replace Donald Hitchcock as executive director of the DNC's Gay and Lesbian Leadership Council., and would eventually join Obama for America as National Constituency Director in Chicago, Illinois. In January 2009, The Advocate magazine announced that Bond would be named deputy director of the White House Office of Public Liaison under Tina Tchen, as confirmed by the transition team of ",
"score": "1.565439"
},
{
"id": "12649225",
"title": "Jack Victory",
"text": " In 1998, Victory debuted in Extreme Championship Wrestling as a mercenary hired to assault New Jack. His wrestling ended for ECW when he broke his leg at 1998's November to Remember in a tag team match pitting himself and Justin Credible against Tommy Dreamer and Jake \"The Snake\" Roberts when he was backdropped over the top rope by Dreamer. While using a wheelchair for rehabilitation, Victory became the manager of Steve Corino. When his leg healed, Victory began interfering in Corino's matches on behalf of his client. Along with Corino, Victory was a member of the stable known as The Network. He remained in ECW until the promotion declared bankruptcy in April 2001, defeating C.W. Anderson on the promotion's last show in January.",
"score": "1.5638417"
},
{
"id": "2192757",
"title": "Victory Contents",
"text": " source: ",
"score": "1.5632952"
},
{
"id": "5547528",
"title": "Victory's Short",
"text": " Victory's Short (La Victoire est de courte durée) is a 2014 black comedy short film directed by Mika'ela Fisher and co-directed by Benjamin Feitelson.",
"score": "1.5630515"
}
] |
Who was the director of Me First?
|
[
"Fernando Ayala"
] |
director
|
Me First (film)
| 5,132,172 | 78 |
[
{
"id": "16217013",
"title": "Me First (film)",
"text": " Me First (Primero yo) is a 1964 Argentine drama film directed by Fernando Ayala, and written by Héctor Olivera and Luis Pico Estrada. It was entered into the 1964 Cannes Film Festival.",
"score": "1.5127158"
},
{
"id": "7406552",
"title": "Me First (album)",
"text": " Me First is the first album by indie band The Elected, released in 2004 via Sub Pop. It is a mix between indie and country.",
"score": "1.4944688"
},
{
"id": "26736832",
"title": "Second unit",
"text": " Service), stunt coordinator David R. Ellis (Final Destination 2), and Frank Marshall, who directed second unit for Steven Spielberg whilst also working as producer, on Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Empire of the Sun, and The Color Purple. Some who became directors may return to working predominantly as second unit directors for the remainder of their career. Notable examples include Yakima Canutt (Ben-Hur, 1959) and Michael D. Moore, who worked on more than sixty films, including Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969), Patton (1970), and the first three Indiana Jones films in the 1980s. It is common for certain personnel involved with a production in another capacity to also ",
"score": "1.4069033"
},
{
"id": "13448563",
"title": "May First/People Link",
"text": " The current co-directors of May First/People Link are Alfredo Lopez and Jamie McClelland. Founding members and other members of MF/PL leadership are represented by organizations including The Praxis Project, NACLA, Progressive Technology Project, and The Brecht Forum.",
"score": "1.3926581"
},
{
"id": "26171376",
"title": "John Palmer (director)",
"text": "Me (1975) ; Sugar (2004) ; The Archer (2005) ",
"score": "1.3898736"
},
{
"id": "7792212",
"title": "Think of Me First as a Person",
"text": " Think of Me First as a Person is a documentary film and home movie about Dwight Core Jr., a boy with Down syndrome. The footage was originally shot throughout the 1960s and '70s by Core's father, Dwight Core Sr. The footage was later discovered and completed by the filmmaker's grandson, George Ingmire. The film was first shown at New Orleans' 2006 Home Movie Day. Later that year, it was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry, an honor bestowed every year to twenty-five films deemed \"culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.\" The Library of Congress's statement announcing the 2006 additions to the Registry called the film a \"loving portrait by a father of his son with Down syndrome\" that represented \"the creativity and craftsmanship of the American amateur filmmaker.\" The film's title comes from the 1974 Rita Dranginis poem of the same name.",
"score": "1.3750143"
},
{
"id": "32206158",
"title": "Robert Mandel",
"text": " Festival at Lincoln Center. Mandel went on to become a successful film director, as well as a television series director, having directed Lost, Nash Bridges and The Practice. He was the director of the pilot for The X-Files and the sixth episode of Prison Break. Mandel was the original director hired on for what was then titled Carrie 2: Say You're Sorry but quickly left the production over \"creative differences.\" Katt Shea took over as director for the film, which was eventually released as The Rage: Carrie 2. Mandel was the dean of AFI Conservatory for nine years from 2005 to 2014. He was the first alumnus of the program to be selected a dean.",
"score": "1.3730657"
},
{
"id": "2153840",
"title": "Lee Hyun-seung (director)",
"text": " Film (2010), as well as for the human rights-themed projects If You Were Me (2003), If You Were Me 4 (2009), and Fly Penguin (2009). Lee also served in several cinema-related capacities, such as being the first commissioner of the Gyeonggi Performing Arts & Film Commission, vice-chairman of the Korean Film Council, executive director of the Mise-en-scène Short Film Festival, film professor at Chung-Ang University, and founder of the Director's Cut Awards, among others. During this period, his only directorial efforts were the short films Between (2002), Twenty Millimeter Thick (2004, starring Yum Jung-ah), and Relay (2009, starring Park Bo-young and Son Eun-seo). In ",
"score": "1.3722775"
},
{
"id": "32788193",
"title": "The Spy Who Loved Me (film)",
"text": " a director. The producers approached Steven Spielberg, who was in post-production for Jaws, but ultimately decided against him. The first director attached to the film was Guy Hamilton, who directed the previous three Bond films as well as Goldfinger, but he left after being offered the opportunity to direct the 1978 film Superman, although Richard Donner took over the project. Eon Productions later turned to Lewis Gilbert, who had directed the earlier Bond film You Only Live Twice. With a director finally secured, the next hurdle was finishing the script, which had gone through several revisions by numerous writers. The initial villain ",
"score": "1.3651004"
},
{
"id": "16394459",
"title": "Ted Hope",
"text": "Second unit director or assistant director ",
"score": "1.3603773"
},
{
"id": "10912042",
"title": "List of cinematic firsts",
"text": "Lois Weber directs The Merchant of Venice making her the first American female director of a feature length film. ",
"score": "1.3519039"
},
{
"id": "7362886",
"title": "List of African-American firsts",
"text": "First African-American female director of a major-studio movie: Darnell Martin (Columbia Pictures' I Like It Like That) ; First African-American to win the United States Amateur Championship: Tiger Woods ",
"score": "1.351856"
},
{
"id": "26736831",
"title": "Second unit",
"text": " stunt coordinators first, including Vic Armstrong, who has directed second unit on The Amazing Spider-Man, Mission: Impossible III, and War of the Worlds; Simon Crane, who did Men in Black 3, Frankenstein, and X-Men: The Last Stand; and Terry J. Leonard, responsible for second unit on Cowboys & Aliens, The Expendables, and Die Hard with a Vengeance. Second unit director can be a stepping stone for aspiring directors to gain experience. Unlike an assistant director, who is second-in-command to the main director, a second unit director operates independently. Second unit directors who have gone on to become full-fledged film directors include former editors Peter Hunt (Goldfinger), John Glen (On Her Majesty's ",
"score": "1.350719"
},
{
"id": "4174293",
"title": "List of women's firsts",
"text": " ; 1996: Cheryl Dunye, first feature-length narrative film written and directed by out black lesbian about black lesbians (The Watermelon Woman). ; 2011: Jennifer Yuh Nelson, first woman to solely direct an animated feature from a major Hollywood studio (Kung Fu Panda 2). ; 2013 Emma Watkins, first female member of The Wiggles. ; 2013: Rebecca Sugar, the creator of Steven Universe, becomes the first woman to create an animated series independently for Cartoon Network. ; 2014: Judith Weir, first female Master of the Queen's Music. ; 2017: Patty Jenkins, first woman to direct a studio superhero comic book live-action theatrical release film (Wonder Woman). ; 2019: Nina Martinez, first living HIV-positive kidney donor in the US. ",
"score": "1.3412869"
},
{
"id": "3369106",
"title": "List of African-American arts firsts",
"text": "First African-American woman director of a major-studio movie: Darnell Martin (Columbia Pictures' I Like It Like That) ",
"score": "1.3407967"
},
{
"id": "10912046",
"title": "List of cinematic firsts",
"text": "Men Who Have Made Love to Me, directed by Arthur Berthelet was the first film to break the fourth wall. ",
"score": "1.336951"
},
{
"id": "5117115",
"title": "Bryce Zabel",
"text": " Lost Empire (2001). He also wrote the first Sci-Fi Channel original film, Official Denial (1993). A long-time member of the Directors Guild of America, he first worked as a director on the Los Angeles magazine series \"Eye on LA\" and Willow: The Making of an Adventure. He made his feature directorial debut in 2009 on Let's Do It, a comedy about the first student film ever produced, back in 1929. As an actor, he appeared as a reporter in the Dark Skies episode \"The Warren Omission\", and as a priest in the Lois & Clark episode, \"All Shook Up\". In 2001, Zabel became the first writer/producer to be elected as Chairman and CEO of the Academy of Television Arts & ",
"score": "1.3355734"
},
{
"id": "25885163",
"title": "Stephen Tompkinson",
"text": " In 2006, Tompkinson made his directing debut in the Midlands, at the helm of the BBC1 afternoon drama The Lightning Kid. He was shadowed by a film crew making the documentary Director's Debut: Stephen Tompkinson's Story that aired immediately prior to the drama, with the intent of revealing the challenges faced by a new director.",
"score": "1.3335361"
},
{
"id": "26934820",
"title": "Women in film",
"text": "Alice Guy-Blaché is considered to be the first ever female film director, as well as the first director of a fiction film. Blaché directed her first film in 1896, La Fée aux Choux and founded Solax Studios in 1910. Over her lifetime, \"she directed between 40 to 50 films and supervised nearly 300 other productions\". ; Kathryn Bigelow is an American film director, producer, screenwriter, and television director. She became the first woman to win an Academy Award for Best Director for The Hurt Locker, the Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directing, the BAFTA Award for Best Direction, and the Critics' Choice Award for Best Director as well as the Saturn Award for Best Director. ; ",
"score": "1.3322519"
},
{
"id": "15052892",
"title": "Alan K. Campbell",
"text": " Alan Keith Campbell (May 31, 1923 – February 4, 1998) was the first Director of the United States Office of Personnel Management.",
"score": "1.3265352"
}
] |
Who was the director of Pilot?
|
[
"Robby Benson",
"Robin David Segal"
] |
director
|
Pilot (Sabrina the Teenage Witch)
| 5,453,554 | 16 |
[
{
"id": "11645394",
"title": "Pilot (V)",
"text": " \"Pilot\" is the series premiere of the 2009 reimagining of the 1983 miniseries V created by Kenneth Johnson. The episode's teleplay was written by Scott Peters, with story credit going to Johnson and Peters. Yves Simoneau directed the episode, which originally aired in the United States on ABC on November 3, 2009. The episode sees spaceships appear over 29 of the world's major cities. Though the alien \"Visitors\" claim to come in peace, it transpires that they have been infiltrating the planet for decades, and are planning on enslaving the human species. Parallels have been drawn between the Visitors and US Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, though Peters and co-producer Jeffrey Bell refute that they were intentional. Bell feels that while the original series ",
"score": "1.4783118"
},
{
"id": "14177516",
"title": "The Pilot (film)",
"text": " The Pilot (also known as Danger in the Skies) is a 1980 American action-drama film by director and star Cliff Robertson and is based on the novel of the same name by Robert P. Davis.",
"score": "1.4500029"
},
{
"id": "8602681",
"title": "Pilots (film)",
"text": " Pilots is a 2000 Indian Malayalam-language drama film written and directed by Rajiv Anchal and produced by Menaka under Revathy Kalamandhir. Starring Suresh Gopi, Sreenivasan, and Praveena.",
"score": "1.4495071"
},
{
"id": "14985590",
"title": "Alan Smithee",
"text": " of season 4 of American television series, believed to be directed by Joseph L. Scanlan. ; Riviera, 1987 ABC-TV movie intended as pilot, directed by John Frankenheimer. ; MacGyver, \"Pilot\", directed by Jerrold Freedman, and \"The Heist\", director unknown (1985). ; Moonlight, TV movie and pilot for an unsold series (1982) (not to be confused with the later CBS vampire series), directed by Jackie Cooper and Rod Holcomb. ; The Owl, 1991 television film credited to director Tom Holland when originally broadcast. Holland approved of the 46-minute television cut but disliked the extended 84-minute home video cut and credited it to \"Alan Smithee\". ",
"score": "1.4494202"
},
{
"id": "14920510",
"title": "Pilot (The Americans)",
"text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the first season of the period drama television series The Americans. It originally aired on FX in the United States on January 30, 2013. The episode was written by series creator Joe Weisberg and directed by Gavin O'Connor. In 1981, shortly after the inauguration of President Ronald Reagan, Philip and Elizabeth Jennings (Matthew Rhys and Keri Russell) are undercover Soviet intelligence agents from the secretive Directorate S of the KGB sent to the U.S. 15 years ago to work deep cover in Washington, D.C. Their assumed identities are a married couple who run a travel agency, and even their own children Paige (Holly Taylor) and Henry (Keidrich Sellati) do not know their secret. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. Critics commented on the lead performances of Russell, Rhys, and Noah Emmerich. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 3.22 million.",
"score": "1.4419975"
},
{
"id": "30220069",
"title": "Tucker Cawley",
"text": "\"Pilot\" ",
"score": "1.4356245"
},
{
"id": "6731306",
"title": "Jay Sandrich",
"text": "Kuney, Jack. Take One: Television Directors on Directing. ISBN: 978-0275935467 New York: Greenwood, 1990. ; Meisler, Andy. \"Jay Sandrich: Ace of Pilots.\" Channels magazine (New York), October 1986. ; Ravage, John W. Television: The Director's Viewpoint. Boulder, ISBN: 978-0891583370, Colorado: Westview, 1978. ",
"score": "1.4350898"
},
{
"id": "6019210",
"title": "Pilot (Masters of Sex)",
"text": " The series opens in October 1956 at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri where Bill Masters (Michael Sheen) is honored for his work in obstetric surgery. While making a speech, Bill states that he has to go. Later, he watches through a peephole as Betty DiMello (Annaleigh Ashford), a prostitute whom he hired, has sex with Ernie (Steve Rosen). Afterwards, Bill talks with Betty at a bar where they discuss her sexual response. She tells him she faked her orgasm, a practice which Bill is unfamiliar with. A young doctor, Ethan Haas (Nicholas D'Agosto) speaks to Bill about a new female ",
"score": "1.4299989"
},
{
"id": "13378281",
"title": "Pilot (studio)",
"text": " Aleksandr Tatarsky served as the Pilot's artistic director up until his death in 2007. He was replaced by Eduard Nazarov who held the position until 2013. Currently Igor Gelashvili serves as the studio's director. Pilot produced over 130 animated films. A subdivision called \"Pilot-TV\", founded in 1997, produced satirical animated series using 3D motion-captured characters, most famous of them being the studio's key mascots: the Pilot Brothers based on Chief and Colleague from the popular Soviet mini-series Investigation Held by Kolobki. The studio has received over 50 awards at international film festivals. It is best known for animating the popular Cartoon Network series Mike, Lu & Og outside of ",
"score": "1.4287794"
},
{
"id": "27706142",
"title": "Pilot (Homeland)",
"text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the psychological thriller TV series Homeland. It originally aired on Showtime on October 2, 2011. The episode focuses on the return home of Marine Sergeant Nicholas Brody (Damian Lewis), rescued after eight years as a prisoner-of-war in Afghanistan. While Brody is celebrated as a hero, CIA officer Carrie Mathison (Claire Danes) believes Brody to actually be acting as a sleeper agent for al-Qaeda. The pilot was universally acclaimed by critics and was the highest-rated drama premiere on Showtime since 2003.",
"score": "1.421827"
},
{
"id": "27932156",
"title": "Pilot (Person of Interest)",
"text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the crime drama television series Person of Interest. It originally aired on CBS in the United States on September 22, 2011. The episode was written by series creator Jonathan Nolan and directed by David Semel. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 13.33 million.",
"score": "1.4201274"
},
{
"id": "9331023",
"title": "John Hodge (engineer)",
"text": " in the Mercury program, MA-9, was scheduled to last long enough that a second flight director was needed in Mission Control. Thus, in 1963, Hodge became a flight director, choosing blue as his team color. The missions that he worked on included Gemini 8, where he was the first person other than Kraft to be lead flight director for a mission. Hodge was on shift when a stuck Gemini thruster brought a rapid end to the mission. He was also on duty during the launch test that resulted in the Apollo 1 fire which killed Virgil Grissom, Edward White and Roger Chaffee. ",
"score": "1.4186392"
},
{
"id": "14175622",
"title": "Pilot (Preacher)",
"text": " The \"Pilot\" of Preacher was directed by series creators Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, both first-time television directors. Prior to directing for the series, Rogen and Goldberg's directorial filmography included This Is the End (2013) and The Interview (2014). Shortly after the airing of the pilot, AMC released a featurette titled \"Directors' Commentary On “Pilot”\" which went into greater detail about the creation of the pilot episode, with both Rogen and Goldberg providing commentary and insight into its construction. The directors were intent on challenging themselves within the production, with the budget limitations helping in that regard, as it forced both ",
"score": "1.4115834"
},
{
"id": "9073659",
"title": "Pilot Speed",
"text": " Pilot Speed (formerly known as Pilate) was a Canadian rock band, who were active in the early 2000s. Based in Toronto, Ontario, the band consisted of vocalist and pianist Todd Clark, guitarist Chris Greenough, bassist Ruby Bumrah and drummer Bill Keeley. Clark was a graduate of the music program at the University of Western Ontario, while all of the other three members were alumni of OCAD University. They released their debut EP, For All That's Given, Wasted, independently in 2001 before signing to MapleMusic Recordings, which released their full-length debut album Caught by the Window in 2003. The album was most noted for the single \"Into Your Hideout\"; the song's music video, directed by Maxime Giroux, won the MuchMusic Video Award for Best Independent Video at ",
"score": "1.4102017"
},
{
"id": "12877364",
"title": "The Flying Ace",
"text": " With principal photography in Jacksonville, Florida, The Flying Ace was an example of producer Norman's \"home talent\" films, in which he would travel to various towns with stock footage and a basic script. After recruiting local celebrities for minor roles, they would film a small portion of footage (approximately 200 feet of new material) over the course of a few days. The films were processed at Norman's laboratory in Chicago. Once completed, the films would be screened and any funds raised would be split between Norman and the town where the scenes were shot. Norman cast J. Laurence Criner, a veteran of Harlem’s prestigious all-black theater troupe the Lafayette Players, in the leading role of Captain Billy Stokes, a black pilot who fought in France during World War I. While Eugene Bullard was a black pilot in the Lafayette Escadrille, African-Americans were not allowed to serve as ",
"score": "1.4080057"
},
{
"id": "26447212",
"title": "Pilot (Revenge)",
"text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the American television series Revenge. It premiered on ABC on September 21, 2011. The episode was written by Mike Kelley and directed by Phillip Noyce.",
"score": "1.4070531"
},
{
"id": "2971117",
"title": "Pilot (Lost)",
"text": " \"Pilot\" is the two-part television pilot of the ABC television series Lost, with part 1 premiering on September 22, 2004, and part 2 one week later on September 29. Both parts were directed by J. J. Abrams, who co-wrote the script with Damon Lindelof. Jeffrey Lieber, who had been commissioned by ABC to write the first version of the script, earned a story credit. Filmed in Oahu, Hawaii, it was the most expensive pilot episode up to that time, costing between $10 and $14 million, largely due to the expense of purchasing, shipping, and dressing a decommissioned Lockheed 1011 to represent Flight 815's wreckage. Many changes were made during the casting ",
"score": "1.4054728"
},
{
"id": "27683816",
"title": "Wes Archer",
"text": "\"Pilot\" ",
"score": "1.4042113"
},
{
"id": "26346022",
"title": "Pilot (The Deuce)",
"text": " by a former adult film star who was working craft services for the shot. Of the project, Simon said \"We’re interested in what it means when profit is the primary metric for what we call society. In that sense, this story is intended as neither prurient nor puritan. It’s about a product, and those human beings who created, sold, profited from and suffered with that product... Porn, prostitution, pimps, the Mob, after-hours nightlife, institutional corruption, and New York in its Wild West heyday ... it’s a world rich in character, and a fascinating story we’re eager to tell.\" Filming began in October 2015, and in January, 2016, the pilot was picked up for series.",
"score": "1.4007639"
},
{
"id": "8882905",
"title": "Ace Eli and Rodger of the Skies",
"text": " Steven Spielberg had developed the story of a flyer with a young son, containing themes that interested him: aircraft and flying and parental responsibility. He developed the premise with fellow Cal State alumni Claudia Salter, and hoped to direct it himself, but Richard D. Zanuck, who was then the president of 20th Century Fox, declined to hire Spielberg as director. Producers Robert Fryer and James Cresson hired John Erman to direct because he was older. The film originally ended with Eli committing suicide, but the studio recut it to give it a happier ending. Spielberg was so displeased by the film that he publicly complained it had been \"turned into a really sick film. They should bury it.\" Spielberg would not make a film for Twentieth Century Fox until 2002's Minority Report (even then, this was a co-production with DreamWorks). Fryer, ",
"score": "1.3968065"
}
] |
Who was the director of La renzoni?
|
[
"Maurits Binger",
"Maurits H. Binger"
] |
director
|
La renzoni
| 1,390,145 | 96 |
[
{
"id": "25670032",
"title": "Paolo Reni",
"text": " Paolo Reni was an Italian art director.",
"score": "1.5586116"
},
{
"id": "6732105",
"title": "Carlo Lizzani",
"text": " (1971). His film L'oro di Roma (1961) examined events around the final deportation of the Jews of Rome and the Roman roundup, grande razzia, of October 1943. For his 1968 film Bandits in Milan he won a David di Donatello award as best director and a Nastro d'Argento award for best screenplay. Lizzani worked frequently for Italian television in the 1980s and supervised the Venice International Film Festival for four editions, from 1979 to 1982. In 1994 Lizzani was a member of the jury at the Berlin Film Festival. For his 1996 film Celluloide, which deals with the making of Rome, Open City, ",
"score": "1.5571063"
},
{
"id": "29583645",
"title": "La renzoni",
"text": " La renzoni is a 1916 Dutch silent drama film directed by Maurits Binger.",
"score": "1.5512962"
},
{
"id": "6024326",
"title": "Renzo Spinaci",
"text": " .",
"score": "1.4860905"
},
{
"id": "756768",
"title": "Renzo Marignano",
"text": " Renzo Marignano (26 March 1923 - 25 November 1987), sometimes credited as Renzo Marignani, was an Italian actor and film director. Born in Genoa, after World War II Marignano was one of the founders of Cimofilm, a production company specialized in documentaries, some of which he also directed. In 1958 he moved to Rome where he started a career as character actor, appearing in a large number of films. He also was assistant director for several films by Pietro Germi and Mario Monicelli.",
"score": "1.4843526"
},
{
"id": "6169011",
"title": "Maurizio Ferrini",
"text": "1986 - Il commissario Lo Gatto, director Dino Risi ; 1987 - Animali metropolitani, director Steno ; 1988 - Compagni di scuola, director Carlo Verdone ; 1989 - Saremo felici, director Gianfrancesco Lazotti ; 1992 - Sognando la California, director Carlo Vanzina ",
"score": "1.4760692"
},
{
"id": "15177867",
"title": "Giovannino Guareschi",
"text": "La rabbia, 1963. Co-director with Pier Paolo Pasolini. ",
"score": "1.4674299"
},
{
"id": "6732104",
"title": "Carlo Lizzani",
"text": " Born in Rome, before World War II Lizzani worked as a scenarist on such films as Roberto Rossellini's Germany Year Zero, Alberto Lattuada's The Mill on the Po (both 1948) and Giuseppe De Santis' Bitter Rice (1949), for which he received an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Story. After directing documentaries, he debuted as a feature director with the admired World War II drama Achtung! Banditi! (1951). Respected for his awarded drama Chronicle of Poor Lovers (1954), he has proven a solid director of genre films, notably crime films such as The Violent Four (1968) and Crazy Joe (1974) or crime-comedy Roma ",
"score": "1.4640443"
},
{
"id": "31718441",
"title": "Francesco Carrozzini",
"text": " Carrozzini's first film job came at age 19, when he directed a 30-second promo for Italian MTV. In 2005, commissioned by advertising agency McCann Erickson, he created a commercial for the 51st Venice Biennale. He traveled to Poland the following year to shoot a documentary about the life and creative process of the Polish Theatre Wierszalin. Later that year, he collaborated with The New York Times on the creation of a project that became known as \"The New York Times Screen Tests,\" a collection of intimate video interviews with entertainment figures that included Natalie Portman, Charlize Theron, and Marion Cotillard. The series ",
"score": "1.4596074"
},
{
"id": "11664326",
"title": "Gianni Bongioanni",
"text": " Giovanni (Gianni) Bongioanni (August 6, 1921 – January 21, 2018) was an Italian film director, screenwriter, cinematographer, camera operator, editor, writer and occasional actor. He was one of the earliest directors to adopt an authentic, neo-realistic approach to Italian film-making, and his film La svolta pericolosa (1959) is considered the first Italian television series. In addition, Bongioanni was actively involved in the Italian TV and radio broadcasting industries, in which he worked for several years before making his first feature film, Tre per una rapina (1964).",
"score": "1.4588344"
},
{
"id": "31301929",
"title": "Gianni Di Venanzo",
"text": " Gianni Di Venanzo (18 December 1920, Teramo, Abruzzo – 3 February 1966, Rome), was an Italian cinematographer. Di Venanzo was one of the leading Italian post-war cinematographers with the unique distinction to be part of the neo-realist, post neo-realist and modern schools in Italian Cinema. He collaborated with several notable directors, working on films directed by Michelangelo Antonioni such as L'amore in città (Love in the City), Le Amiche (The Girlfriends), Il Grido (The Outcry), La Notte (Night) and L'Eclisse (The Eclipse); Francesco Rosi: La sfida (The Challenge), I Magliari (The Magliari), Salvatore Giuliano, Le mani sulla città (Hands Over the City), and Il momento della verità (The Moment of Truth); Federico Fellini: 8½ and Giulietta degli spiriti (Juliet of the Spirits) and a film directed by Joseph Losey: Eva. His last film was The Honey Pot (1967) directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz. His work with Michelangelo Antonioni, Francesco Rosi and Fellini made him one of the leading European masters of the camera of the middle part of the century. His career was cut short when he died in Rome of viral hepatitis at the age of 45.",
"score": "1.4387778"
},
{
"id": "1091217",
"title": "Mario Landi",
"text": " Mario Landi (12 October 1920 – 18 March 1992) was an Italian director known for his giallo movies such as Giallo a Venezia and his television series Le inchieste del commissario Maigret.",
"score": "1.4350935"
},
{
"id": "26090260",
"title": "Renato Polselli",
"text": " Renato Polselli (1922-2006) was an Italian film director and writer. Born in Arce, Lazio on 26 February 1922, Polselli began directing films in Italy in the early 1950s. He is best known for directing and writing the film The Vampire and the Ballerina. Polselli's film work since the 1970s was sporadic, and included work on horror film productions that remained unfinished. His later film works were often pornography made with his frequent collaborator Bruno Vanni. Polselli died in Italy on 1 October 2006.",
"score": "1.4346664"
},
{
"id": "11664339",
"title": "Gianni Bongioanni",
"text": " In 2003, Bongioanni published a book called RADIOTEVERE. This book is about his experiences as a young radio presenter and director towards the end of the Second World War. In 2008, he published another book, PROFESSIONE REGISTA (PROFESSION: DIRECTOR). This is an account of his professional life, from his early experience of the film industry in Turin to his troubled time in the world of Cinecittà.",
"score": "1.4328306"
},
{
"id": "29464512",
"title": "Roberto Moranzoni",
"text": " Roberto Moranzoni (October 5, 1880, Bari - December 14, 1959, Milan) was an Italian conductor, principally of opera. Moranzoni was a pupil of Pietro Mascagni and was selected by Mascagni to give his debut performances with the composer's Le maschere in 1901. Moranzoni was active internationally in the decade of the 1910s, directing the Boston Grand Opera from 1910 to 1917 and conducting in Paris and London. He conducted primarily from the Italian repertory at the Metropolitan Opera from 1917 to 1924, then was named conductor at the Chicago Civic Opera from 1924 to 1929. Among his most noteworthy performances were the first run of Le maschere (following Mascagni's own first production), the inaugural British production of Italo Montemezzi's L'amore dei tre re (1914), the world premiere of Giacomo Puccini's Il trittico at the Metropolitan Opera in 1918, and the world premiere of Joseph Carl Breil's The Legend, also at the Metropolitan Opera, in 1920.",
"score": "1.4311235"
},
{
"id": "25133773",
"title": "List of Italian film directors",
"text": "Ubaldo Ragona ; Simone Rapisarda Casanova ; Filippo Walter Ratti ; Piero Regnoli ; Pina Renzi ; Tonino Ricci ; Gennaro Righelli ; Davide Riondino ; Claudio Risi ; Dino Risi ; Marco Risi ; Nelo Risi ; Antonello Riva ; Alfredo Rizzo ; Alfredo Robert ; Roberto Roberti ; Giuseppe Rocca ; Alice Rohrwacher ; Luca Ronconi ; Brunello Rondi ; Gian Luigi Rondi ; Francesco Rosi ; Gian Paolo Rosmino ; Nello Rossati ; Renzo Rossellini ; Roberto Rossellini ; Franco Rossetti ; Francesco Rosi ; Salvatore Rosso ; Luigi Rovere ; Sergio Rubini ; Antonio Rubino ",
"score": "1.4309373"
},
{
"id": "265214",
"title": "Renzo Alfani",
"text": " .",
"score": "1.4110645"
},
{
"id": "1657696",
"title": "Renzo Lucidi",
"text": " Renzo Lucidi was an Italian film editor who worked on more than sixty films between 1940 and 1979. He worked with Orson Welles several times, including editing Othello (1951) and Mr. Arkadin (1955).",
"score": "1.4089838"
},
{
"id": "6405853",
"title": "Sergio Bertolucci",
"text": " From 2002-04 he worked at the Laboratori Nazionali di Frascati (LNF), where he was Director.",
"score": "1.4081205"
},
{
"id": "12178258",
"title": "Guglielmo Biraghi",
"text": " Guglielmo Biraghi (1 September 1927 – 23 April 2001) was an Italian critic and film festival director. He was the director of the Taormina Film Fest in the 1970s and became the 14th director of the Venice Film Festival in 1987. In 1970, he was a member of the jury at the 1970 Cannes Film Festival and in 1988, he was the Head of the Jury at the 38th Berlin International Film Festival.",
"score": "1.4056082"
}
] |
Who was the director of Messiah?
|
[
"William Klein"
] |
director
|
Messiah (1999 film)
| 1,495,476 | 98 |
[
{
"id": "26825454",
"title": "The Young Messiah (musical)",
"text": " the music director of RTE's The Late Late Show and The Irish Tenors. Leading international TV director, Bill Cosel, was hired to direct the TV coverage. RTÉ hired Paula Farrell, the Eurovision set designer, to design the set. Joe Canavan was hired as lighting designer. The Executive Producer for RTÉ was Peter Feeney. The RTÉ used its largest outside broadcast unit in filming this event. The event cost IR£1.4 million (or about US$2 million) to stage and also featured a spectacular light and sound extravaganza. The production was a labor of love for the three producers, McNamara, Kearns and Bennett, who between them personally contributed a substantial portion of the budget. John Kearns, a director of Messiah ",
"score": "1.5466402"
},
{
"id": "31368710",
"title": "The Messiah (2007 film)",
"text": "Director of Photography: Sadegh Mianji ; Sound: Seyed Jalal Hosseini ; Set & Costume Designer: Ahmad Soleimani-Nia ; Make-up Designer: Morteza Zarrabi ; Executive Producer: Abdollah Saeedi ; Production Assistant: Saeed Kazemi ; Photographer: Saeed Sourati ; Music: Loris Tjeknavorian ",
"score": "1.5395964"
},
{
"id": "4686655",
"title": "Messiah (American TV series)",
"text": " Messiah is an American thriller streaming television series created by Michael Petroni. The first season consists of ten episodes, which were released on Netflix on January 1, 2020. The series stars Mehdi Dehbi, Tomer Sisley, Michelle Monaghan, John Ortiz, Melinda Page Hamilton, Stefania LaVie Owen, Jane Adams, Sayyid El Alami, Fares Landoulsi, and Wil Traval. In March 2020, the series was canceled after one season.",
"score": "1.4921162"
},
{
"id": "24950844",
"title": "Savage Messiah (1972 film)",
"text": " Savage Messiah is a 1972 British biographical film of the life of French sculptor Henri Gaudier-Brzeska, made by Russ-Arts and distributed by MGM. It was directed and produced by Ken Russell, with Harry Benn as associate producer, from a screenplay by Christopher Logue, based on the book Savage Messiah by H. S. Ede. Much of the content of Ede's book came from letters sent between Henri Gaudier-Brzeska and his lover Sophie Brzeska. The musical score was by Michael Garrett – though music by Claude Debussy, Alexander Scriabin, and Sergei Prokofiev was also used – and the cinematography by Dick Bush. The sets were designed by Derek Jarman.",
"score": "1.4860175"
},
{
"id": "13794284",
"title": "Cyrus Nowrasteh",
"text": " Nowrasteh directed the biblical drama The Young Messiah, which was released on 11 March 2016. The story was adapted by Cyrus and Betsy Giffen Nowrasteh from Anne Rice's Christ the Lord, and was produced by 1492 Pictures and Ocean Blue Entertainment in association with CJ E&M Film Division. The film was distributed by Focus Features. The project had a jump start in early 2013 but was shut down in preproduction and was seemingly dead. Then in late 2014, the project was resurrected thanks to the efforts of Tracy K. Price and Bill Andrew, along with Italian producer Enzo Sisti. Filmed in Matera and Rome, Italy, the plot follows Jesus Christ at age seven, when he returns to Nazareth and learns about his true place as the son of God. On 10 December 2015, Nowrasteh was interviewed on EWTN by Raymond Arroyo. Nowrasteh said of the film: \"This is really a movie about a family and we take you inside the Holy Family.\"",
"score": "1.4736955"
},
{
"id": "4686659",
"title": "Messiah (American TV series)",
"text": " On November 17, 2017, it was announced that Netflix had given the production a series order for a first season consisting of ten episodes. The series was created by Michael Petroni who is also credited as an executive producer and showrunner of the series. Additional executive producers include Andrew Deane, James McTeigue, Mark Burnett and Roma Downey. Production companies involved with the series include Industry Entertainment and LightWorkers Media. On March 26, 2020, Netflix canceled the series after one season.",
"score": "1.4638126"
},
{
"id": "9593292",
"title": "Boris Starling",
"text": " levels of gore, Messiah was a commercial and critical success, reaching both The New York Times and the official UK bestseller lists. It was subsequently adapted for television by the BBC, with Starling taking a cameo role as a murder victim's corpse. There have been four television sequels broadcast. Messiah I-IV starred Ken Stott in the lead role as DCI Redfern Metcalfe. For Messiah V, Marc Warren took over as DCI Joseph Walker, heading up an entirely new cast. Messiah V was broadcast on BBC1 in January 2008. Starling is listed as series creator of the franchise. His second book, ",
"score": "1.45741"
},
{
"id": "24950850",
"title": "Savage Messiah (1972 film)",
"text": " According to Rex Reed the film was a \"tremendous hit with audiences\" at the Venice Film Festival although not with critics. The Los Angeles Times said the film was \"utterly unconvincing.\" Russell described the film as \"just two people talking\". He said it and Song of Summer helped get him the job of directing Altered States, because it showed he could handle actors.",
"score": "1.4560336"
},
{
"id": "11575154",
"title": "Messiah of Evil",
"text": " Messiah of Evil (later also shown under the title Dead People) is a 1973 American supernatural horror film co-written, co-produced, and co-directed by Willard Huyck and Gloria Katz, and starring Marianna Hill, Michael Greer, Anitra Ford, Royal Dano, and Elisha Cook Jr.. Its plot follows a woman who travels to a remote coastal town in California to find her missing artist father; upon arrival, she finds herself in the midst of a series of bizarre incidents. Released theatrically in the spring of 1973, it would later be re-released in 1983 under the alternate title Dead People. Directors Huyck and Katz are the husband-and-wife team who would subsequently direct Howard the Duck as well as produce screenplays for American Graffiti and Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.",
"score": "1.454544"
},
{
"id": "31368713",
"title": "The Messiah (2007 film)",
"text": " The film was played at the Philadelphia Film Festival. The 2007 Religion Today Film Festival in Italy has given the movie an award for promoting interfaith understanding.",
"score": "1.4438779"
},
{
"id": "28863147",
"title": "Messiah (2011 film)",
"text": " Messiah (メサイア) is a 2011 Japanese film directed by Shusuke Kaneko.",
"score": "1.443217"
},
{
"id": "12211789",
"title": "The Young Messiah",
"text": " The Young Messiah is a 2016 American biblical drama film directed by Cyrus Nowrasteh and co-written by Betsy Giffen Nowrasteh and Nowrasteh, based on the novel Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt by Anne Rice. The film stars Adam Greaves-Neal, Sean Bean, David Bradley, Lee Boardman, Jonathan Bailey, and David Burke. The film revolves around a fictional interpretation of a seven-year-old Jesus, who tries to discover the truth about his life when he returns to Nazareth from Egypt. Nowrasteh acquired the film rights in 2011, and wrote the script along with his wife Betsy Giffen. Chris Columbus developed the film through his 1492 Pictures banner and helped the film financing by Ocean Blue Entertainment. FilmDistrict acquired the US distribution rights in ",
"score": "1.4346356"
},
{
"id": "11814773",
"title": "Geraldine Connor",
"text": " associate director – and subsequently being performed internationally, drawing record audiences of up to 27,000. At the invitation of the Trinidad and Tobago government, Carnival Messiah had sold-out at Queen's Hall, Port of Spain, in 2003 and in 2004, and in 2008 excerpts were showcased at the Royal Albert Hall. Her other successes as a director include Margaret Busby's historical drama Yaa Asantewaa—Warrior Queen, a co-production between the West Yorkshire Playhouse and Adzido Pan-African Dance, which toured the UK and Ghana in 2001–02, Vodou Nation (2004), a multi-media reflection of Haiti, Blues in the Night (2005), and a production at the West Yorkshire Playhouse of the reggae-based musical derived from the iconic 1972 film The Harder They Come.",
"score": "1.4322703"
},
{
"id": "11575170",
"title": "Messiah of Evil",
"text": " Principal photography of Messiah of Evil began on September 1, 1971 in California, on a budget of under $1 million.",
"score": "1.4228811"
},
{
"id": "4126524",
"title": "Savage Messiah (2002 film)",
"text": " Savage Messiah (Moïse, l’affaire Roch Thériault) is a Canadian thriller-drama film, released in 2002. The film dramatizes the real-life story of Roch \"Moïse\" Thériault, a cult leader who was arrested in Burnt River, Ontario, in 1989. The film stars Luc Picard as Thériault, and Polly Walker as Paula Jackson, the social worker whose investigation revealed Thériault's crimes.",
"score": "1.4194767"
},
{
"id": "7787397",
"title": "The Messiah (1975 film)",
"text": " The Messiah (Il messia) is a 1975 Italian / French film directed by Roberto Rossellini.",
"score": "1.4182233"
},
{
"id": "4019736",
"title": "Messiah Prophet",
"text": "Rock the Flock – 1984 Morada Records, Jim Zimmerman producer, Cedric Winter engineer, executive producer Ray Fletcher ; Master of the Metal – 1986 Pure Metal Records, Bill Grabowski producer, executive producer Ray Fletcher ; Colors – 1996 UCan Records, executive producer Ray Fletcher ",
"score": "1.4175606"
},
{
"id": "1922976",
"title": "Waco: Madman or Messiah",
"text": " Waco: Madman or Messiah is a 2018 American documentary film directed by Christopher Spencer about the Branch Davidians and David Koresh in the years leading up to and including the 51-day stand-off with the FBI which ended with the 1993 raid on Mount Carmel, Texas. The four-hour, two-part documentary special premiered on January 28, 2018.",
"score": "1.4171385"
},
{
"id": "4686658",
"title": "Messiah (American TV series)",
"text": "Philip Baker Hall as Kelman Katz ; Beau Bridges as Edmund DeGuilles ; Hugo Armstrong as Ruben ; Barbara Eve Harris as Katherin ; Nimrod Hochenberg as Israel ; Emily Kinney as Staci Kirmani ; Jackson Hurst as Jonah Kirmani ; Nicole Rose Scimeca as Raeah Kirmani ; Makram Khoury as Mullah Omar ; Ori Pfeffer as Alon ; Rona-Lee Shimon as Mika Dahan ; Kenneth Miller as Larry ; Assaâd Bouab as Qamar Maloof ; Dermot Mulroney as President John Young ",
"score": "1.4149581"
},
{
"id": "25084703",
"title": "Messiah (software)",
"text": " Messiah has been used for character animation and the creation of VFX shots in several feature films and shorts, including Ghost Rider, Harry Potter, Hellboy, Into the Deep, Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius, Syriana, The Triplets of Belleville, X-Men, and Zambezia.",
"score": "1.4129627"
}
] |
Who was the director of Homecoming?
|
[
"Todd Holland"
] |
director
|
Homecoming (Miss Guided)
| 4,490,656 | 68 |
[
{
"id": "29598688",
"title": "The Homecoming (film)",
"text": " The Homecoming is a 1973 British-American drama film directed by Peter Hall based on the play of the same name by Harold Pinter. The film was produced by Ely Landau for the American Film Theatre, which presented thirteen film adaptations of plays in the United States from 1973 to 1975. The film was screened at the 1974 Cannes Film Festival, but was not entered into the main competition.",
"score": "1.6329691"
},
{
"id": "1128011",
"title": "Homecoming (Miss Guided)",
"text": " “Homecoming” is the pilot episode of the ABC television series Miss Guided. It was the series premiere of the show, and was written by Caroline Williams and directed by Todd Holland It aired March 18, 2008.",
"score": "1.5781322"
},
{
"id": "14949977",
"title": "Homecoming (2001 play)",
"text": " Homecoming was directed by Maryann Lombardi and it starred Lauren Weedman. This show is based on true stories from her life.",
"score": "1.5769132"
},
{
"id": "26959990",
"title": "Homecoming (2009 film)",
"text": " Homecoming is a 2009 American independent horror-thriller film, directed by Morgan J. Freeman and written by Katie L. Fetting, Jake Goldberger and Frank Hannah. The film follows a student couple, Mike (Matt Long) and Elizabeth (Jessica Stroup), on their homecoming. Elizabeth is taken home by Mike's ex-girlfriend Shelby (Mischa Barton) after a road accident. Shelby is soon revealed to be fixated on Mike and subsequently treats Elizabeth in a cruel and deranged manner.",
"score": "1.5518801"
},
{
"id": "29410965",
"title": "The Homecoming",
"text": " performed at the Trafalgar Studios, London, starring John Macmillan, Keith Allen, John Simm, Gemma Chan, Ron Cook and Gary Kemp. Directed by Jamie Lloyd. Design by Soutra Gilmour. Lighting by Richard Howell. Sound by George Dennis. Others Other productions of The Homecoming have at times been listed on the home page of Pinter's official website and through its lefthand menu of links to the \"Calendar\" (\"Worldwide Calendar\"). A film with the same name was made in the UK in 1973, featuring several actors from the London premiere. The play was chosen by Lusaka Theatre Club as its entry for the 1967 Zambia Drama Festival, and was awarded prizes for best production and best actor (Norman Williams as Lenny). The director was Trevor Eastwood.",
"score": "1.5453483"
},
{
"id": "30069582",
"title": "Homecoming (1984 film)",
"text": " Homecoming (似水流年) is a 1984 Hong Kong film directed by Yim Ho. It won the Best Film Award at the 4th Hong Kong Film Awards. The film was also selected as the Hong Kong entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 57th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee.",
"score": "1.5271745"
},
{
"id": "27709576",
"title": "Homecoming (TV series)",
"text": " Homecoming is an American psychological thriller television series, based on the Gimlet Media podcast of the same name. Created by Eli Horowitz and Micah Bloomberg, the series premiered November 2, 2018, on Amazon Prime Video. Horowitz and Bloomberg also serve as writers and executive producers alongside Sam Esmail, Chad Hamilton, Julia Roberts, Alex Blumberg, Matt Lieber, and Chris Giliberti. Esmail also directed every episode of the first season, which stars Roberts, Bobby Cannavale, Stephan James, Shea Whigham, Alex Karpovsky, and Sissy Spacek. The series was given an initial series order for two seasons. The second season deviates from the podcast and features a new story and characters. The second season was directed by Kyle Patrick Alvarez and stars Janelle Monáe, Chris Cooper and Joan Cusack with Stephan James and Hong Chau returning from the first season. The second season premiered on May 22, 2020.",
"score": "1.5225029"
},
{
"id": "13904776",
"title": "Homecoming (1996 film)",
"text": " Homecoming is a 1996 American made-for-television drama film starring Anne Bancroft. On April 14, 1996, Homecoming aired on the American cable channel, Showtime. The screenplay was written by Christopher Carlson and was based on Cynthia Voigt's novel, Homecoming. The movie follows the story of four children who were abandoned by their mother and left to fend for themselves. Homecoming was directed by Mark Jean, produced by Jack Baran, and the executive producer was Shirō Sasaki. This drama is rated PG and has a running time of 105 minutes. Homecoming did not win any awards, despite being nominated for a total of five. Anne Bancroft was nominated for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a TV Movie or Miniseries by the Screen Actors Guild. Christopher Carlson and Mark Jean were nominated for Adapted Long Form by the Writers Guild of America, USA. The movie gathered three Young Artist Awards nominations: Best Family TV Movie or Mini-Series - Cable, Best Performance in a TV Movie/Home Video - Young Ensemble, and Kimberlee Peterson was nominated for Best Performance in a TV Movie/Mini-Series - Young Actress.",
"score": "1.5126641"
},
{
"id": "13455304",
"title": "Dick Carruthers",
"text": " In 2011 Carruthers directed The Script's DVD Homecoming: Live at the Aviva Stadium, Dublin, which was part of the Irish group's Science & Faith Tour and was their biggest headline show to date (50,000 people).",
"score": "1.5119877"
},
{
"id": "27709579",
"title": "Homecoming (TV series)",
"text": "Ayden Mayeri as Reina, the receptionist at the Homecoming Facility. (season 1) ; Bill Stevenson as Abe (season 1) ; Sam Marra as Javen (season 1) ; Marianne Jean-Baptiste as Gloria Morisseau, Walter's mother. (season 1) ; Jeremy Allen White as Shrier, a former soldier from the same unit as Walter and now a fellow client at the Homecoming facility. (season 1) ; Alden Ray as Maurice (season 1) ; Henri Esteve as Abel (season 1) ; Frankie Shaw as Dara (season 1) ; Gwen Van Dam as Mrs. Trotter (season 1) ; Brooke Bloom as Pam, Carrasco's boss at the Department of Defense. ; Sydney Poitier Heartsong as Lydia Belfast, Colin's wife. (season 1) ",
"score": "1.511955"
},
{
"id": "27709578",
"title": "Homecoming (TV series)",
"text": "Julia Roberts as Heidi Bergman (season 1), Walter's caseworker who is employed at a secret government facility, the Homecoming Transitional Support Center. ; Bobby Cannavale as Colin Belfast (season 1; guest season 2), Heidi's supervisor. ; Stephan James as Walter Cruz, a young military veteran and client of the Homecoming facility who is eager to rejoin civilian life. ; Shea Whigham as Thomas Carrasco (season 1), a bureaucrat from the Department of Defense investigating the Homecoming Transitional Support Center. ; Alex Karpovsky as Craig (season 1; recurring season 2), an employee at the Homecoming facility. ; Sissy Spacek as Ellen Bergman (season 1), Heidi's mother. ; Janelle Monáe as Jacqueline Calico / Alex Eastern (season 2), a woman who wakes up on a rowboat and goes on the search for her identity. ; Hong Chau as Audrey Temple (season 2; recurring season 1), an assistant at Geist Emergent Group, Homecoming's parent company. ; Chris Cooper as Leonard Geist (season 2), the owner of Geist Emergent Group. ; Joan Cusack as Francine Bunda (season 2), a representative from the Department of Defense who becomes a partner at Geist after the Homecoming incident. ",
"score": "1.5110044"
},
{
"id": "2971452",
"title": "Homecoming (Lost)",
"text": " \"Homecoming\" is the 15th episode of the first season of the American drama television series Lost. It aired on ABC in the United States and on CTV in Canada on February 9, 2005. The episode was written by executive producer Damon Lindelof and directed by Kevin Hooks. The episode sees the return of Claire Littleton (Emilie de Ravin), who escaped after she was kidnapped by Ethan Rom (William Mapother). However, her return meant that all the survivors' lives are in danger, and the team have to figure out a way to stop Ethan. Charlie Pace (Dominic Monaghan) is featured in the episode's flashbacks. \"Homecoming\" was seen by nineteen-and-a-half million American viewers, and received mixed to positive reviews, where Charlie's backstory received general praise. Lindelof, however, would later consider it one of his least favorite Lost episodes, as he felt exploring Charlie's drug addiction once again was a wrong move.",
"score": "1.5092138"
},
{
"id": "1862585",
"title": "Fielder Cook",
"text": " Fielder Cook (March 9, 1923 – June 20, 2003) was an American television and film director, producer, and writer whose 1971 television film The Homecoming: A Christmas Story spawned the series The Waltons.",
"score": "1.507092"
},
{
"id": "26733064",
"title": "Topher Campbell",
"text": " His films have appeared in festivals worldwide. At the age of 24, he participated in the Regional Theatre Young Directors Training Scheme, which led to his first film, The Homecoming (1995). Created with artist/photographer Ajamu X through the Black Arts Video Project, :282 The Homecoming is a meditation on Black masculinity and sexuality, themes he has continued to explore throughout his work.",
"score": "1.504915"
},
{
"id": "27709577",
"title": "Homecoming (TV series)",
"text": " Heidi Bergman had been a social worker at the Homecoming Transitional Support Center, a live-in facility run by the Geist Group; the facility ostensibly helped soldiers transition to civilian life, though why they needed this help is unclear. Four years later, Bergman has started a new life working as a waitress but has difficulty remembering her time at Homecoming. After a U.S. Department of Defense auditor inquires as to why she left Homecoming, Bergman comes to realize that she had been misled about the true purpose of the facility.",
"score": "1.5005484"
},
{
"id": "26951112",
"title": "Homecoming (1928 film)",
"text": " Homecoming (Heimkehr) is a 1928 German silent war drama film directed by Joe May and starring Lars Hanson, Dita Parlo, and Gustav Fröhlich. It was shot at the Babelsberg Studios in Berlin and on location in Hamburg. The film's sets were designed by the art director Artur Schwarz.",
"score": "1.4963498"
},
{
"id": "9315474",
"title": "Andrew Carroll",
"text": " duty troops, veterans, and their loved ones, write about the military experience. The program and book also inspired two films: One directed by Lawrence Bridges, titled Muse of Fire and features Kevin Costner and people involved in the program, either reading their written works or talking about the program's mission, and a second documentary, Operation Homecoming, directed by Richard Robbins, which was broadcast on PBS and also shown in movie theaters nationwide. Robbins' film included re-enactments of the written material along with voiceovers by prominent actors, including Robert Duvall, Aaron Echkhart, Blair Underwood, and John Krasinski. Robbins' documentary was nominated for an Oscar and won an Emmy.",
"score": "1.4950261"
},
{
"id": "31304142",
"title": "Homecoming (The Wire)",
"text": " \"Homecoming\" is the sixth episode of the third season of the HBO original series, The Wire. The episode was written by Rafael Alvarez from a story by David Simon & Rafael Alvarez and was directed by Leslie Libman. It originally aired on October 31, 2004.",
"score": "1.4909167"
},
{
"id": "31408754",
"title": "Hasan Minhaj: Homecoming King",
"text": " Homecoming King was filmed January 27, 2017, at the Mondavi Center at Minhaj's alma mater, the \tUniversity of California, Davis, in his hometown of Davis. He first created the one-man show after being selected by the Sundance Institute's New Frontier Story Lab in 2014. He performed the set at the 2015 Just for Laughs Festival in Montreal before his off-Broadway premiere in October 2015 at the Cherry Lane Theatre in New York City, where it ran for four weeks. He went on to perform the show in more than 40 cities before shooting the special. Minhaj chose the title Homecoming King to reflect his status as the high school underdog who never went to football games or dances, while also conveying a message of redemption as an adult. The art director for the show was Sam Spratt, who created multiple paintings depicting Minhaj's life in the style of Norman Rockwell for posters and the website. The stage set contained bright yellows and oranges to reflect Indian culture. Minhaj also teamed up with Swedish composer Ludwig Göransson for the musical elements of the show.",
"score": "1.4899783"
},
{
"id": "27928568",
"title": "Homecoming (1948 film)",
"text": " Homecoming is a 1948 romantic drama starring Clark Gable and Lana Turner. It was the third of their four films together, and like two of the others, was about a couple caught up in World War II.",
"score": "1.4890656"
}
] |
Who was the director of Thank You, Madame?
|
[
"Carmine Gallone",
"Carmelo Gallone"
] |
director
|
Thank You, Madame
| 1,413,462 | 85 |
[
{
"id": "31803452",
"title": "Thank You, Madame",
"text": " Thank You, Madame (German title:Opernring) is a 1936 Austrian musical film directed by Carmine Gallone and starring Jan Kiepura, Friedl Czepa and Luli Deste. It is also known by the alternative title In the Sunshine (Im Sonnenschein). The film's sets were designed by Julius von Borsody.",
"score": "1.6735868"
},
{
"id": "3110991",
"title": "Yvette Etiévant",
"text": " Vieux de la vieille (directed by Gilles Grangier) - Louise, la patronne du bistrot ; 1960: L'Ours (directed by Edmond Séchan) - Madame Médard ; 1960: La Mort de Belle (directed by Edouard Molinaro) - Alice, la secrétaire du juge ; 1962: War of the Buttons (directed by Yves Robert) - Mme Lebrac ; 1963: Le Jour et l'Heure (directed by René Clément) - La caissière de la pharmacie ; 1963: Thank You, Natercia (directed by Pierre Kast) - (uncredited) ; 1963: Graduation Year (directed by José-André Lacour) - Mme cachou ; 1964: Les Yeux cernés (directed by Robert Hossein) - L'hôtelière ; 1964: Mata Hari, agent H21 (directed by ",
"score": "1.4545674"
},
{
"id": "26589708",
"title": "Enter Madame (1935 film)",
"text": "Elliott Nugent - director ; Benjamin Glazer - producer ; Gladys Lehman - screenplay ; Charles Brackett - screenplay ; Nathaniel Finston - musical direction ; Travis Banton - costume design ; Theodor Sparkuhl - photography ; William C. Mellor - photography ; Ernst Fegté - art director ",
"score": "1.4535921"
},
{
"id": "11122542",
"title": "Nina Moise",
"text": " Moise was an actress who became a theatrical and film director. She was both an actress and director with the Jessie Bonstelle company in Detroit. In 1914, she gave a dramatic reading for the Ebell Club in Los Angeles. In 1917 she was named the first professional director of the Provincetown Players. \"Tactful handling of temperaments on Nina's part pulled the whole bill through to success,\" recalled Edna Kenton. She directed seventeen productions, collaborating with playwrights Floyd Dell, Eugene O'Neill, Neith Boyce, and Susan Glaspell, among others, before she left the Provincetown Players in May 1918. Later in 1918, during World War I, she was head of the educational department ",
"score": "1.4524357"
},
{
"id": "6568004",
"title": "Jane Marken",
"text": " ; Mister Taxi (Monsieur Taxi, 1952) - Tante Louise ; A Mother's Secret (1952) - Rosa ; Crazy for Love (Le Trou normand, 1952) - Augustine Lemoine, la tante ; Companions of the Night (Les Compagnes de la nuit, 1953) - Madame Anita ; Captain Pantoufle (Capitaine Pantoufle, 1953) - Madame Cauchard ; Maternité clandestine (1953) - La tante de Jacques ; Leguignon guérisseur (1954) - Mme Leguignon ; Chiens perdus sans collier (1955) - La déléguée ; Tant qu'il y aura des femmes (1955) ; Marie Antoinette Queen of France (1956) - Mme Victoire ; Pity for the Vamps (1956) - Mme Edith ; And God Created Woman (1956) - Madame ",
"score": "1.4491975"
},
{
"id": "4182169",
"title": "Ursula Dirichs",
"text": " 1980: Sparkling Red (Madame Colette) - Directed by: Otto Düben, with Ruth Drexel, Elisabeth Justin, Walter Lenz ; 1981: The Duration of the Piano Players - Director: Walter Adler, with Dieter Laser, Elisabeth Schwarz, Peter Roggisch ; 1981: Noblesse oblige (Lady Bowington) - Directed by: Otto Düben, with Horst Bollmann, Witta Pohl, Hans Baur ; 1988: The Assassination (after Harry Mulisch) - Director: Hans Gerd Krogmann, Peter Fitz, Benjamin Tholen, Friedrich W. Bauschulte ; 1989: The Daisies (cat) - Director: Raoul Wolfgang Schnell, with Heinz Schimmelpfennig, Verena von Behr, Charles Wirths ; 1991: The Hitchhiker's Guide to Space (after The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams) (The unobtrusive Losverkäuferin) - Director: Hartmut Kirste, with Rolf Boysen, Felix von Manteuffel, Ingo Hülsmann ",
"score": "1.4482222"
},
{
"id": "28053382",
"title": "Rory Kennedy",
"text": " and very much like me\" and discovered they \"were not monsters.\" She directed Thank You, Mr. President: Helen Thomas at the White House for HBO Documentary Films, which premiered on HBO on August 18, 2008. According to reviews, the 40-minute-long documentary provided an interesting, though brief, glimpse into the iconic journalist. On June 30, 2009, Kennedy was invited to join the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Kennedy directed The Fence (La Barda), which premiered at the opening night of The Sundance Film Festival 2010. The film made its debut on HBO on September 16, 2010. Favorably received, it details the woeful inadequacies of ",
"score": "1.4480526"
},
{
"id": "14832163",
"title": "Suzanne Schiffman",
"text": " qui aimait les femmes (1977) (writer, first assistant director, actress) - directed by François Truffaut ; L'argent de poche (1976) (original scenario, first assistant director) - directed by François Truffaut ; The Story of Adèle H. (1975) (writer, assistant director) - directed by François Truffaut ; Out 1: Spectre (1974) (writer) - directed by Jacques Rivette ; Pleure pas la bouche pleine (1973) (writer, first assistant director) - directed by Pascal Thomas ; La nuit américaine (1973) (writer, assistant director) - directed by François Truffaut ; La société du spectacle (1973) (documentalist) - directed by Guy Debord ; Such a Gorgeous Kid Like Me (1972) (assistant director) - directed by François Truffaut ; Two English ",
"score": "1.4476435"
},
{
"id": "26589706",
"title": "Enter Madame (1935 film)",
"text": " Enter Madame is an American romantic comedy film directed by Elliott Nugent, starring Elissa Landi and Cary Grant, and released by Paramount Pictures. The film is based on a three-act play of the same name that ran from August 16, 1920 to April 1922 at the Garrick Theatre in New York City for a total of 350 performances. The stage version was directed by Brock Pemberton. The 1935 movie was a remake of a 1922 silent film starring Clara Kimball Young and Louise Dresser.",
"score": "1.4437364"
},
{
"id": "27335984",
"title": "Dear World",
"text": " The musical had a notably troubled preview period that included multiple changes to the script and score. Lucia Victor, Gower Champion's assistant and a director of several revivals, including Hello, Dolly!, was hired as director, but resigned shortly thereafter, due to \"artistic differences\" with the musical's star, Angela Lansbury, and the authors, according to The New York Times. Peter Glenville was then hired, but resigned following negative reviews during tryouts in Boston, Massachusetts. Producer Alexander H. Cohen stated (in an article in The New York Times of November 19, 1968) that \"there was no friction between Mr. Glenville and Miss Lansbury, the composer, the authors or the producer... an advance arrangement had been made with Mr. Glenville to direct the show through last week only.\" The show's final director, Joe Layton, was then hired, also replacing the choreographer Donald Saddler. The musical opened on Broadway at the Mark Hellinger Theatre on February 6, 1969 and closed on May 31, 1969 after 132 performances and 45 previews. The show was directed and choreographed by Joe Layton, scenic design was by Oliver Smith, costume design was by Freddy Wittop and lighting design was by Jean Rosenthal.",
"score": "1.4280233"
},
{
"id": "25465127",
"title": "Gertrude Jeannette",
"text": " (1965), The Skin of Our Teeth (1975) and Vieux Carré (1977). In 1970 she appeared in the film Cotton Comes to Harlem, and in 1972 she appeared in the film Black Girl. Her film credits also include Shaft. In 1979, she founded the H.A.D.L.E.Y. players (Harlem Artist’s Development League Especially for You). She acted into her 80s, retiring from directing at the age of 98. Jeannette was one of several prominent African American theater directors featured in the 13 minute documentary Drama Mamas: Black Women Theatre Directors In the Spotlight and Remembered, which was shown at the Reel Sisters of the Diaspora Film Festival in Brooklyn, New York in March 2006.",
"score": "1.4251499"
},
{
"id": "5009418",
"title": "Lewis Allen (director)",
"text": " In 1935 he began working on Broadway. His credits include directing the U.S. premieres of J.B. Priestley's Laburnum Grove (1935) (131 performances) and The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse (1937) with Cedric Hardwicke. He did the general stage direction of Victoria Regina (1935–36) (a big hit, with Helen Hayes and Vincent Price), Tovarich (1936–37) (another success, 356 performances) and French Without Tears (1937–38). He later did Priestley's I Have Been Here Before (1938) and Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur's Ladies and Gentleman with Helen Hayes (1939–40). Allen then received an offer to direct for Paramount. Allen went to London to direct a production of The Women in 1940. In May 1941 he signed a contract at Paramount Pictures.",
"score": "1.4226449"
},
{
"id": "14832162",
"title": "Suzanne Schiffman",
"text": " (1984) (scenario, first assistant director) - directed by Jacques Rivette ; The Man Who Loved Women (1983) (first story) - directed by Blake Edwards ; Vivement dimanche! (1983) (writer, assistant director) - directed by François Truffaut ; Merry-Go-Round (1981) (scenario) - directed by Jacques Rivette ; Le Pont du Nord (1981) (scenario, first assistant director) - directed by Jacques Rivette ; The Woman Next Door (1981) (original scenario, assistant director) - directed by François Truffaut ; The Last Metro (1980) (scenario, assistant director) - directed by François Truffaut ; L'amour en fuite (1979) (scenario, first assistant director) - directed by François Truffaut ; La chambre verte (1978) (assistant director) - directed by François Truffaut ; ",
"score": "1.4196486"
},
{
"id": "32152535",
"title": "Marcel Varnel",
"text": " ; Oh, Mr Porter! (1937) – Director ; Convict 99 (1938) – Director ; Hey! Hey! USA! (1938) – Director ; The Loves of Madame Dubarry (1938) – Director ; Old Bones of the River (1938) – Director ; Alf's Button Afloat (1938) – Director ; Ask a Policeman (1939) – Director ; Where's That Fire? (1939) – Director ; The Frozen Limits (1939) – Director ; Band Waggon (1940) – Director ; Let George Do It! (1940) – Director ; Gasbags (1940) – Director ; The Ghost of St Michaels (1941) – Director ; Turned Out Nice Again ",
"score": "1.4124861"
},
{
"id": "1521200",
"title": "Jules Dassin",
"text": " May 25, 1951, and film director Michael Gordon on September 17, 1951. Dassin was from this point on, officially listed as an identified past or present member of the Communist Party. In 1952, after Dassin had been out of work for two years, actress Bette Davis hired him to direct her in the Broadway revue Two's Company. The show ran for 90 performances, closing on March 8, 1953 due to Davis' poor health, and Dassin returned to Europe in order to avoid the issuance of a subpoena to testify before the United States House of Representatives, Committee on Un-American Activities.",
"score": "1.4074155"
},
{
"id": "7553492",
"title": "André Birabeau",
"text": " Your Orders, Madame, directed by Mario Mattoli (Italy, 1939, based on the play Un déjeuner de soleil) À vos ordres, Madame, directed by Jean Boyer (France, 1942, based on the short story Chfr. 35) ; Punto negro, directed by (Argentina, 1943, based on the play Pamplemousse) ; Fiori d'arancio, directed by (Italy, 1944, based on the play La fleur d'oranger) ; Lost Kisses, directed by Mario Soffici (Argentina, 1945, based on the play Baisers perdus) ; La Femme fatale, directed by Jean Boyer (France, 1946, based on the play La Femme fatale) ; Too Young for Love, directed by (Italy, 1953, based on the play Dame Nature) ",
"score": "1.4055753"
},
{
"id": "25465122",
"title": "Gertrude Jeannette",
"text": " Gertrude Hadley Jeannette (November 28, 1914 – April 4, 2018) was an American playwright and film and stage actress. She is also known for being the first woman to work as a licensed taxi driver in New York City, which she began doing in 1942. Despite being blacklisted during the Red Scare in the 1950s, she wrote five plays and founded the H.A.D.L.E.Y. Players in Harlem, New York, remaining active in mentoring African-American actors in New York City. In the 1960s and 1970s she appeared in Broadway productions such as The Long Dream, Nobody Loves an Albatross, The Amen Corner, The Skin of Our Teeth and Vieux Carré. She also appeared in films such as Cotton Comes to Harlem in 1969, Shaft in 1971, and Black Girl in 1972. She acted into her 80s and retired from directing theater at the age of 98.",
"score": "1.4013474"
},
{
"id": "31803453",
"title": "Thank You, Madame",
"text": "Jan Kiepura as Toni Kowalski ; Friedl Czepa as Mizzi, flower girl ; Luli Deste as Corinne Dalma ; Theo Lingen as Der Diener ; Fritz Imhoff as Heini Weidl ; Anton Pointner as Frank Dalma ; Anton Neugenbauer as Der Operndirektor ; Robert Valberg as Lawyer ; Babette Devrient as Großmamma Sophie ; Maria Mell as Großmamma Emma ",
"score": "1.399704"
},
{
"id": "3440429",
"title": "Lise Delamare",
"text": " (1946) - Léonora Galigai ; Monsieur Vincent (1947) - Françoise Marguerite de Silly, comtesse de Joigny ; A Certain Mister (1950) - Madame Lecorduvent ; The King of the Bla Bla Bla (1950) - Lucienne Lafare ; The Grand Maneuver (1955) - Juliette Duverger ; Lola Montès (1955) - Mrs. Craigie, Lola's mother ; Escapade (1957) - Mme. Mercenay ; Nathalie (1957) - La comtesse de Lancy ; L'ennemi dans l'ombre (1960) - La marquise ; Captain Blood (1960) - Marie de Médicis ; Bernadette of Lourdes (1961) - La mère générale ; Vive Henri IV... vive l'amour! (1961) - Mme de Montglat ; Les démons de minuit (1961) ; Clérambard (1969) - Madame de Lere ; Hail the Artist (1973) - Lucienne - l'actrice qui joue Lady Rosemond ; Baxter (1998) - Madame Deville ",
"score": "1.3995063"
},
{
"id": "3556614",
"title": "Enter Madame (play)",
"text": " Enter Madame was a 1920 Broadway three-act comedy written by Gilda Varesi and Dolly Byrne, produced and directed by Brock Pemberton. Varesi also played the lead role of opera singer Madame Lisa Della Robia with Norman Trevor playing her husband Gerald Fitzgerald. It ran a total of 350 performances from August 16, 1920 to October 2, 1920 at the Garrick Theatre, from October 4, 1920 - May 21, 1921 at the Fulton Theatre, then May 23, 1921 - April 1922 at Theatre Republic. It was included in Burns Mantle's The Best Plays of 1920-1921. It was adapted into two films of the same name Enter Madame (1922) and the 1935 remake Enter Madame starring Cary Grant.",
"score": "1.3989294"
}
] |
Who was the director of All the Way Up?
|
[
"James MacTaggart"
] |
director
|
All the Way Up
| 3,295,991 | 90 |
[
{
"id": "1382511",
"title": "All the Way Up (film)",
"text": " All The Way Up is a 1970 British comedy film directed by James MacTaggart based on Semi-Detached, a 1962 play by Midlands dramatist David Turner. It stars Warren Mitchell, Pat Heywood, Kenneth Cranham, Richard Briers, Adrienne Posta and Elaine Taylor. The film is rated M in New Zealand for sex scenes and sexual references.",
"score": "1.9052188"
},
{
"id": "1382512",
"title": "All the Way Up (film)",
"text": " A social climbing father uses everything from poison pen letters to blackmail in order to gain promotion and wealth for his children through marriages.",
"score": "1.7571167"
},
{
"id": "1382513",
"title": "All the Way Up (film)",
"text": "Warren Mitchell - Fred Midway ; Pat Heywood - Hilda Midway ; Elaine Taylor - Eileen Midway ; Kenneth Cranham - Tom Midway ; Vanessa Howard - Avril Hadfield ; Richard Briers - Nigel Hadfield ; Adrienne Posta - Daphne Dunmore ; Bill Fraser - Arnold Makepiece ; Terence Alexander - Bob Chickman ; Maggie Rennie - Mrs. Chickman ; Frank Thornton - Mr. Driver ",
"score": "1.7053688"
},
{
"id": "13336198",
"title": "Which Way Is Up?",
"text": " Which Way is Up? is a 1977 American comedy film starring Richard Pryor and directed by Michael Schultz. It is a remake of the 1972 Italian comedy film The Seduction of Mimi. Richard Pryor plays three roles: an orange picker who has two women at the same time, the orange picker's father, and a reverend who gets the orange picker's wife pregnant.",
"score": "1.5815125"
},
{
"id": "25196700",
"title": "All the Way (play)",
"text": " A television film based on the play starring Cranston, written by Schenkkan, and directed by Jay Roach premiered on HBO on May 21, 2016.",
"score": "1.5751212"
},
{
"id": "8881741",
"title": "Uphill All the Way",
"text": " Uphill All The Way is a 1986 American comedy Western film directed by Frank Q. Dobbs and starring Roy Clark, Mel Tillis, Glen Campbell, Burl Ives, Trish Van Devere, Elaine Joyce, Frank Gorshin and Sheb Wooley. The film has developed a very small cult following among Western fans.",
"score": "1.5668073"
},
{
"id": "10444130",
"title": "All the Way Up (Emily Osment song)",
"text": " The official music video for \"All the Way Up\" was directed by Roman White. It was filmed in last July 2009, and was released on August 25, 2009, the same as the release date of the song. American band Push Play appear in the video for the song, as Osment's backing band. This is a reference to the fact that Osment had just starred in the music video for their single \"Midnight Romeo\", which was also directed by White. The video features Osment and Push Play performing the song in their apartment, while the people in the surrounding apartments listen in. Eventually, the music becomes so loud that the building begins to fall apart. When asked about the concept of the video, Osment said \"The video was so fun, Push Play plays my band [...] We're buddies,\" [...] \"It was really fun we shot it in a mock apartment where you could see what's going on in every room [...] I'm playing music upstairs and you can see how it's affecting all the rooms below.\"",
"score": "1.5629182"
},
{
"id": "31165872",
"title": "This Way Up (film)",
"text": " This Way Up is a 2008 short film directed by Alan Smith and Adam Foulkes. It follows the story of two undertakers trying to deliver a body to a graveyard. It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film at the 81st Academy Awards, but lost to Japanese film La Maison en Petits Cubes.",
"score": "1.5513712"
},
{
"id": "28561356",
"title": "All the Right Wrongs",
"text": "\"All the Way Up\" was released as the lead single from the EP on August 25, 2009. The official music video, directed by Roman White, was released on November 30, 2010. The video features Osment, along with Push Play, performing the song in their apartment building, while the other tenants listen in. The song's lyrics speak of wanting to break free from something, and express yourself. \"All the Way Up\" debuted at number 77 in the Canadian Hot 100 then a week later peaked at number 76. The song also peaked on the Australian Hitseekers Singles Chart at number 10. ",
"score": "1.5417684"
},
{
"id": "10444122",
"title": "All the Way Up (Emily Osment song)",
"text": " \"All the Way Up\" is a 2009 song performed by actress/singer Emily Osment from her debut extended play, All the Right Wrongs. It was released on August 25, 2009 as the lead single from the album. The song was co-written by Emily Osment and Anthony Fagenson, and was produced by James Maxwell Collins. Lyrically, Osment stated she wanted the song to be about \"breaking out\" and that \"a lot of kids can relate to that\". The song received generally positive reviews from music critics. Some have praised Osment's \"spunk\", and also make comment about how she chose not to join with Hollywood Records, like most other Disney Channel artist and instead joined Wind-Up Records (the label that is home to Creed and Evanescence). However, some call the song childish, stating that Osment tries to come across as \"fierce\", ",
"score": "1.5371696"
},
{
"id": "1303216",
"title": "All the Way (film)",
"text": " On July 16, 2014, it was announced that HBO Films had acquired the rights to the play All the Way with Robert Schenkkan writing the adaptation and Bryan Cranston reprising his role as Lyndon B. Johnson. Schenkkan and producer Steven Spielberg agreed that the adaptation would differ significantly from the play. Schenkkan says, \"When Steven, Bryan Cranston and I brought this to HBO, what I said at the time was, 'Look, I have no interest in just shooting the play. What I want to do is a complete cinematic reimagining of this story.' Everybody was on board for that. It's ",
"score": "1.5323155"
},
{
"id": "27212958",
"title": "Russ Malkin",
"text": " Malkin is best known for producing and directing the iconic Long Way Round (2004), Long Way Down (2007) and Long Way Up (2020) featuring Charley Boorman and Ewan McGregor. The series follows McGregor and Boorman as they motorcycle across the globe, the long way.",
"score": "1.5116594"
},
{
"id": "10444124",
"title": "All the Way Up (Emily Osment song)",
"text": " \"All the Way Up\" was co-written by Osment, along with James Maxwell Collins and Anthony Fagenson. The song was recorded by Osment while on the set of the hit Disney show, Hannah Montana. She stated during an interview that the song was finished after nearly 3 months of working on it. The single was debuted on Radio Disney on August 25, 2009, and was released for radio airplay the following day. Originally, You Are the Only One was intended to be released as the lead single. However, Osment pushed for the release of \"All the Way Up\", and eventually her record label agreed to release it as her debut single.",
"score": "1.4961793"
},
{
"id": "1303209",
"title": "All the Way (film)",
"text": " All the Way is a 2016 American biographical television drama film based on events during the presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson. Directed by Jay Roach and adapted by Robert Schenkkan from his 2012 play with the same title, the film stars Bryan Cranston, who reprises his role as Johnson from the play's 2014 Broadway production, opposite Melissa Leo as First Lady Lady Bird Johnson; Anthony Mackie as Civil Rights Movement leader Martin Luther King Jr.; and Frank Langella as U.S. Senator Richard Russell Jr. from Georgia. The film was broadcast on HBO on Saturday, May 21, 2016. The film was well received by critics, with Cranston's portrayal of Johnson garnering praise. It has been nominated for a Television Critics Association Award for Outstanding Achievement in Movies, Miniseries and Specials, with Cranston also nominated for Individual Achievement in Drama for his work on the film. It was nominated for eight Primetime Emmy Awards, including Outstanding Television Movie as well as acting nominations for Cranston and Leo.",
"score": "1.4880548"
},
{
"id": "13937514",
"title": "The Drugs",
"text": "The Only Way Is Up (2000) ",
"score": "1.4869589"
},
{
"id": "10444123",
"title": "All the Way Up (Emily Osment song)",
"text": " just falls flat in the end. However, some have praised the single, calling it a magnificent start to her career. Osment herself has stated that the song is influenced by Alanis Morissette's album, Jagged Little Pill. \"All the Way Up\" failed to garner much attention on the music charts, but it did manage to enter the charts in a few international territories, as well as becoming a hit on Radio Disney. The music video was directed by Roman White and features Osment, along with the band and labelmates Push Play rehearsing a performance of the song in their apartment. The video shows the effects the loud music has on all of the surrounding apartments. \"All the Way Up\" was performed on Osment's first tour, the \"Clap Your Hands Tour\", as well as the American talk show, The View.",
"score": "1.4770352"
},
{
"id": "14885184",
"title": "This Way Up (TV series)",
"text": " This Way Up is a British comedy-drama television series broadcast on Channel 4. It is set in London, and is written by and stars Aisling Bea and Sharon Horgan, who also executive-produced the series. The first series was shown in 2019, and the second in 2021. The series is distributed in the United States on Hulu.",
"score": "1.463628"
},
{
"id": "6861571",
"title": "The Way Down (TV series)",
"text": " The Way Down is a 2021 American documentary television miniseries directed and produced by Marina Zenovich. It follows Gwen Shamblin Lara, the founder of a diet program Weigh Down Workshop, and The Remnant Fellowship, a new Christian group led by Shamblin Lara. It consists of 5 episodes and premiered with the first three on HBO Max on September 30, 2021, with the last two set to premiere in 2022.",
"score": "1.4617287"
},
{
"id": "7690485",
"title": "David Alexanian",
"text": " Alexanian's involvement with The Way began in 2008 when actor-writer-director Emilio Estevez attended the theatrical release of Long Way Down. At the time, Estevez was scripting The Way and he asked Alexanian if he would come aboard to produce. The duo flew to Spain, embarking on a different sort of road trip, an ancient pilgrimage called the Camino de Santiago de Compostela. They spent the next months travelling the 800 km trek, scouting locations, hiring local crew, casting, and producing The Way.",
"score": "1.4615057"
},
{
"id": "28901725",
"title": "The Way Way Back",
"text": " The Way Way Back is a 2013 American coming-of-age comedy-drama film written and directed by Nat Faxon and Jim Rash in their directorial debuts. It stars Liam James as Duncan, an introverted 14-year-old who goes on summer vacation to Wareham, Massachusetts with his mother and her overbearing boyfriend. It also stars Steve Carell, Toni Collette, Allison Janney, AnnaSophia Robb, Sam Rockwell, and Maya Rudolph, with Rob Corddry, Amanda Peet, Faxon, and Rash in supporting roles. Faxon and Rash conceived the film in the early 2000s; however, it spent several years in development hell before funding could be secured. Eventually, Fox Searchlight Pictures (the same studio which distributed other independent films such as Little Miss Sunshine and Juno) agreed to distribute the film. Filming lasted several months during summer 2012. It premiered at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival, and had a wider release on July 5, 2013, where it received positive reviews and was a box office success, grossing $26.9 million against its $5 million budget.",
"score": "1.4591434"
}
] |
Who was the director of Zonnetje?
|
[
"Maurits Binger",
"Maurits H. Binger"
] |
director
|
Zonnetje
| 4,511,471 | 58 |
[
{
"id": "29583704",
"title": "Zonnetje",
"text": " Zonnetje is a 1919 Dutch silent film directed by Maurits Binger.",
"score": "1.7568226"
},
{
"id": "1974420",
"title": "Carla Van Zon",
"text": " Carla Marja Olga Van Zon (born 20 January 1952) is a New Zealand retired artistic director. She worked on international opportunities for New Zealand artists at Creative New Zealand, before becoming artistic director of the New Zealand International Festival of the Arts in Wellington in 1996. From 2013 she was the Artistic Director of the Auckland Arts Festival, where she was responsible for commissioning works such as the opera The Bone Feeders. Van Zon has been responsible for supporting the careers of many New Zealand artists. She retired from the Auckland Arts Festival in 2017, following a diagnosis of kidney disease in 2016.",
"score": "1.6595653"
},
{
"id": "4590811",
"title": "Bernard Lievegoed",
"text": " Zonnehuis, a home for children with disabilities, in Bosch in Duin. The Zonnehuis was later relocated to Zeist and, in the course of its expansion its name was changed to the Zonnehuizen Veldheim Steinia te Zeist. Lievegoed was the director of this institution from its founding until 1954. In 1932 Lievegoed helped to found the Vrije School (free Waldorf school) of Zeist. In 1939 he did a higher doctorate (promotion) with a thesis about the therapeutic use of music. In 1946 he published the first of a number of books, Ontwikkelingsfasen van het kind; this was translated into eight ",
"score": "1.6143198"
},
{
"id": "4577985",
"title": "Helena van der Meulen",
"text": " Helena van der Meulen studied philosophy and film at the University of Amsterdam. During her studies, van der Meulen wrote film reviews for the Dutch film magazine Skrien. In September 1991, she was the head of publicity at the Dutch Film Museum. During an interview, director Heddy Honigmann asked van der Meulen to collaborate on her next screenplay, Tot Ziens (1995). The film was critically acclaimed and won prestigious awards. Tot Ziens’ success opened the door to van der Meulen’s screenwriting career. In the late nineties, van der Meulen was granted a stipend from the Dutch Media Fund to develop original material, including Zoenzucht (1999) ",
"score": "1.5794919"
},
{
"id": "1974422",
"title": "Carla Van Zon",
"text": " Van Zon's career in arts administration began in Creative New Zealand, where she worked to improve international opportunities for New Zealand artists. She managed New Zealand's entry to the 2009 Venice Biennale. She was involved with the New Zealand International Festival of the Arts in Wellington from 1989, and from 1996 she was Executive Director, and was appointed as Artistic Director in 2000. Van Zon helped the festival turn a profit for the first time, and during her time it won four national tourism awards and the Dominion Gold Award for outstanding contribution to the Wellington economy. From 2013 to 2017 she was ",
"score": "1.5423627"
},
{
"id": "8003102",
"title": "Paula van der Oest",
"text": " New Mother). Her husband at the time, Theu Boermans, had a role in this movie (later, he would also have a role in Zus & Zo). De trip van Teetje (the journey of Teetje) was produced in 1998, with Cees Geel as a louche entrepreneur who buys a Russian cargo ship. With Zus & Zo, loosely based on Chekhov's The Three Sisters, Van der Oest directed her first mainstream film in 2001. The realistic characters and the relations among the individuals from her former movies remained central, but there was more humour added, and an English script doctor made some changes, resulting in an Oscar nomination. However, the general public left ",
"score": "1.5334023"
},
{
"id": "7306821",
"title": "Het Scheepvaartmuseum",
"text": " too much on entertainment and not enough on its task as a museum. The next director was Pauline Krikke, the former mayor of Arnhem and a prominent member of the VVD, a centre-right political party that was senior partner in the second Rutte cabinet. Krikke came into conflict with the management team of the museum and the \"Raad van Toezicht\" (Board of Supervision) concerning a perceived lack of communication. During a confrontation on 15 November 2015, the management team expressed its lack of confidence in Krikke, who resigned. The former director of the Rembrandt House Museum, Michael Huijser, was appointed as the new director of the museum.",
"score": "1.519053"
},
{
"id": "8003101",
"title": "Paula van der Oest",
"text": " Paula van der Oest (born 1965) is a Dutch film director and screenwriter. Her 2001 film Zus & Zo was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. With her final exam at the Dutch Film and Television Academy, Zinderend, she won a Cannon Award in 1988. In the following years, she worked as an assistant director, until she returned in 1994 as a director. For the VPRO-series Lolamoviola she made the short movies Coma and Achilles en het zebrapad (Achilles and the Zebracrossing). With the first, she won a Golden Calf for the best television drama. In 1996 Van der Oest made her first long movie, De nieuwe moeder ",
"score": "1.5118873"
},
{
"id": "11340222",
"title": "Jean Herbiet",
"text": " Jean Herbiet (born December 16, 1930 in Namur, Belgium), moved to Ottawa, Canada in 1958 after completing studies in administration at the Institut Polytechnique and in theatre at the Institut belge du théâtre in Brussels. Between 1971 and 1981, Jean Herbiet held the position of Artistic Director of the French Theatre at the National Arts Centre, where he opened a series of production programs, cultural exchanges and tours that brought shows overseas to and from Europe. Herbiet is best remembered as the director of two famous productions created in collaboration with the brilliant puppeteer Félix Mirbt: Büchner's Woyzeck (1974) and Strindberg's A Dream Play (1977). Throughout his tenure, Herbiet expanded the scope of theatre by exploring the new possibilities offered by the National ",
"score": "1.4987984"
},
{
"id": "1255163",
"title": "Bert Beyens",
"text": " Bert Beyens (°1956) is a Belgian filmmaker, known for Jan Cox A Painter's Odyssey (written and directed with Pierre De Clercq, Belgium The Netherlands 1988), and A la Rencontre de Marcel Hanoun (France 1994). He teaches writing and directing at RITS since 1993. Between 2001 and 2013 he was the head of RITS, Erasmus University College Brussels. He was Vice President for Finance and Fundraising CILECT (The International Association of Film and Television Schools) between 2008 and 2010. Since 2014 Bert Beyens is the Chair of the Executive Council of GEECT (Groupement Européen des Ecoles de Cinéma et de Télévision/European Grouping of FIlm and Television Schools), and prior to that held the post of treasurer (2010–2014). In addition he is also a member of the European Film Academy.",
"score": "1.4981425"
},
{
"id": "2928480",
"title": "Bruno Nuytten",
"text": " Bruno Nuytten (born 28 August 1945) is a French cinematographer turned director. Camille Claudel which was Nuytten's first directorial and screenwriting effort, won the César Award for Best film in 1989. The film starred and was co-produced by Isabelle Adjani, with whom he had a son, Barnabé Saïd-Nuytten. Adjani won the Silver Bear for Best Actress at the 39th Berlin International Film Festival for her role in the film. His sophomore directorial effort, Albert Souffre, though also a heavily emotional movie, was set in contemporary times. His 2000 film, Passionnément, starred Charlotte Gainsbourg. His films as cinematographer include Les Valseuses, Barocco, La meilleure façon de marcher, The Bronte Sisters, Brubaker, Garde à vue, Possession, Fort Saganne, So Long, Stooge (Tchao Pantin), Jean de Florette and Manon des Sources (US title: Manon of the Spring). He won the César Award for Best Cinematography in 1977 and 1984, and was nominated in 1980, 1982, 1985 and 1987. He is a professor at France's national film school La Fémis.",
"score": "1.4839419"
},
{
"id": "9516177",
"title": "Schunck",
"text": " which had also been advocated by Peter Schunck. Three years later, in 1975, after an interior reorganisation, Schunck was healthy again, with Christine as director and her nephew drs L.F. Verleisdonk as deputy director (and P.M. Notermans as executive secretary), focusing on clothing and interior decoration/furniture. This despite a continued unemployment and low purchasing power, although the latter had improved thanks to increased social security (under the government of Den Uyl). Around 1970, after the closing of the mines, there was so much uncertainty that people didn't dare spend what money they had. When things settled down, that brought continuity and people started spending again. Competing with giants like V&D ",
"score": "1.4801319"
},
{
"id": "10080602",
"title": "List of directors of Teylers Stichting",
"text": " (1889 - 1895) ; Anthonie Wilhelm Thöne (1889 - 1921) ; Jacobus Johannes van Oorde (1895 - 1924), resigned ; Jan Adriaan Fontein (1906 - 1941) ; Pieter Dozy (1910 - 1918), resigned ; Vincent Loosjes II (1915 - 1931) ; Wopco Cnoop Koopmans (1918 - 1946) ; Jan Cornelis Tadema (1921 - 1961) ; Carsten Wilhelm Thöne (1924 - 1969), resigned ; Jan Willem van der Vlugt (1931 - 1963) ; Addick Adrianus Gosling Land (1941 - 1949) ; Theodoor August Wesstra (1946 - 1969) ; René Fontein (1949 - 1963), resigned ; Pieter Jacob Zondervan (1961 - 1973), resigned ; Hendrik Eliza Stenfert Kroese (1963 - 1984) ; Cornelis Wilhelmus Derk Vrijland (1963 - ?) ; Leo van Nouhuys (1969 - ?) ; Gerhard Beets (1970 - ?) ; Lodewijk Herbert Schimmelpenninck (1973 - ?) Replacements were added by cooptation.",
"score": "1.4800814"
},
{
"id": "7231970",
"title": "Willem van Zwet",
"text": " Van Zwet was born on 31 March 1934 in Leiden. Van Zwet obtained his doctoral degree in 1964 under the supervision of Jan Hemelrijk at the University of Amsterdam with a thesis titled \"Convex Transformations of Random Variables\". After that, he worked at the Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica in Amsterdam, and became a lector of statistics at Leiden University in 1964 and was named professor in 1968. He retired in 1999. From 1992 to 1999, van Zwet was the Director of the Thomas Stieltjes Institute of Mathematics. He co-founded Eurandom in 1997, and served as its director until 2000. From 1997 to 1999, he ",
"score": "1.4737694"
},
{
"id": "613376",
"title": "Wieke Paulusma",
"text": " in 2011, working as manager at Thuiszorg Icare, and became a manager at the University Medical Center Groningen (UMCG) in 2013. She worked as a manager and project leader at Treant Zorggroep in 2017 before becoming a district nurse again the following year at TSN Thuiszorg. Between 2019 and her election to the House in 2021, she was a program manager at Ommelander Hospital and the UMCG. Besides her job, Paulusma has also been serving as the chair of the board of directors of the International Film Festival Assen (IFA) since 2019 and as the secretary of the three-person board of directors of Stichting Lutje Geluk, which makes it possible for financially strained families to go on trips, since its formation in 2018.",
"score": "1.4716566"
},
{
"id": "28378513",
"title": "Hillie Molenaar",
"text": " Hillie Molenaar (born 22 May 1945, Sneek) is a Dutch documentary film director. She left school at 15 and worked as a cleaner, waitress, and bookkeeper before finding her niche as a documentary filmmaker in 1974 when, at the age of 29, she made her first film Protest Garden. She was assistant to the legendary Joris Ivens before she formed Molenwiek Film with Joop van Wijk in 1978. Jointly they have produced and directed a dozen award winning documentaries and short films including The Factory (1979) and The Daily Nation (2000). They also produced Xime (Guinea-Bissau, 1994) directed by Sana Na N’Hada, which was an official selection at Cannes Film Festival in Un Certain Regard. She has since formed her own production company HM Films, and teaches with the Zelig School for Documentary, Television and New Media.",
"score": "1.4704564"
},
{
"id": "30836719",
"title": "Karina's Zelfopoffering",
"text": " Karina's Zelfopoffering was directed by Ph. Carli, who had been trained as a documentary filmmaker and had made his feature film debut two years earlier with De Stem des Bloeds. It starred his wife, Annie Krohn. Production was handled by Carli's Bandung-based company, Kinowerk Carli. One of the film's posters advertised \"the most brilliant dancing and richest staging ever seen in a film from the Indies\". This same poster gave the cast as including Jean de la Motte, W. Batten, Lucy Kay, Erna Zwartjes, and Pola du Moulin. An announcement in the Medan-based daily De Soematra Post, meanwhile, records all actors except Krohn as natives.",
"score": "1.469965"
},
{
"id": "2968309",
"title": "Maarten Treurniet",
"text": " Film and Television he directed a Sunday morning show for VPRO, directed and made the scenario for de Nachtwacht (six minutes) and de Dochter van de Nacht (20 minutes), he helped with the direction of a play called Parking by Olga Zuiderhoek and Loes Luca and he did the screenplay and directed a graduation film Het Nadeel van de Twijfel. In 1990 he earned a degree for directing, editing, camera and sound at the faculty Film and Television. After all of his studies, he did many small projects like short movies and commercials. Later he started making bigger things like series and movies. His work won many prizes. One of the highlights ",
"score": "1.4678745"
},
{
"id": "10181170",
"title": "Patrice Chéreau",
"text": " Patrice Chéreau (2 November 1944 – 7 October 2013) was a French opera and theatre director, filmmaker, actor and producer. In France he is best known for his work for the theatre, internationally for his films La Reine Margot and Intimacy, and for his staging of the Jahrhundertring, the centenary Ring Cycle at the Bayreuth Festival in 1976. Winner of almost twenty movie awards, including the Cannes Jury Prize and the Golden Berlin Bear, Chéreau served as president of the jury at the 2003 Cannes festival. From 1966, he was artistic director of the Public-Theatre in the Parisian suburb of Sartrouville, where in his team were stage designer Richard Peduzzi, costume designer Jacques Schmidt and lighting designer André Diot, with whom he collaborated in many ",
"score": "1.4653375"
},
{
"id": "3510534",
"title": "Wesley Zonneveld",
"text": " Zonneveld played in the youth department of FC Lisse. As a seven-year-old, he was initially positioned as a goalkeeper, but later continued as a outfield player. At age 13, he returned to the goalkeeping position. Zonneveld played for Lisse for a few more years, moved to the AZ youth academy 2009. He was active in Alkmaar for two years. After his contract expired, he signed for SC Telstar, where he made his professional debut on 30 September 2011 in a match against PEC Zwolle. In this match, goalkeeper Stephan Veenboer was sent-off in the 86th minute with the score being 6–3 in favour of Zwolle. Head coach Jan Poortvliet then chose to remove striker ",
"score": "1.4637592"
}
] |
Who was the director of College?
|
[
"Franco Castellano",
"Giuseppe Moccia"
] |
director
|
College (1984 film)
| 2,769,262 | 90 |
[
{
"id": "29214894",
"title": "William B. Langsdorf",
"text": " an administrative staff that included Executive Dean Dr. Stuart McComb who had been Superintendent of the Pico Rivera School District, Dean of Instruction Dr. Gerhard Ehmann who had been president of Glendale Community College, Finance Officer Jack Lyons from the San Francisco State College Foundation, Dean of Students Dr. Earnest A. Becker from Pasadena City College, and Librarian Dr. Earnest Toy, Jr. from Riverside City College. At the time the state colleges in California were under the nominal control of the California state department of education and the Superintendent of Public Instruction. However, in practice, the individual state colleges enjoyed a considerable degree of ",
"score": "1.489593"
},
{
"id": "12132716",
"title": "West Shore Community College",
"text": " John Eaton was the college's initial president; he served from 1967 to 1983. William M. Anderson was the college's second president, serving from 1983 to 1998. Afterward in 2001, Governor John Engler appointed Anderson the founding director of the Michigan Department of History, Arts and Libraries. Governor Jennifer Granholm reappointed Dr. Anderson to her cabinet, where he continued to serve as the director of HAL until 2009. Charles T. Dillon served as West Shore Community College's third president from 1998 to 2014. He was succeeded by Kenneth Urban (2015–2017).",
"score": "1.4738278"
},
{
"id": "14178236",
"title": "Robert J. Bernard",
"text": " After graduation, he became an assistant to Pomona president James Blaisdell. When the Claremont Colleges were established in 1925, he was appointed secretary under Blaisdell. He became administrative director in 1942; his title changed to managing director in 1944 and president in 1959.",
"score": "1.4709213"
},
{
"id": "13633997",
"title": "José Aybar",
"text": " Aybar served as director of the state of Florida's Latin American and Caribbean Basin Scholarship Program. He subsequently worked at the James F. Byrnes International Center at the University of South Carolina. Later, at Colorado Mountain College (CMC), he served as dean of the Vail/Eagle Valley campus. In addition to his administrative work at CMC, he led a great books discussion group for local residents. Aybar joined the administration of the City Colleges of Chicago in 2003, after completing his contract at CMC. From late 2003 to 2009, he served as Associate Vice Chancellor for Arts and Sciences. In this capacity he became the first in the City Colleges system to receive the \"Administrator of the Year\" award in 2004. Aybar was appointed president of Daley College in August 2009, ",
"score": "1.4671907"
},
{
"id": "2893227",
"title": "Council for Educational Technology",
"text": " Geoffrey Hubbard was appointed as Director in June 1969. He was previously an engineer and then a civil servant at the Ministry of Technology. He successfully steered the Council through its sometimes difficult relationship with government. He retired in 1986 but continued his role as Chairman of the National Extension College.",
"score": "1.4660594"
},
{
"id": "8751813",
"title": "Charles Longsworth",
"text": " Charles R. Longsworth (born August 21, 1929) is the current director of Saul Centers, Inc.. He assumed this position in June 1993. He serves as president Emeritus of Hampshire College. He worked as president of The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation from 1977 to 1994, as Chief Executive Officer until November 1992, and Chairman from November 1991 to November 1994. He works as Chairman Emeritus of The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation of Williamsburg, Virginia. He graduated from Amherst College in 1951 and serves as Life Trustee at the college. Mr. Longsworth was Hampshire College's founding vice president who succeeded Franklin Patterson as President (1971–1977), and who had helped draft the final 1965 plan in the form of The Making of College from the New College Plan.",
"score": "1.4654391"
},
{
"id": "26737227",
"title": "Howard Community College",
"text": " faculty at Corning Community College, hired in June 1969. In 1973, he signed a five-year contract to remain as president. In 1976, Smith faced scrutiny for accounting expense allowances from the County which funded 35% of operational costs. Dwight Burrill took the role of dean in 1981, serving for seventeen years. In 1980, the Columbia Film Society moves to the HCC performing arts center for weekend movies. Dr. Mary Ellen Duncan became president of the college in 1998, followed by Dr. Kathleen Hetherington in 2007. In 2019 HCC won the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award in the category of education. That same year, the original ST and Nursing buildings were remodeled and renamed Academic Commons and Howard Hall, respectively",
"score": "1.4600556"
},
{
"id": "8961366",
"title": "Goodenough College",
"text": " As the name of the College and the Director's equivalent position has changed over time, the title of each appointee is given.",
"score": "1.4598294"
},
{
"id": "29554024",
"title": "American Conservatory of Music",
"text": " desire to leave his pro bono post, the board accepted it and launched a nationwide search for a new president and a dean. The board hired Steven J. Nelson, as president, and Carl L. Waldschmidt, PhD (1917–1995), the former dean, longtime music professor, and choral director from Concordia University in Chicago (retired 1987), as dean. Steve Nelson had studied violin at Cleveland Institute of Music and had served as president of the Center for Creative Studies – Institute of Music and Dance in Detroit. After leaving the American Conservatory of Music, Steve Nelson served as vice president college of relations at Landmark College in Putney, Vermont. In 1998, he became head master at the Calhoun School in New York City. Vern Nelson remained on the board.",
"score": "1.4525791"
},
{
"id": "11931762",
"title": "Dana Mohler-Faria",
"text": " From 1975 to 1984, Mohler-Faria was Director of Financial Aid and the SACHEM Outreach Program at Cape Cod Community College. Following that post, he served as Assistant Dean of Administrative Services at Bristol Community College until 1987, and then in various leadership positions at Mount Wachusett Community College until 1991. In 1991 he began his association with Bridgewater State College, serving eleven years as the Vice President for Administration and Finance. In 2002, he succeeded Adrian Tinsley as President of Bridgewater State College. He stepped down the at end of the 2014-2015 academic year. According to his biographical sketch on the Commonwealth of Massachusetts' website, Mohler-Faria, in ascending to the presidency of Bridgewater State University, became the \"first person of color to lead Bridgewater State College and is only the second Cape Verdean in the United States to be elected the president of a higher education institution.\" He is currently a member of the advisory council for the Wampanoag Language Immersion School, a partnership between the Wôpanâak Language Reclamation Project and the Montessori Academy of Cape Cod.",
"score": "1.4472575"
},
{
"id": "7867614",
"title": "Hilary Boulding",
"text": " In July 2007, Boulding was appointed the Principal of the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama (RWCMD) in succession to Edmond Fivet. During her time in charge, she oversaw £22.5 million of development including the building of a 450-seat concert hall and a 160-seat theatre. In September 2016, it was announced that Boulding had been elected as the next President of Trinity College, Oxford, in succession to Sir Ivor Roberts. This made her the first woman in its 462-year history to head the college. She took up the appointment on 1 August 2017.",
"score": "1.4451134"
},
{
"id": "11861108",
"title": "Wheelock College",
"text": " Dr. Gordon L. Marshall. The Wheelock Family Threatre opened in 1981 and held its first production, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. In 1983, Gordon Marshall retired and Dr. Daniel S. Cheever, Jr. became President of the college. In 1984, the college awarded its first Bachelor of Social Work degree. In 1991, Gerald Tirozzi replaced Daniel Cheever as President. In 1992, the Center for International Education, Leadership, and Innovation was opened. Tirozzi resigned as president in 1993 and Marjorie Bakken was named Acting President. She was formally inaugurated as president the following year. In 1994, Wheelock College joined the Colleges of the Fenway consortium. In 2004, Jackie Jenkins-Scott became the 13th president of Wheelock College. In 2005, Wheelock College and Jumpstart began a partnership, providing ",
"score": "1.4386187"
},
{
"id": "28603861",
"title": "David A. Caputo",
"text": " David Armand Caputo became the sixth president of Pace University in 2000. He serves as co-chair of the New York State Regents' Professional Standards and Practices Board, as a director of the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities, on the Council of Presidents of the Association of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges, and as a director of the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, and the Westchester Arts Council. Caputo also serves on the Council on Foreign Relations. He received his B.A. in Government from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio and his M.A. and Ph.D. in Political Science from Yale University. Prior to his appointment at Pace he served for five years as president of Hunter College, the largest college in the City University of New York system. Before that, he was at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, for 25 years, last serving as dean of its School of Liberal Arts. On May 15, 2007, he announced his retirement from the position of President of Pace University, effective June 3.",
"score": "1.4326017"
},
{
"id": "10102462",
"title": "Richard Kneedler",
"text": " John Vanderzell, Dean of the College at Franklin & Marshall. He subsequently held appointments as Assistant to President Keith Spalding, Secretary of the College, Administrative Vice President, Vice President for Administration, and Vice President for Development, as well as serving as Secretary of the College's Board of Visitors and the College's Board of Trustees. He served as Franklin & Marshall's President from 1988 until 2002. Dr. Kneedler has served on boards of education-related organizations at regional, state and national levels, including The Association of Independent College and Universities of Pennsylvania, The Pennsylvania Association of Colleges and Universities, The National ",
"score": "1.4314799"
},
{
"id": "31410941",
"title": "William J. Flynn (athletic director)",
"text": " William J. Flynn (July 13, 1915 – June 27, 1997) was an American college athletics administrator. He was the athletic director at Boston College from 1957 to 1990. He began his association with Boston College in 1930 as a student athlete. He was also a mathematics professor and assistant football coach at the school.",
"score": "1.4310122"
},
{
"id": "30349615",
"title": "Oaklands College",
"text": "John Hunter Smith (1921-50) ; Rowland Line (1950-55) ; Eric Pelham (1955-79) ; Richard Blossom (1979-91) ; Keith Gardner (1991-97) ; Liz Cristofoli (1997-2001) ; Helen Parr (2001-04) ; Mark Dawe (2005-10) ; Zoe Hancock (2011-21) ; Andrew Slade (2021-) The college corporation oversees all aspects of the college and is responsible for appointing the principal. The principal oversees its day-to-day running. The current corporation chair is Peter Thompson. Andrew Slade is the tenth and current principal of Oaklands College, having assumed office on 1 September 2021. The following people have served in a permanent role as principal of Oaklands College, or its predecessor, Hertfordshire College of Agriculture and Horticulture. The incumbent is shown in bold. ",
"score": "1.4307756"
},
{
"id": "10510073",
"title": "London School of Economics",
"text": " The director is the head of LSE and its chief executive officer, responsible for executive management and leadership on academic issues. The director reports to and is accountable to the council. The director is also the accountable officer for the purposes of the Higher Education Funding Council for England Financial Memorandum. The LSE's current director is Dame Nemat Shafik, who replaced interim director, Professor Julia Black, on 1 September 2017. The director is supported by a deputy director and provost who oversees the heads of academic departments and institutes, three pro-directors each with designated portfolios (teaching and learning, research and planning and resources) and the school secretary who acts as company secretary. † Titled as director and president",
"score": "1.4272811"
},
{
"id": "25585667",
"title": "MidKent College",
"text": " The current chief executive of MidKent College is Simon Cook, who has held the position since the retirement of previous CEO, Stephen Grix, in July 2016. Mr Grix first joined the College in 1971 when, having left school at age 15 with no formal qualifications, he enrolled as a day-release bricklaying student at the old Horsted site in Chatham. After 13 years in the trade he returned to study an education degree, followed by a master's degree in education management. The father-of-three eventually went on to become principal of Sir George Monoux College in Walthamstow, north-east London, and then head of Ofsted's post-compulsory education division. Next was a role as director of education for the London borough of Tower Hamlets before Mr Grix returned to MidKent College as principal and chief executive in March 2005. Once back at the place where he launched his career, ",
"score": "1.4265555"
},
{
"id": "15256746",
"title": "Richard G. Jewell",
"text": " Richard G. Jewell was the eighth president of Grove City College, a Christian liberal arts college in Grove City, Pennsylvania. The 1967 Grove City graduate assumed the presidency in fall of 2003 after a successful career in law and business. He left his position in 2014 and was succeeded by Paul J. McNulty. In June 2015, he was appointed to a two-year term as commissioner of the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board by Speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives Mike Turzai. Immediately before becoming President of Grove City College, Jewell was the Pittsburgh director of Navigant Consulting Inc., the nation's largest forensic accounting firm. Jewell is known throughout the Pittsburgh region for his leadership in numerous civic groups. Prior to assuming ",
"score": "1.4253008"
},
{
"id": "27554695",
"title": "Collège La Cité",
"text": " The first president of the college, Andrée Lortie, helmed the establishment until her retirement in March 2010. She was replaced by Lise Bourgeois, who had been head of the Conseil des écoles catholiques du Centre-Est (CECCE) (Ontario) (Central-Eastern Catholic School Board), the largest French school board in Canada outside of the province of Québec.",
"score": "1.4234529"
}
] |
Who was the director of Practical Jokers?
|
[
"George Sidney"
] |
director
|
Practical Jokers
| 5,483,068 | 92 |
[
{
"id": "31578899",
"title": "Practical Jokers",
"text": " Practical Jokers is a 1938 Our Gang short comedy film directed by George Sidney. It was the 174th Our Gang short (175th episode, 86th talking short, 87th talking episode, and sixth MGM produced episode) that was released.",
"score": "1.6223775"
},
{
"id": "31578901",
"title": "Practical Jokers",
"text": "Darla Hood as Darla ; Eugene Lee as Porky ; George McFarland as Spanky ; Carl Switzer as Alfalfa ; Billie Thomas as Buckwheat ",
"score": "1.4886761"
},
{
"id": "25932874",
"title": "The Practical Joker",
"text": " \"The Practical Joker\" is the third episode of the second season of the American animated science fiction television series Star Trek, the 19th episode overall. It first aired in the NBC Saturday morning lineup on September 21, 1974, and was written by American television writers Chuck Menville and Len Janson who together also wrote the first season episode \"Once Upon a Planet\". The \"Rec Room\" in this episode is the forerunner of the Holodeck, which plays a significant part in numerous episodes of the subsequent spin-off Star Trek series. Set in the 23rd century, the series follows the adventures of Captain James T. Kirk (voiced by William Shatner) and the crew of the Starfleet starship Enterprise. In this episode, after the Enterprise passes through an unusual cloud the ship's computer starts playing practical jokes on the crew.",
"score": "1.472792"
},
{
"id": "4183371",
"title": "Frauds (film)",
"text": " practical joker working in the fictional town of Andreas. Jonathan Wheats (Weaving) and his wife, Beth (Byrnes), a kindergarten teacher, host a party involving their friends Margaret and Michael. As a gift, Michael gives Jonathan and Beth two tickets to La Bohème. The next night, while Jonathan is at the opera house, Beth, forgetting about the show as she was supposed to meet Jonathan at the opera house immediately after work, comes home to find the house trashed. She finds a burglar stealing a set of silver Georgian cutlery and trying to escape, and he pursues her with a knife. In defense, Beth fires a ",
"score": "1.4250422"
},
{
"id": "32557525",
"title": "Impractical Jokers",
"text": " TruTV and Built Games developed a mobile game called Impractical Jokers: Wheel of Doom, released in 2018. Wilder Games developed a party game series including Impractical Jokers: Box of Challenges and Impractical Jokers: Ultimate Challenge Pack that were released in 2020. The Official Practical Jokers Podcast started in 2017, hosted by producers Casey Jost and James McCarthy. Episodes are usually released the day after new episodes have broadcast. Assistant director and producer Chá DeBerry joined the podcast as a host in 2021.",
"score": "1.4245057"
},
{
"id": "31578902",
"title": "Practical Jokers",
"text": "Tommy Bond as Butch ; Gary Jasgur as Gary ; Sidney Kibrick as Woim ; Leonard Landy as Leonard ; Marie Blake as Butch's mother ; Grace Bohanon as Party extra ; Joe Levine as Party extra ",
"score": "1.4232413"
},
{
"id": "28075071",
"title": "Impractical Jokers: The Movie",
"text": " Impractical Jokers: The Movie is a 2020 American reality comedy film directed by Chris Henchy, based on the truTV television series Impractical Jokers. The film stars Brian Quinn, James Murray, Sal Vulcano, and Joe Gatto, also known as The Tenderloins. It was theatrically released on February 21, 2020. The film received generally mixed reviews and was a box office success, grossing $10 million against a budget of $3 million.",
"score": "1.4070206"
},
{
"id": "28075078",
"title": "Impractical Jokers: The Movie",
"text": " The film was produced by The Tenderloins, Chris Henchy (who also served as the director), Buddy Enright and Funny or Die's Jim Ziegler. The film was executively produced by Mike Farah and Joe Farrell of Funny or Die, Marissa Ronca, Chris Linn & Jack Rovner. Henchy said that he had heard of the Tenderloins group as his daughters were watching the Impractical Jokers TV show, and was contacted by his agent about two weeks later with an offer to direct the film. Principal photography for the film began in May 2018, in New York. The cinematographers used professional sound and video quality unlike the TV show to make the movie have a better aesthetic. Filming concluded on June 5, 2018.",
"score": "1.4033319"
},
{
"id": "31578900",
"title": "Practical Jokers",
"text": " Hoping to get even for all the practical jokes perpetrated by neighborhood troublemaker Butch, the Gang plans to sabotage Butch's birthday party. The weapon of choice is a firecracker, which is substituted for one of the birthday candles. Unfortunately, the kids in general and Alfalfa in particular are unable to escape from the party before the big (and tasty) explosion.",
"score": "1.4029219"
},
{
"id": "15906216",
"title": "The Joker's Wild",
"text": " Richard S. Kline served as the director on all incarnations of the show.",
"score": "1.4012239"
},
{
"id": "3939531",
"title": "The Practical Theatre Company",
"text": " The Practical Theatre Company was founded in 1979 under the name Attack Theater at Northwestern University by Brad Hall, Paul Barrosse, Robert Mendel, and Angela Murphy as a not for profit theater company dedicated to the production of improvisational comedy and new plays. The company's first show, Clowns, a play about two improvisational comedians written and performed by artistic directors Hall and Barrosse, opened on April 11, 1979 at Shanley Hall on the NU campus. In September of '79, Attack Theatre's inaugural season closed with a pair of one-act plays staged at National College of Education: Playgrounds by Hall and ",
"score": "1.3969362"
},
{
"id": "11137250",
"title": "Joker (Jack Napier)",
"text": " was also director Joe Dante's first choice for the role of the Joker when he was attached to direct the film in the early 1980s. Jack Nicholson had been the studio's top choice since 1980. Jon Peters approached Nicholson as far back as 1986, during filming of The Witches of Eastwick. Peter Guber took Burton and Nicholson on a horseback riding excursion in Aspen to get the pair aquatinted and convince him to take the role. Nicholson's contract featured an \"off-the-clock\" agreement, specifying the number of hours he could have off, and allowed him to take time off to attend Los Angeles Lakers home games.",
"score": "1.3876126"
},
{
"id": "3939535",
"title": "The Practical Theatre Company",
"text": " The turning point that third season came when the prominent director Sheldon Patinkin came to the JLA to judge the group's third improvisational comedy revue Scubba Hey for the Joseph Jefferson Committee. Patinkin's involvement with The Practical Theatre helped to accelerate the young company's development, artistically and from a business standpoint. Scubba Hey featured Barrosse, Hall, Pearson and Louis-Dreyfus, whom Barrosse and Pearson met when they performed together in the 1980 Mee-Ow Show at Northwestern. Scubba Hey was a critical and box office hit, and the group closed its first season at the JLA with Beggar's Holiday, an original comedy which opened on November 28, 1981 to a glowing review by Richard Christiansen of the Chicago Tribune, who called the PTC \"as zany a bunch of intellectual clowns as the Earth can hold.\"",
"score": "1.3874254"
},
{
"id": "31102988",
"title": "Lucky Losers",
"text": " Producer Jan Grippo was a professional magician brought to Hollywood to teach Veronica Lake to be convincing doing card tricks in This Gun for Hire. He later became Leo Gorcey's agent and produced the Bowery Boys series. He performed the card and dice tricks seen in the film.",
"score": "1.376904"
},
{
"id": "30761762",
"title": "Phil Judd",
"text": "Practical Jokers (1981) – Singles: \"Counting the Beat\", \"It Ain't What You Dance It's The Way You Dance It\" ; Counting the Beat (1997) – Re-release of Practical Jokers with extra tracks ",
"score": "1.3501539"
},
{
"id": "16016483",
"title": "Richard S. Kline",
"text": " One of Richard S. Kline's early shows where he worked as a director was on Jack Barry's The Joker's Wild on CBS, starting in 1972. He also served as an associate producer, and did both jobs until the series ended in 1975.",
"score": "1.3491371"
},
{
"id": "25932878",
"title": "The Practical Joker",
"text": " In 2016, SyFy noted this episode for presenting \"the beginnings of the holodeck\", a technological idea that later became a popular element in many later episodes.",
"score": "1.3473047"
},
{
"id": "3939552",
"title": "The Practical Theatre Company",
"text": " of a Madman (1983) ; Babalooney (1983) ; My Dog Ate It (1983) ; Flight (1983) ; Tomato (1983) ; A Passion for Being Nice (1983) ; Wild Connections (1983) ; Hula-Rama (1983) ; The Diamond Anniversary Comedy Ball & Cakewalk (1984) ; Beats Workin’: The Best of the Practical Theatre Company (1984) ; Soapbox Sweepstakes: The 1984 Election Revue (1984) ; The Merry Guys Who Windsurf (1984) ; Noonday Demons (1985) ; Wendell and Betty in the Throes of Anarchy (1985) ; Art, Ruth & Trudy (1986) ; Deer Season (1986) ; Bozo the Town (1987) ; Rockme! (1988) ",
"score": "1.3442271"
},
{
"id": "3939551",
"title": "The Practical Theatre Company",
"text": "Clowns (1979) ; Subnormal (1979) ; Playgrounds (1979) ; On the Fritzz (1979) ; Bag O' Fun (1980) ; Nightfall (1980) ; Citizen Stumpick (1980) ; Sant O'Claus on the Christmas Beat (1980) ; Thrills & Glory (1981) ; Subnormal (1981) ; Stunning Achievements in Iowa (1981) ; Scubba Hey (1981) ; Beggar's Holiday (1981) ; The Brothers Bubba (1982) ; Song of the Snells (1982) ; No Restroom for the Wicked (1982) ; The Golden 50th Anniversary Jubilee (1982) ; A Cast of Squirrels Before Swine (1982) ; The Practical Theatre Company Meets Godzilla (1982) ; Megafun (1983) ; ",
"score": "1.3428051"
},
{
"id": "25862463",
"title": "An Audience with...",
"text": " After the death of the television practical joker Jeremy Beadle on 30 January 2008, ITV decided to commission An Audience Without... Jeremy Beadle, to celebrate his best work and raise money for some of his favourite charities. Broadcast on 16 May 2008, the show was hosted by Chris Tarrant, and included the results of an ITV public vote choosing his top-5 best ever pranks from his show Beadle's About. This episode was produced by Talent Television.",
"score": "1.3408818"
}
] |
Who was the director of The Tree?
|
[
"Todd Field",
"William Todd Field"
] |
director
|
The Tree (1993 film)
| 5,960,645 | 82 |
[
{
"id": "31830643",
"title": "The Tree (2010 film)",
"text": " The Tree was written and directed by Julie Bertuccelli, it is based on the screenplay by Elizabeth J. Mars, produced by Sue Taylor of Taylor Media, Yael Fogiel and Laetitia Gonzalez of Les Films du Poisson, and is a co-production between Australia and France. It came to be a co-production when Julie Bertuccelli was given the book Our Father Who Art in the Tree by a close friend. When she looked into getting the rights for the film she found that Australian producer Sue Taylor already had them, however she did not have a director. It just so happened that Julie is a director, and from there the co-production was born. The tree used in the film is Teviotville Tree, located in the small town of Teviotville in the state of Queensland. It has a 34 m spread, 20 m height and 2.31 m diameter at 1 m above ground, which is the narrowest point. The tree has low branches which have not been pruned off, and when they are laden with fruit they reach the ground. It is very rare to find this in a Moreton Bay Fig tree. It is estimated that it was planted in 1880.",
"score": "1.6257787"
},
{
"id": "3067364",
"title": "Orange Tree Theatre",
"text": " From 1986 to 2014 the theatre ran a trainee director scheme, each year appointing two young assistant directors. Graduates of this scheme included Rachel Kavanaugh, Timothy Sheader, Sean Holmes, Dominic Hill, and Anthony Clark. This was replaced by a Resident Director position in 2014/15. The Orange Tree currently runs an MA in Theatre Directing with St Mary's University, Twickenham which started in 2016–17.",
"score": "1.5631036"
},
{
"id": "15172973",
"title": "The Tree (1969 film)",
"text": " The Tree is a 1969 American film that was written, produced, and directed, by Robert Guenette. A psychological drama revolving around the kidnapping of a young child, the film stars Jordan Christopher, Eileen Heckart, Alan Landers, Gale Dixon, James Broderick, Kathy Ryan, Ruth Ford, and George Rose.",
"score": "1.5503144"
},
{
"id": "4895642",
"title": "The Tree (1993 film)",
"text": " The Tree is a 1993 short film that Todd Field created while a fellow at the AFI Conservatory. It is a non-verbal dramatic piece following the life of a boy born at the turn of the century. The single setting, an apple tree set high on a rural ridge, is where we glimpse the boy mature, fall in love, go to war, return with his own son, and finally pay his last respects as a very old man who has seen much change. The set was designed using the tree as a scale foreground visual anchor and employing forced perspective for other items appearing in frame, including distant mountains, a train, and a town in transition. The scene changes from season to season and year to year all achieved practically using trompe-l'œil. The film is loosely based upon and inspired by the story The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein.",
"score": "1.533947"
},
{
"id": "31830638",
"title": "The Tree (2010 film)",
"text": " The Tree is a French-Australian 2010 film co-produced between Australia and France. It was filmed in the small town of Boonah in Queensland, Australia, and follows the lives of Dawn (Charlotte Gainsbourg) and her four children after the unexpected death of her husband Peter (Aden Young). The film is an adaptation of the 2002 debut novel Our Father Who Art in the Tree by Australian writer and performer Judy Pascoe. The film closed the Cannes Film Festival on 23 May 2010 following the Awards Ceremony and received a seven-minute standing ovation. In addition, The Tree premiered at the 2010 Sydney Film Festival. The film is distributed in the US by Zeitgeist Films, opening on 15 July 2011 in New York, on 22 July in Los Angeles, Boston and Washington, D.C., and throughout the country over the summer.",
"score": "1.5217158"
},
{
"id": "14581175",
"title": "The Christmas Tree (1996 film)",
"text": " The Christmas Tree is a 1996 American made-for-television Christmas drama film directed by Sally Field, starring Julie Harris and Andrew McCarthy and produced by Walt Disney Television which premiered on ABC on December 22, 1996.",
"score": "1.5210862"
},
{
"id": "13431240",
"title": "The Learning Tree",
"text": " The film The Learning Tree is based on Gordon Parks's 1963 semi-autobiographical novel of the same name. Parks also wrote the screenplay, and as a result, the script for the movie did not deviate much from the book, except for featuring fewer characters for the sake of time. In addition to being the screenwriter, he was also the director, producer, and music composer. Assisting him with directing were Jack Aldworth and Fred Giles. Also working with Parks was James Lydon as associate producer and Burnett Guffey as cinematographer. These men tried to include as many black technicians as possible for the film. Parks personally chose Kyle Johnson to play the character of Newt, after a brief meeting with him in a Beverly Hills hotel. However, during the meeting, he gave no inclination that ",
"score": "1.517122"
},
{
"id": "9217648",
"title": "The Education of Little Tree (film)",
"text": " things, disappeared off the face of the earth in Alabama, where he was a Ku Kluxer, and reappeared in the Oklahoma-Texas area near the Cherokee reservation of the western Cherokee nation, where he proceeded to write several books. It strikes me he spent his literary life, and whoever he was in his second phase, in some kind of grand apology for his first life.\" Friedenberg was originally drawn to the book and chose to adapt it as he felt that \"characters and milieu they were in represented everything that was good about America and everything that was bad.\" Prior to Friedenberg's involvement, filmmakers Steven Spielberg and his former producing partnership between Peter Guber and Jon Peters had considered adapting the work into a feature film. Joseph Ashton, who stars in the film as the titular Little Tree, is himself of Cherokee ancestry.",
"score": "1.5086992"
},
{
"id": "12865723",
"title": "Bob and the Trees",
"text": " Director Diego Ongaro moved from Paris to Brooklyn, New York to Sandisfield, Massachusetts, where he befriended Bob Tarasuk, a farmer and logger. Tarasuk and Matthew Gallagher, Tarasuk's son-in-law and business partner, took Ongaro to their work, where he \"saw the conditions these guys lived under and how hard it is and the knowledge required\", and, after he saw \"how charismatic a character Bob was\", Ongaro \"felt [he] had a story\". Originally a short released in 2011, the film was expanded to feature-length with fifteen days of shooting in November 2014.",
"score": "1.5039461"
},
{
"id": "14581176",
"title": "The Christmas Tree (1996 film)",
"text": " A story about a forming friendship between an elderly nun, Sister Anthony (Julie Harris), and New York's Rockefeller Center's head gardener Richard Reilly (Andrew McCarthy), who wants to fell a tree which she has been growing for decades and move it to New York City for Christmas display.",
"score": "1.5037715"
},
{
"id": "29169408",
"title": "Brian Metcalf",
"text": " Metcalf directed the micro-budgeted drama/thriller The Lost Tree. The premiere was held at the TCL Chinese Theatre before a limited theatrical release in 2012. Metcalf wrote, directed and produced Living Among Us which stars John Heard (in his final performance), William Sadler, James Russo, Esme Bianco, Andrew Keegan and Thomas Ian Nicholas. The film was distributed by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment and given a limited theatrical release in 2017. The film was panned by critics, carrying a 14% rating at Rotten Tomatoes. Metcalf designed the poster for the Syrian documentary Little Gandhi, and won the Murray Weissman Award for it. Metcalf created, funded and directed the drama/thriller film Adverse, with a cast including Mickey ",
"score": "1.501703"
},
{
"id": "5722660",
"title": "Thomas Tree",
"text": "The Trees ; “Some Girls” (1982) – starring Gretchen Murray written by Thomas Tree and CJC – Directed by Paul Barrera Christy McCool ; “Neals Deal With Meals” (1990) – directed by Vincent Prect, written by Thomas Tree and CJC ; “Old Man Bagman” (1991) written by Thomas Tree and CJC – directed by Robert Reed Altman, (stars Albert Crane IV and is dedicated to his memory) Thomas Tree & Cory Joseph Coppage ; “So Quickly” (1993) – starring Jade Vaccarelli, directed by Robert Reed Altman ",
"score": "1.4957471"
},
{
"id": "28088835",
"title": "Harold Lee Tichenor",
"text": " (director) ; Boreal Forest: Spring and Summer (1978) (director) ; Gyros: Handle with Care (1978) (producer/director) ; The Snow War (1978) (writer/producer/director) ; Three Rivers (1978) (director) ; Edmonton Art Gallery (1977) (director) ; Katei Seikatsu: Japanese Family Life (1976) (producer/director) ; The Magic of Water (1975) (director) ; Chief Dan George Speaks (1974) (codirector/editor) ; Concerto for Water, Sun and Wilderness (1972) (director) ; Together (1972) (director) ; Bharata Natyam (1971) (director) ; Three Very Short Films (1967–1971) (director) ; Yard Limit (1970) (codirector) ; Life Cycle of Leucochloridium variae (1969) (director) - about Leucochloridium variae parasite ; Four Passes of the Invisible Hand (1966) (director) ",
"score": "1.4954658"
},
{
"id": "15766440",
"title": "The Halloween Tree (film)",
"text": "Gordon Hunt - Recording Director ; Jill Ziegenhagen - Talent Coordinator ; Kris Zimmerman - Recording Director, Animation Casting Director ; David Kirschner - Executive Producer ; Mark Young - Co-Executive Producer ; Kunio Shimamura - Associate Producer ; Catherine Winder - Production Executive ; Al Gmuer - Art Director ; William DeBoer Jr. - Negative Consultant ; Jerry Mills - Technical Director ; Michelle Douglas - Supervising Editor ; Joy Avery - Program Executive ; Jim Katz - Production Manager ; Floro Dery - Character Designer ; Edwin Collins - Supervising Recording Engineer ; Alvy Dorman - Recording Engineer ; Jim Hearn - Track Reader ; Sync Sound - Post Production Sound Services ",
"score": "1.4944541"
},
{
"id": "12212483",
"title": "The Fruitless Tree",
"text": " The director who is a married woman without any children in real life, confronts with the issue of infertility which is a concern in Niger. She shares a collection of stories about wives and husbands who refuse to be tested.",
"score": "1.484525"
},
{
"id": "5722655",
"title": "Thomas Tree",
"text": " Trees were regulars at the Blue Note, a Boulder nightclub where they performed with the likes of Hüsker Dü, Mau Mau 55, Firehose, Aviators, Buddy Rich. When Tree and CJC moved their partnership to Hollywood in 1986, they renamed the project Bodhitrees. In addition to Tree and CJC, Bodhitrees included Ronnie Nelson (Bass) James \"Fabe\" Fabery- (Guitar) Michael King (Bass) Alexander Christopher (Guitar) and drummer Ron Rosing (from Billy Corgan's first band \"The Marked\"). Tree was also hired by Rolling Stones producer Don Was to film the first 360-video with 'birds-eye' technology of a Rolling Stones concert at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada on March 4, 2006. Tree (Tectonic Phlegm Publishing) has been a member of ASCAP since 1988.",
"score": "1.4809382"
},
{
"id": "7670364",
"title": "The Tree of Knowledge (1920 film)",
"text": " The Tree of Knowledge is a lost 1920 American silent drama film produced by Famous Players-Lasky and distributed by Paramount Pictures. It was directed by William C. deMille and starred Robert Warwick. It is based on an 1897 play, The Tree of Knowledge, by R. C. Carton. In a prologue to the film involving a Garden of Eden scene, Yvonne Gardelle appears nude as Lilith to tempt Adam, who was played by dancer Theodore Kosloff. The two actors of the prologue were promoted in print advertisements for the film.",
"score": "1.4807444"
},
{
"id": "11285438",
"title": "Jonathan Messer",
"text": " film Joshua Tree starring Taylor Dayne. Messer also worked as the Assistant Director to Jim Sharman in the production of Three Furies at the Sydney Opera House. He has also directed and produced music videos for the bands Tiltmeter, Nokturnal and 67 Special. Messer trained in Los Angeles for three years, and developed his film making skills and experience studying film direction at the American Film Institute. He then worked as production assistant for the Kennedy-Marshall Company producing feature films such as Seabiscuit and The Bourne Supremacy. Before graduation from the MFA program in directing at the American Film Institute (AFI) in 2002, Messer underwent an internship at Killer Films in New York, working in ",
"score": "1.4781106"
},
{
"id": "2138394",
"title": "The Christmas Tree (1966 film)",
"text": " The Christmas Tree is a 1966 British children's adventure film about getting a Christmas tree to a London hospital for Christmas. It follows their escapades such as the difficulties in getting the tree inside a public bus, on the back of a jeep, and carrying it through villages and rescuing it from a river. Directed by Jim Clark and written by Ed Harper and Michael Barnes, it stars William Burleigh, Kate Nicholls and Anthony Honour, with an early role for Brian Blessed as a policeman.",
"score": "1.475637"
},
{
"id": "31260756",
"title": "Dore Schary",
"text": " for 556 performances. (It was later filmed, without Schary's involvement.) Less successful was The Highest Tree (1959), which Schary wrote, produced and directed (and featured a young Robert Redford in the cast ) and Triple Play (1959), a collection of short plays, which he produced. Schary wrote and produced the film version of Sunrise at Campobello, which was released by Warner Brothers, directed by Donehue, in 1960. He also had a brief uncredited role in the film as Chairman of the Connecticut Delegation. On Broadway, Schary had another huge hit as producer and director with the Meredith Wilson musical, The Unsinkable Molly Brown (1960) starring Tammy Grimes, which ",
"score": "1.4700456"
}
] |
Who was the director of Driven?
|
[
"Maurice Elvey"
] |
director
|
Driven (1916 film)
| 1,530,395 | 76 |
[
{
"id": "8074155",
"title": "Driven (2018 film)",
"text": " Driven is a 2018 biographical comedy thriller film directed by Nick Hamm and written by Colin Bateman. The film stars Jason Sudeikis, Lee Pace, Judy Greer, Isabel Arraiza, Michael Cudlitz, Erin Moriarty, Iddo Goldberg, Tara Summers, Justin Bartha, and Corey Stoll. The film premiered at the 75th Venice International Film Festival on September 8, 2018, and subsequently screened at the 2018 Toronto International Film Festival. It was released in the United States on August 16, 2019, by Universal Pictures Home Entertainment Content Group and in the United Kingdom on November 8, 2019, by Vertigo Releasing.",
"score": "1.7207295"
},
{
"id": "16167806",
"title": "Drive (2011 film)",
"text": " the director, a first in his career. The actor chose Danish filmmaker Nicolas Winding Refn, whose work he admired. He said, \"It had to be [him]. There was no other choice.\" When Refn read the first screenplay for Drive, he was more intrigued by the concept of a man having a split personality, being a stuntman by day and a getaway driver at night, than the plot of the story. Believing that the director might be intimidated by the script, as it was unlike anything he had done before, Gosling had concerns about whether Refn wanted to participate. Refn took on the project without hesitation.",
"score": "1.6683512"
},
{
"id": "29825189",
"title": "Driven (2008)",
"text": " Driven (2008) was the second annual Driven professional wrestling pay-per-view event produced by Ring of Honor. It aired on pay-per-view on November 14, 2008 and took place at Boston University's Case Gym in Boston, Massachusetts.",
"score": "1.6454096"
},
{
"id": "27985062",
"title": "Driven (1923 film)",
"text": " Driven is a 1923 American silent romance film produced and distributed by Universal Pictures. The director of the film was Charles Brabin. This film appears to be lost. The film was adapted from \"The Flower of the Flock\", a short story by Jay Gelzer.",
"score": "1.6429503"
},
{
"id": "31969063",
"title": "Jeremy Larner",
"text": " In 1971, Drive, He Said, was made into a movie directed by Jack Nicholson, who collaborated with Larner on the screenplay. This film constituted Nicholson's directorial debut and is available as part of the Criterion edition \"America Lost and Found: The BBS Story.\"",
"score": "1.6393533"
},
{
"id": "16167819",
"title": "Drive (2011 film)",
"text": " visual style, wide-angle lenses were used extensively by cinematographer Sigel, who avoided hand-held camera work. Preferring to keep the film more \"grounded\" and authentic, he also avoided the use of computer-generated imagery (CGI). Budget restrictions were also a factor in this decision. Although many stunt drivers are credited, Gosling did some stunts himself, after completing a stunt driving car crash course. During the production, Gosling re-built the 1973 Chevrolet Malibu used in the film, taking it apart and putting it back together. Filming concluded on November 12, 2010. Beth Mickle was hired as the film's production designer on Gosling's recommendation; they had worked together ",
"score": "1.5889338"
},
{
"id": "7643642",
"title": "Paul Tan",
"text": " The concept of a Malaysian motoring television programme sparked from Paul Tan and his team in 2008. The concept materialised into Driven, which debuted on 11 April 2010 on 8TV. Driven episodes were also hosted on a dedicated website owned by Driven Communications, www.driven.com.my. The show featured new car reviews, challenges, an 'Insider Review' segment, public service announcements and various other content concerning both Malaysian and international motoring topics. Driven was presented by three hosts, namely Sharizan Borhan, Nurul Alis and Harvinder Singh. It was directed by Jon Yap and produced by Nazrudin Rahman. The programme was sponsored by BHPetrol. Season 1 of Driven aired for 12 consecutive weeks, between 11 April 2010 and 4 July 2010 respectively.",
"score": "1.5875432"
},
{
"id": "6897378",
"title": "Driven (1916 film)",
"text": " Driven is a 1916 British silent drama film directed by Maurice Elvey and starring Elisabeth Risdon, Fred Groves and Guy Newall. The film is based on the play The Evolution of Katherine by E. Temple Thurston. After learning she hasn't long to live, a woman begins an affair.",
"score": "1.5645511"
},
{
"id": "28656269",
"title": "Driven (TV series)",
"text": " Driven is a motoring television programme launched by Channel 4 in 1998 as a rival to the successful and long-running BBC series Top Gear.",
"score": "1.5553668"
},
{
"id": "4950907",
"title": "Driven (video game)",
"text": " Driven is a racing video game released in 2001 by BAM! Entertainment. The game is based on the movie Driven with Sylvester Stallone.",
"score": "1.5537319"
},
{
"id": "15857786",
"title": "Driven (2007)",
"text": " Driven (2007) was the inaugural Driven professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event promoted by Ring of Honor (ROH). It took place on June 23, 2007 at the Frontier Fieldhouse in Chicago Ridge, Illinois, and first aired on September 21.",
"score": "1.549937"
},
{
"id": "6561450",
"title": "James Sallis",
"text": " Press, 2001) John Turner series ; Cypress Grove (New York: Walker & Co, 2003. Harpenden: No Exit Press, 2003) ; Cripple Creek (New York: Walker & Co, 2006) ; Salt River (New York: Walker & Co, 2007) The Driver series ; Drive (Scottsdale, AZ: Poisoned Pen Press, 2005) Set mostly in Arizona and L.A., Drive is about a man who does stunt driving for movies by day and drives for criminals at night. Nicolas Winding Refn won the Best Director award at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival for his film version of Drive with Ryan Gosling. ; Driven (2012) Seven years after the events of “Drive” Driver is now living in Phoenix under the name Paul West, engaged to be married. When two goons attack ",
"score": "1.5486345"
},
{
"id": "15524951",
"title": "Nicolas Winding Refn",
"text": " In 2011, Refn directed the American action drama film Drive (2011). It premiered in competition at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival, where he received the Best Director Award. The film earned Refn a BAFTA nomination for directing. The film was also nominated in 2012 for an Academy Award for Best Sound Editing, a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor - Motion Picture nomination for Albert Brooks, Excellence in Production Design Award from the Art Directors Guild, won Best Director, Best Screenplay (for Hossein Amini) and Best Supporting Actor (for Brooks) at the Austin Film Critics Awards, won Boston Society of Film Critics Awards for Best Supporting Actor ",
"score": "1.5465266"
},
{
"id": "16167791",
"title": "Drive (2011 film)",
"text": " Drive is a 2011 American action drama film directed by Nicolas Winding Refn. The screenplay, written by Hossein Amini, is based on James Sallis's 2005 novel of the same name. The film stars Ryan Gosling as an unnamed Hollywood stunt driver who moonlights as a getaway driver. He quickly grows fond of his neighbor, Irene (Carey Mulligan), and her young son, Benicio. When her debt-ridden husband, Standard (Oscar Isaac), is released from prison, the two men take part in what turns out to be a botched million-dollar heist that endangers the lives of everyone involved. The film co-stars Bryan Cranston, Christina Hendricks, Ron Perlman, and Albert Brooks. Producers Marc Platt and ",
"score": "1.5444969"
},
{
"id": "16167794",
"title": "Drive (2011 film)",
"text": " An unnamed Driver works as a mechanic, a stunt double, a stunt driver, and a criminal-for-hire getaway car driver in Los Angeles, California. His jobs are all managed by auto shop owner Shannon, who persuades Jewish mobster Bernie Rose and his half-Italian partner Nino 'Izzy' Paolozzi to purchase a car for the Driver to race. Driver meets his new neighbor, Irene, and grows close to her and her young son, Benicio. Their relationship is interrupted when Irene's husband, Standard Gabriel, arrives after his release from prison. Standard owes protection money from his time in prison and is assaulted by Albanian gangster Chris Cook, who demands that Standard rob a pawn ",
"score": "1.5363196"
},
{
"id": "31312422",
"title": "James Cunningham (director)",
"text": "Drive, Strawpeople (2000): director ; It's Not Enough, Strawpeople (2000): director ; Signals, Elleven (2004): director ",
"score": "1.536144"
},
{
"id": "27278782",
"title": "List of accolades received by Drive (2011 film)",
"text": " Drive is a 2011 American action drama film directed by Nicolas Winding Refn and written by Hossein Amini, based on the 2005 novel Drive by James Sallis. The film stars Ryan Gosling as an unnamed Hollywood stunt driver moonlighting as a getaway driver, whose budding relationship with his neighbor Irene (Carey Mulligan) and her young son Benicio is interrupted by the sudden release of her husband Standard (Oscar Isaac) from prison. Debt-ridden, Standard hires him to take part in what turns out to be a botched, million-dollar heist that endangers their lives. Bryan Cranston, Christina Hendricks, Ron Perlman, and Albert Brooks play supporting roles. The film premiered on May 11 ",
"score": "1.5347309"
},
{
"id": "28656271",
"title": "Driven (TV series)",
"text": " their paces. These concepts resurfaced in the reborn Top Gear soon after. Originally presented by Mike Brewer, James May and Jason Barlow, subsequent series also featured the rally driver Penny Mallory and the racing driver Jason Plato. During the show's run, both May and Barlow left the show to join the old format of BBC's Top Gear. Following the creation of Fifth Gear and the revival of Top Gear, Driven was cancelled by Channel 4 in 2002. Plato went on to present Fifth Gear, May joined the newly relaunched Top Gear, Brewer presented ITV's Pulling Power and Mallory could be seen on ITV4's Used Car Roadshow.",
"score": "1.534349"
},
{
"id": "26608576",
"title": "The Driven",
"text": " The Driven were an Irish rock band, possibly best known for their 1996 single Jesus Loves You More If You Can Drive. From 1995 to 1998, the band consisted of Brendan Markham (vocals, guitar), Darrin Mullins (lead guitar), Ned Kennedy (drums) and Paul Power (bass). After 1998, Ned Kennedy was replaced by Christian Best. Three of the members later went on to form a group called Citizen.",
"score": "1.5323365"
},
{
"id": "25420410",
"title": "Renny Harlin",
"text": " the change in studios and since he was contracted for the production of The Tuxedo in Toronto months before the attacks. Harlin's next project after Driven was to be a movie adaptation of the Ray Bradbury short story A Sound of Thunder, but Harlin left the project after a disagreement with Bradbury. Although the director was changed, Harlin was credited as a producer when the finished film was released in 2005. In 2006, Harlin collaborated with Markus Selin to direct a biopic of the Finnish President and Marshal of Finland Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim, but budget constraints put the project on hold. Instead, Harlin made another foray into low-budget horror with The Covenant, which was another moderate commercial success. In 2007 the Mannerheim film ",
"score": "1.5268399"
}
] |
Who was the director of Son contento?
|
[
"Maurizio Ponzi"
] |
director
|
Son contento
| 2,925,773 | 73 |
[
{
"id": "29632835",
"title": "Son contento",
"text": " Son contento (I'm Happy) is a 1983 Italian drama comedy film directed by Maurizio Ponzi. For his performance Carlo Giuffré won the David di Donatello for best supporting actor.",
"score": "1.9508868"
},
{
"id": "6047355",
"title": "Son (2008 film)",
"text": " Son is a 2008 short film starring Natalie Press. Financed and commissioned by Sony Vaio it was a branded content short that would become Viao's first branded content film. It went on to win multiple awards including Best Film at Edinburgh International Film Festival and Best Film at Slamdance Film Festival, becoming both a commercial hit and critical success for Sony Vaio.",
"score": "1.5466162"
},
{
"id": "6047357",
"title": "Son (2008 film)",
"text": " Sony Vaio commissioned three artists: musicians Plan B, DJ Norman Jay and filmmaker Daniel Mulloy to each create branded pieces of content for Sony Vaio. Son was commissioned as a marketing tool for the Sony Vaio computer and actress Natalie Press was cast in the lead role. In the filmmaker's hands a narrative was created in which the relationship with Sony Vaio became more subliminal to audiences than traditional product placement. After winning Slamdance Film Festival Son was invited to become one of the first short films to feature on YouTube's newly opened Screening Room. Son's subsequent success led YouTube to promote Son on its US home-page as a featured video.",
"score": "1.5198619"
},
{
"id": "29632836",
"title": "Son contento",
"text": "Francesco Nuti: Francesco ; Barbara De Rossi: Paola ; Carlo Giuffré: Falcone ; Novello Novelli: Manager ; Ricky Tognazzi: Postman ",
"score": "1.5164497"
},
{
"id": "3581586",
"title": "Julio Hernández Cordón",
"text": " In 2003 Hernández Cordón directed the short film Km 31 and five years later, Gasolina (2008), his first feature film, premiered. The film, about three teenagers who steal gasoline to go out at night and drive around in their mom's car, won the Industry, Casa de América and CICAE Awards at the San Sebastián International Film Festival. While reviewing the film, Variety stated that the director \"prominently displays his pitifully scarce resources in the guise of minimalism\". His second film, was the documentary Las Marimbas del Infierno (2010), about Don Alfonso, a marimbero extorted by the mara, and Blacko, a doctor who plays ",
"score": "1.4707918"
},
{
"id": "29161706",
"title": "Román Viñoly Barreto",
"text": " The director was the father of architect Rafael Viñoly, artist Daniel Viñoly, and Dr. Ana Maria de la Merced Viñoly. He died in 1970 in Buenos Aires, Argentina.",
"score": "1.4618456"
},
{
"id": "28007457",
"title": "Pedro Masó",
"text": " Pedro Masó Paulet (born 26 January 1927 in Madrid; died 23 September 2008 in Madrid) was a Spanish director, producer, and scriptwriter. His relation with the cinema began at an early age when he was employed as a boy in the Estudios Chamartín in Madrid. There he performed many jobs, until he was made chief of production in 1953. In 1962 he founded his own production company, Pedro Masó Producciones Cinematográficas, with which he produced some of the biggest commercial successes of Spanish film, including Atraco a las tres, Vacaciones para Ivette, Un millón a la basura and La familia bien, gracias. In 1986 he created the firm Escorpio Films as a branch of Pedro Maso Producciones and subsequently produced his first feature-length movie, entitled El Tesoro with direction by Antonio Mercero and based on the novel of Miguel Delibes. From 1993 he directed and produced the series Compuesta y Sin Novio for the television station Antena 3, starring Lina Morgan and José Coronado.",
"score": "1.4567406"
},
{
"id": "3236859",
"title": "Chūsei Sone",
"text": " Chūsei Sone (曽根 中生) was a Japanese film director known for his stylish and popular Roman Porno films for Nikkatsu, particularly the first two installments of the Angel Guts series. Despite a somewhat uneven career, many mainstream critics consider Sone the best of Nikkatsu's Roman Porno directors.",
"score": "1.4345595"
},
{
"id": "25341174",
"title": "Father There Is Only One",
"text": " The film was produced by Bowfinger International Pictures, Sony Pictures International Productions and Mamá se fue de viaje la película A.I.E., alongside Cindy Teperman and Mogambo, with the collaboration of Atresmedia Cine, and the participation of Amazon Prime Video and Atresmedia.",
"score": "1.4325101"
},
{
"id": "7346495",
"title": "A Son of Man",
"text": " A Son of Man is a 2018 Ecuadorian adventure film directed by Jamaicanoproblem and co- directed by Pablo Agüero. It was selected as the Ecuadorian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 91st Academy Awards, but it was not nominated.",
"score": "1.4319522"
},
{
"id": "14070417",
"title": "Marcos Zurinaga",
"text": "Siempre estuvimos aquí (director) 1977 ; Alicia Alonso y el ballet Nacional de Cuba (16 mm, color, 90 mins. Director) 1979 ; A Step Away (35 mm, color, 120 mins. Director. Roberto Ponce Producer) 1980 ; La Gran Fiesta (35 mm, color, 100 mins. Director, Producer and screenwriter) 1985 ; Tango Bar (35 mm, color. Director, Producer and Screenwriter) 1987 ; A flor de piel (35 mm, color, 80 mins. Director) 1990 ; Puerto Rico (70 mm, color, 15 mins. Director and Producer) 1992 ; Un pueblo que canta-a Banco Popular de Puerto Rico Christmas special (Video. Director) 1994 ; El espíritu de un pueblo-a Banco Popular de Puerto Rico Christmas special (Video. Director) 1995 ; Somos un solo pueblo-a Banco Popular de Puerto Rico Christmas special (Video. Director) 1996 ; The Disappearance of Garcia Lorca (35 mm, color. Director, Screenwriter and Producer) 1997 ; Siempre Piel Canela (Video. Director) 1998 ; Mariela y otras historias Director. Caesar Osiris 2010 ",
"score": "1.4246149"
},
{
"id": "12876860",
"title": "Brother Joe",
"text": " The 93-minute black and white film was made for Argentina Sono Film by director Antonio Momplet. It was written by Nicolás Proserpio, and stars Pepe Arias, Carlos Castro and Ada Cornaro.",
"score": "1.4238305"
},
{
"id": "6274279",
"title": "Gonzalo Rodríguez Risco",
"text": " Play Festival at Yale School of Drama in 2007. It was directed by Erik Pearson and later published in \"The Private Life\" along two plays from Yale School of Drama Playwrights, Matt Moses and Mattie Brickman. In 2007, he premiered \"Father/Son\". as part of \"Speaking Our Mind\" at the Carlotta Festival of New Plays in New Haven. At the end of the year, his play Dramatis Personae, directed by Becca Wolff, was staged at the Langston Hughes Festival of New Plays in New Haven. It was later staged in Lima, Peru in 2008. The US premiere of the play was ",
"score": "1.4217589"
},
{
"id": "14344652",
"title": "La cuna vacía",
"text": " In April 1948, the production company Artistas Argentinos Asociados signed a contract with the renowned writer, essayist, journalist and pediatrician Florencio Escardó, whose pseudonym was Piolin de Macramé, to shoot a film based on his story of Dr. Ricardo Gutiérrez. The following month, Germán Gelpi began to design the sets and Carlos Rinaldi was hired as director. The shooting of the film between July 1948 and January 1949 was long and arduous, during which the director of photography Francis Boeniger had to retire to fulfill other commitments and was replaced by Humberto Peruzzi, a collaborator who had been present from the founding of the production company. According to the critic César Maranghello, Lucas Demare, who was one of the partners of Artistas Argentinos Asociados, actively participated in the direction of the film.",
"score": "1.4189168"
},
{
"id": "3236860",
"title": "Chūsei Sone",
"text": " Chūsei Sone majored in Art History at Tohoku University, and graduated in 1962. Soon after graduation, he began work as an Assistant director at Nikkatsu studios, where he worked with Seijun Suzuki. Suzuki's directing style was to have a lasting influence on Sone's own later work. In their Japanese Cinema Encyclopedia: The Sex Films, the Weissers compare Suzuki and Sone, writing, \"Sone's films are riddled with quirky characters and surrealistic metaphors, but unlike the works of Suzuki, these movies are much more linear, plot driven, and ultimately crowd pleasing.\" When Nikkatsu started their Roman Porno series of mainstream theatrical softcore pornographic films in November 1971, Sone was ",
"score": "1.4146873"
},
{
"id": "3024081",
"title": "Son of the Bride",
"text": " Son of the Bride (El hijo de la novia) is a 2001 Argentine comedy drama film directed by Juan José Campanella and written by Campanella and Fernando Castets. The executive producers were Juan Vera and Juan Pablo Galli, and it was produced by Adrián Suar. It stars Ricardo Darín, Héctor Alterio, Norma Aleandro, Eduardo Blanco and Natalia Verbeke. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film and won the Silver Condor for Best Film.",
"score": "1.4129328"
},
{
"id": "4997667",
"title": "Manolo Caro",
"text": " Manolo Caro (born 1985) is a Mexican director, known for films including Tales of an Immoral Couple and the Netflix series The House of Flowers and Someone Has To Die. He also directed the film Perfect Strangers. All of these star Caro's frequent collaborator and muse, Cecilia Suárez.",
"score": "1.411576"
},
{
"id": "7383087",
"title": "Alfonso Arau",
"text": " Lucas Lucatero ; Calzonzin Inspector (1974, director, writer) - Calzonzín ; Posse (1975) - Pepe ; Tívoli (1975, writer) - Tiliches ; La palomilla al rescate (1976) - (uncredited) ; Caribe, estrella y aguila (1976, director) ; Used Cars (1980) - Manuel ; Mojado Power (1981, director, writer) - Nato Solís ; El día que murió Pedro Infante (1982) ; Romancing the Stone (1984) - Juan ; Redondo (1986) ; Three Amigos (1986, actor) - El Guapo ; Chido Guan, el tacos de oro (1986, director, writer) ; Miami Vice (1987, TV Series) - Jorge Cruz ; Walker (1987) ",
"score": "1.4063437"
},
{
"id": "27383088",
"title": "Your Son",
"text": " Your Son (Tu hijo) is a 2018 thriller drama film directed by Miguel Ángel Vivas and written by Vivas and Alberto Marini. It stars Jose Coronado, Ana Wagener, Asia Ortega, Pol Monen and Ester Expósito. The plot revolves around Jaime Jimenez (Coronado), a surgeon who starts to investigate the beating of his teenage son, Marcos (Monen), outside a nightclub. Your Son was released in Spain on 9 November 2018 by eOne. It was released internationally on Netflix on 1 March 2019.",
"score": "1.4056156"
},
{
"id": "1502038",
"title": "Ignacio F. Iquino",
"text": " Ignacio F. Iquino (Valls, Tarragona Province; October 25, 1910-Barcelona; April 24, 1994) was a Spanish film director, screenwriter, producer, cinematographer and editor. He was the son of theater and film composer Ramón Ferrés and the actress Teresea Iquino. He's most commonly known as a writer/producer/director of several low-budget paella westerns (a Spanish version of a spaghetti western), the better known of which starred Richard Harrison and Fernando Sancho. Iquino also worked with some other minor stars of the time, such as Erika Blanc in Stagecoach of the Condemned (1970). He died in Barcelona on 29 April 1994 aged 83.",
"score": "1.4051437"
}
] |
Who was the director of Taxi at Midnight?
|
[
"Harry Piel",
"Heinrich Piel"
] |
director
|
Taxi at Midnight
| 661,853 | 80 |
[
{
"id": "27660753",
"title": "The Midnight Taxi",
"text": " The Midnight Taxi is a 1928 American early part-talkie thriller picture from Warner Bros. directed by John G. Adolfi and starring Antonio Moreno, Helen Costello, and Myrna Loy. According to the Library of Congress, it has a completed copy of the film and found at British Film Institute's National Film and Television Archive..",
"score": "1.762994"
},
{
"id": "9217052",
"title": "Taxi at Midnight",
"text": " Taxi at Midnight (German: Die Mitternachtstaxe) is a 1929 German silent thriller film directed by Harry Piel and starring Piel, Betty Bird and Philipp Manning. The film's art direction was by Fritz Maurischat and Max Knaake.",
"score": "1.7545164"
},
{
"id": "4135121",
"title": "Midnight Taxi (1937 film)",
"text": " A federal agent poses as a taxi driver to infiltrate a gang of counterfeiters.",
"score": "1.7450919"
},
{
"id": "4135120",
"title": "Midnight Taxi (1937 film)",
"text": " Midnight Taxi is a 1937 American crime film directed by Eugene Forde and starring Brian Donlevy, Frances Drake and Alan Dinehart.",
"score": "1.7339015"
},
{
"id": "4135122",
"title": "Midnight Taxi (1937 film)",
"text": "Brian Donlevy as Charles 'Chick' Gardner ; Frances Drake as Gilda Lee ; Alan Dinehart as Philip Strickland ; Sig Ruman as John B. Rudd ; Gilbert Roland as Flash Dillon ; Harold Huber as Walter 'Lucky' Todd ; Paul Stanon as Agent J. W. McNeary ; Lon Chaney Jr. as Detective Erickson ; Russell Hicks as Barney Flagg ; Regis Toomey as Hilton ; Agnes Ayres as Society Woman ; Joseph E. Bernard as Copy Reader ; Edgar Dearing as Officer Murray ; John Dilson as Doc Wilson ; James Flavin as Detective McCormick ; Creighton Hale as G-Man ; Sherry Hall as Monte ; Eddie Hart as Detective Morton ; Otto Hoffman as Louie the Tailor ; Frank Marlowe as Sailor ; Paul McVey as Robert Powers ; Frank Mills as Gas Station Attendant ; Frank O'Connor as FBI Agent ; Lee Phelps as Chief of Detectives ; Arthur Rankin as Sailor ; Pedro Regas as Dazetta ; Jeffrey Sayre as Buck ; Harry Semels as Joe, Counterman ; Harry Strang as FBI Agent ; Zeffie Tilbury as Mrs. Lane ; Hughey White as Newspaper Vendor ; Norman Willis as Jefferson ",
"score": "1.6476686"
},
{
"id": "14520584",
"title": "Martin Scorsese",
"text": " on New York's crime-ridden streets. The film established him as an accomplished filmmaker and also brought attention to cinematographer Michael Chapman, whose style tends towards high contrasts, strong colors, and complex camera movements. The film starred Robert De Niro as the troubled and psychotic Travis Bickle, and co-starred Jodie Foster in a highly controversial role as an underage prostitute, with Harvey Keitel as her pimp. Taxi Driver also marked the start of a series of collaborations between Scorsese and writer Paul Schrader, whose influences included the diary of would-be assassin Arthur Bremer and Pickpocket, a film by the French director Robert Bresson. Writer–director Schrader often returns ",
"score": "1.5853524"
},
{
"id": "26225443",
"title": "Taxi (1953 film)",
"text": " Taxi is a 1953 American drama film directed by Gregory Ratoff and starring Dan Dailey. It was distributed by 20th Century-Fox.",
"score": "1.5743976"
},
{
"id": "11276566",
"title": "Taxi Driver (1954 film)",
"text": " Taxi Driver is a 1954 Hindi romantic musical film produced by Navketan Films. The film was directed by Chetan Anand and stars his brother Dev Anand, along with Kalpana Kartik, Sheila Ramani and Johnny Walker. The film was written by Chetan himself, along with his wife Uma Anand and his other brother Vijay Anand. The film's music director was S. D. Burman and the lyrics were written by Sahir Ludhianvi.",
"score": "1.5492362"
},
{
"id": "26233183",
"title": "Taxi, Mister",
"text": " Taxi, Mister is a 1943 American comedy film directed by Kurt Neumann and written by Earle Snell and Clarence Marks. The film stars William Bendix, Grace Bradley, Joe Sawyer, Sheldon Leonard, Joe Devlin, Jack Norton, Frank Faylen, Mike Mazurki, Sig Arno, Clyde Fillmore, Jimmy Conlin, Lew Kelly and Iris Adrian. The film was released on April 16, 1943, by United Artists.",
"score": "1.5481904"
},
{
"id": "26225444",
"title": "Taxi (1953 film)",
"text": " Taxi driver Ed Nielson is a bad-tempered bachelor who lives with his mother and owes money on his cab. On a day when things are going wrong, Ed picks up a steamship passenger, Mary Turner, arriving from Ireland, and drives her in a roundabout way rather than directly to her destination. The meter reads $12 but she has only $5, angering Ed. Mary is trying to find a man she impulsively married in Dublin but hasn't seen since, Jim, a writer. He is nowhere to be found. His publisher, Miss Millard, reveals that Jim has gone back to Europe to write and that Mary should go ",
"score": "1.5337999"
},
{
"id": "27660754",
"title": "The Midnight Taxi",
"text": "Antonio Moreno as Tony Driscoll ; Helene Costello as Nan Parker ; Myrna Loy as Gertie Fairfax ; William Russell as Joseph Brant ; Tommy Dugan as Al Corvini ; Bobby Agnew as Jack Madigan ; Pat Hartigan as Detective Blake ; Jack Santoro as Lefty ; William Hauber as Squint ; Paul Kreuger as Dutch ; Spencer Bell as Rastus ",
"score": "1.5321755"
},
{
"id": "15804303",
"title": "Taxi (2004 film)",
"text": " Taxi is a 2004 American action comedy film directed by Tim Story and starring Queen Latifah, Jimmy Fallon, Gisele Bündchen, Jennifer Esposito, and Ann-Margret. An incompetent New York City police officer is banned from driving and comes to rely on a talented taxi driver to help him solve a series of bank robberies. The film was panned by critics.",
"score": "1.5223948"
},
{
"id": "3756998",
"title": "Taxi 13",
"text": " Taxi 13 is a 1928 silent film comedy produced and distributed by Film Booking Offices of America and directed by Marshall Neilan. The film stars Chester Conklin in what is FBO's first film with a pre-recorded soundtrack. Once thought lost, a copy evidently survives at Cineteca Nazionale, Rome.",
"score": "1.5111512"
},
{
"id": "31818096",
"title": "Night Taxi",
"text": " Night Taxi (Italian: Taxi di notte) is a 1950 French-Italian comedy film about a taxicab driver, directed by Carmine Gallone and starring Beniamino Gigli, Danielle Godet and Philippe Lemaire. After finding a baby left abandoned in his cab, a singing taxi driver tries to find its mother.",
"score": "1.5089242"
},
{
"id": "16293535",
"title": "Into the Night (1985 film)",
"text": " director of A Raisin in the Sun (1961), as the director of the hostage film ; Dedee Pfeiffer, actress and sister of Michelle Pfeiffer, as the hooker ; Waldo Salt, Academy Award-winning screenwriter of Midnight Cowboy (1969) and Coming Home (1978), as the derelict who informs Ed of his car having been towed ; Don Siegel, director of Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) and Dirty Harry (1971), as the man caught with a girl in the hotel bathroom ; Jake Steinfeld as Larry, Jack Caper's bodyguard ; Roger Vadim, director of And God Created Woman (1956) and Barbarella (1968), as Monsieur Melville, the French kidnapper ; \"Blue\" Lou Marini, saxophonist, in the airport crowd John Landis appears in the film as the mute member of the quartet of Iranian henchmen, alongside:",
"score": "1.5066586"
},
{
"id": "31898849",
"title": "Robert Mulligan",
"text": " it would have been a very simple person; they don't make complex people. If they do, they end up cardboard complex, lacking in passion.\" Unable to direct Taxi Driver, Mulligan proceeded by rounding out the 1970s with three films dominated by performances from A-list Hollywood actors: Jason Miller as a Los Angeles locksmith threatened by hitmen in The Nickel Ride (1974); Richard Gere as an Italian-American youth trying to break from his working-class family in Bloodbrothers (1978); and Alan Alda and Ellen Burstyn portraying George and Doris, a pair of long-term adulterers, in Same Time Next Year (1978), based on the play by Bernard Slade.",
"score": "1.4996835"
},
{
"id": "11276567",
"title": "Taxi Driver (1954 film)",
"text": " Mangal (Dev Anand) is a taxi driver who is called \"Hero\" by his friends because of his altruistic habits. He is a driver who drives a cab by day, then at night listens to the seductive club dancer Sylvie (Sheila Ramani) who has feelings for him. One day, while assisting another taxi driver, Mangal comes to the assistance of a damsel in distress, Mala (Kalpana Kartik), who is being molested by two thugs. Mangal gallantly rescues her, and attempts to take her to her destination, but to no avail, as the person she is looking for is Ratanlal, a music director, and he has moved out. The next day, Mangal ",
"score": "1.4989539"
},
{
"id": "4088404",
"title": "Arthur Taxier",
"text": " Arthur Taxier (born January 19, 1951) is an American character actor, best known for the role of Lieutenant Carl Zymak in the TV series Midnight Caller. He also played the recurring role of Dr. Morton Chegley in the TV series St. Elsewhere, between 1983 and 1988. He played William Weiderman in the Tales from the Darkside episode Sorry, Right Number (1987), written by Stephen King.",
"score": "1.4950941"
},
{
"id": "12985071",
"title": "Taxi No. 9211",
"text": "Director: Milan Luthria ; Producer: Ramesh Sippy, Rohan Sippy & Hussain Shaikh ; Screenplay: Manoj Tyagi ; Story: Milan Luthria ; Dialogue: Rajat Arora ; Music: Vishal-Shekhar ; Cinematography: Karthik Vijay ; Choreography: Bosco–Caesar ; Lyrics: Dev Kohli & Vishal Dadlani ; Action: Abbas Ali Moghul ; Art Direction:Wasiq Khan ; Editing: Aarif Sheikh ; Costume Designs: Rocky S & Lajjo C ",
"score": "1.4938364"
},
{
"id": "25429596",
"title": "Taxi (film series)",
"text": " Taxi was shot in 1998 by Gérard Pirès based on the script by Luc Besson. It tells the story of the young taxi driver Daniel, who loves risk and high speeds, and clumsy policeman Émilien who team up to catch a German gang of bank robbers. In the end, thanks to Daniel's ingenuity, they succeed. The movie earned $44.4 million at the box office with a budget of $8.1 million.",
"score": "1.492981"
}
] |
Who was the director of Freedom?
|
[
"Liz Friedlander"
] |
director
|
Freedom (The Following)
| 1,051,711 | 63 |
[
{
"id": "25262720",
"title": "USA Freedom Corps",
"text": " C. Lozano was Deputy Assistant to the President and Director of USA Freedom Corps from September 11, 2007 until July 25, 2008. He was preceded by Desiree Thompson Sayle and succeeded by Alison T. Young. The first director of the program was John Bridgeland, previously director of the Domestic Policy Council on George W. Bush's White House staff. The USA Freedom Corps also announced it has begun to work \"with educators and others to help increase civic awareness and participation\" across the United States and hosted a White House Summit on American History, Civics and Service, resulting in new initiatives to support civic education at the National ",
"score": "1.6083577"
},
{
"id": "11944574",
"title": "Anthony D. Romero",
"text": " Anthony Romero became executive director in September 2001, just before the September 11, 2001 attacks. He is the first openly gay man and the first Hispanic director of the civil liberties institution. After the September 11th attacks, Romero launched a national campaign called \"Keep America Safe and Free\" to protect American civil liberties and basic freedoms during a time of crisis in the United States. The campaign successfully targeted the Patriot Act, achieving a number of court victories, and uncovered hundreds of thousands of documents detailing the illegal torture and abuse of detainees in U.S. custody in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Guantanamo. As a result of their successful ",
"score": "1.5895474"
},
{
"id": "14696742",
"title": "Freedom (2016 film)",
"text": " British producer and religious minister George Hargreaves premiered Freedom on stage in Europe in August 2017. It was staged at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in Scotland and the Bernie Grant Arts Centre in London between August 15-26th that same year.",
"score": "1.5492014"
},
{
"id": "26067626",
"title": "Henry Lozano",
"text": " Henry Lozano (born August 24, 1948) is a non-profit executive and grassroots organizer. His years of public service culminated in his post at the White House as Deputy Assistant to the President and Director of USA Freedom Corps. On August 10, 2011, he was appointed to serve as the Director of Los Angeles County Teen Challenge and Urban Ministries Initiatives. On September 11, 2007, President George W. Bush asked Lozano to step into the job of Deputy Assistant to the President and director of USA Freedom Corps. In this role, he advanced the \"Call to Service\" initiative launched by President George W. Bush in his 2002 \"State of the Union\" address. President George W. Bush created USA Freedom Corps to build on the countless acts of service, sacrifice and generosity that followed the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. As director, Lozano coordinated service ",
"score": "1.5440723"
},
{
"id": "14190390",
"title": "Gwendolyn Zoharah Simmons",
"text": " trainer, working with Staughton Lynd in his capacity as orientation director, as well as Vincent Harding. In Mississippi, Simmons was sent to the city of Laurel in Jones County, an area notorious for Klan violence. In this environment, Simmons feared for her life, regularly encountering hostility and police harassment. When her project director, Lester McKinney, was sent to jail, Simmons was appointed to replace him, despite her lack of field organizing experience. She thus became one of only seven female Freedom Summer project directors. Under Simmons' direction, Freedom Summer volunteers operated a Freedom School, opened a day care, registered voters, and established a library.",
"score": "1.5397063"
},
{
"id": "4240149",
"title": "Steve Ross (director)",
"text": " Steve Ross (born Steven J. Ross in Elmont, New York on December 29, 1949) is an American motion picture director living in Memphis, Tennessee. He is best known for his documentary Oh Freedom After While, a story of the Missouri sharecropper strike of 1939. Ross received a bachelor's degree from the State University of New York in 1971 and a master's degree from New York University in 1974. He is a professor at the University of Memphis and was named Communicator of the Year by the Tennessee Speech Communication Association in 1999.",
"score": "1.5317101"
},
{
"id": "29631522",
"title": "Where Is Freedom?",
"text": " Where Is Freedom? (Dov'è la libertà?) is a 1954 Italian comedy-drama film directed by Roberto Rossellini. The film had a troubled production because, after shooting some scenes, Rossellini lost interest in the film and abandoned the set. The work was completed after about a year, mainly from Mario Monicelli, with some scenes also shot by Lucio Fulci and Federico Fellini. Despite that, Rossellini is the sole credited director of the film.",
"score": "1.512753"
},
{
"id": "27268100",
"title": "Floyd Mann",
"text": " Floyd Mann (August 20, 1920 - January 12, 1996) was an American law enforcement official, who served as Director of the Alabama Department of Public Safety between 1959 and 1963. He is best known for his interactions with the Freedom Riders who passed through Alabama in May 1961.",
"score": "1.501421"
},
{
"id": "12980136",
"title": "Freedom Communications",
"text": "D.R. Segal (1981–1992) ; James N. Rosse (1992–1999) ; Samuel C. Wolgemuth (1999–2002) ; Alan Bell (2002–2006) ; Scott N. Flanders (2006–2009) ; Burl Osborne (2009–2010) ; Mitchell Stern (2010–2012) ; Aaron Kushner (2012–2015) ; Rich Mirman (2015−2016) Founder and chief executive officer R.C. Hoiles led Freedom until his death in 1970. He was succeeded as chief executive officer by his son, C.H. Hoiles, who served until 1981, and then by: ",
"score": "1.4934202"
},
{
"id": "13353349",
"title": "Shuhei Morita",
"text": "Freedom (2006; Director, CG, Storyboard (Ep. 4) ; Coicent (2010, Director, Script) ; Votoms Finder (2010; CG supervision) ; Chō Kidō Gaiku KASHIWA-NO-HA (2015; Director, Supervisor manga adaptation) ",
"score": "1.4889264"
},
{
"id": "12337107",
"title": "The Line of Freedom",
"text": " The Line of Freedom is a 2013 political drama film directed and produced by David Whitney and starring Antonio Aakeel. The film had its world premiere at the Dubai International Film Festival in 2013. It was instantly banned in Pakistan due to the controversial depiction of its security forces and subsequently contributed to a national ban of the Internet Movie Database. The film has sparked a backlash from some titling it \"anti-state propaganda\" and resulted in its star Antonio Aakeel, and others who had helped in the production allegedly receiving death threats.",
"score": "1.4800271"
},
{
"id": "14732596",
"title": "New Freedom Theatre",
"text": " After the death of co-founder and artistic director John E. Allen, Jr., the theatre's board of directors appointed Walter Dallas, former head of Philadelphia's University of the Arts theatre program. Dallas made the theatre an Equity house and created links with theatre professionals across the country to bring prominence to the New Freedom Theatre. Under the leadership of Walter Dallas, the company completed a $10-million capital fund-raising drive which created the 299-seat John E. Allen, Jr. theatre, which opened for the 1996–1997 season. (American Theatre 1995 Graham) The current artistic director of The New Freedom Theatre is Rajendra Ramoon Maharaj. He is an Indo-Caribbean American artist, educator and activist. His credits at the New Freedom Theatre include The Ballad of Trayvon Martin, Jamaica, Don't Bother Me, I Can't Cope, The Colored Museum, and Walk Through Time. The executive producing director is Sandra Norris Haughton. She is known as a successful professional in evaluating and implementing new strategies for cultural institutions in distress and developed transformational strategies to redefine and make them viable.",
"score": "1.4750862"
},
{
"id": "13048834",
"title": "The Future of Freedom Conference",
"text": " psychologist; Sandy Shakocius (a.k.a. Sandy Shaw), life-extensionist and biochemist; Shawn Steel, a founder of the Future of Freedom Conference Series; Carl Nicolai, electronics designer and inventor; Kenneth Grubbs, Jr., editorial editor of The Register in Orange County, and Janice Allen, Libertarian Party activist, emceed the event. The Saturday banquet paid tribute to libertarian pacifist, author, TV/radio broadcaster, and founder of Rampart College, Robert LeFevre, who received the Future of Freedom Award. Another award, the Ludwig von Mises Merit of Honor Award was presented to Dana Rohrabacher, one of the early organizers of the Future of Freedom Conference series. A film festival included For a New Liberty, Libra, The Inflation File, and Theo Kamecke directed The Incredible Bread Machine. Debates pitted notable opposites, including the following: Lowell Ponte, radio commentator ",
"score": "1.4734194"
},
{
"id": "10894161",
"title": "Muriel S. Snowden",
"text": " Muriel Sutherland Snowden (July 14, 1916 – September 30, 1988) was the founder and co-director of Freedom House, a community improvement center in Roxbury, Massachusetts. She is, together with her husband Otto P. Snowden, a major figure in Boston history and activism.",
"score": "1.4665219"
},
{
"id": "5964098",
"title": "Freedom! '90",
"text": " did I know that to this day, when someone meets me for the first time, they bring up that video. That's what they remember. So yeah, George was right.\" An initial disagreement over their salaries was resolved when Annie Veltri, who represented Crawford, Evangelista, Campbell, and Patitz at Elite Model Management, clarified that all of her clients would be compensated equally, at $15,000 a day. The video was directed by David Fincher, who had also directed videos by Madonna, Billy Idol, Aerosmith, and Paula Abdul (who choreographed George Michael's Faith Tour). His team for the multi-day \"Freedom! '90\" shoot included ",
"score": "1.4655882"
},
{
"id": "5999226",
"title": "David Fincher",
"text": " Springfield, Martha Davis, Paula Abdul, rock band the Outfield, and R&B singer Jermaine Stewart. Fincher's 1990 music video for \"Freedom! '90\" was one of the most successful for George Michael. In addition, he directed Michael Jackson's \"Who Is It\", Aerosmith's \"Janie's Got A Gun\" and Billy Idol's \"Cradle of Love\". For Madonna, he directed some of her iconic music videos: \"Express Yourself\", \"Oh Father\", \"Vogue\" and \"Bad Girl\". Between 1984 and 1993, Fincher was credited as a director for 53 music videos. He referred to the production of music videos as his own \"film school\", in which he learned how to work efficiently within a small budget and time frame.",
"score": "1.4647396"
},
{
"id": "32061135",
"title": "Freedom (1982 film)",
"text": " Freedom is a 1982 film directed by Scott Hicks, starring Jon Blake and Jad Capelja.",
"score": "1.4628066"
},
{
"id": "4231296",
"title": "Ira Berlin",
"text": " Project and served as director until 1991. The project's multi-volume Freedom: A Documentary History of Emancipation has twice been awarded the Thomas Jefferson Prize of the Society for the History of the Federal Government, as well as the J. Franklin Jameson Prize of the American Historical Association for outstanding editorial achievement (October, 1999). He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2004. In 2003, Berlin was the chief advisor for the HBO documentary Unchained Memories. In 2007, he was an advising scholar for the award-winning PBS documentary Prince Among Slaves, produced by Unity Productions Foundation.",
"score": "1.4623723"
},
{
"id": "2899081",
"title": "Sound of Freedom (film)",
"text": " Sound of Freedom is an upcoming American biographical action drama film directed by Alejandro Monteverde and starring Jim Caviezel, Mira Sorvino, and Bill Camp. Caviezel plays Tim Ballard, a self-styled anti-human trafficking activist and founder of the organization Operation Underground Railroad.",
"score": "1.4552894"
},
{
"id": "31359016",
"title": "Freedom (2000 film)",
"text": " Freedom (Laisvė) is a 2000 drama film directed by Šarūnas Bartas. It tells the story of two men and a woman who are stranded in the Moroccan desert after a failed smuggling trip. The film was a co-production between companies in Lithuania, France and Portugal. It premiered in competition at the 57th Venice International Film Festival.",
"score": "1.4515841"
}
] |
Who was the director of Balance?
|
[
"Lyudmil Kirkov"
] |
director
|
Balance (1983 film)
| 2,987,359 | 75 |
[
{
"id": "31787797",
"title": "Balance (1983 film)",
"text": "Georgi Georgiev-Getz as the screenwriter ; Plamena Getova as Elena ; Konstantin Kotsev as the film director ; Katerina Evro as Maria ; Pavel Popandov as Milko ; Vania Tzvetkova as the actress Vania ; Stefan Danailov as the actor ; Nevena Simeonova as Elena's mother ; Luchezar Stoyanov as the cameraman ; Ivan Dzhambazov as the chief of the production ; Maria Stefanova as the screenwriter's wife ; Stefan Ilyev as the friend of the Maria's father ",
"score": "1.3797796"
},
{
"id": "31430455",
"title": "Leon Panetta",
"text": " Though elected to a ninth term in 1992, Panetta left the House at the beginning of 1993, after President-elect Bill Clinton selected him to serve as Director of the United States Office of Management and Budget. In that role he developed the budget package that would eventually result in the balanced budget of 1998.",
"score": "1.3491529"
},
{
"id": "25720811",
"title": "John Balance",
"text": " Balance was born Geoffrey Laurence Burton. He took the surname 'Rushton' from his stepfather. During his teens, Balance became acquainted with Christopherson as a fan of the latter's group Throbbing Gristle. The duo were both members of Psychic TV, Christopherson's next project after Throbbing Gristle. They eventually quit Psychic TV to form Coil. Balance was extremely active as a youth and in his early twenties. Apart from his early musical releases and involvement in bands before Coil, he published seven issues of a fanzine, Stabmental, and was a tireless correspondent with members of the alternative musical and cultural scene in the UK and also abroad. He also released three compilation albums of music by bands and artists about which he was enthusiastic: Endzeit, Bethel and The Men with the Deadly Dreams. The compilations are today collector’s items and fetch high prices. Also from his youth, Balance was an avid occultist, maintaining a lifelong interest in the likes of Aleister Crowley and Austin Osman Spare.",
"score": "1.336817"
},
{
"id": "25720812",
"title": "John Balance",
"text": " Balance died on 13 November 2004 after losing his balance and falling from a two-story balcony at his home. Peter Christopherson announced Balance's death on the Threshold House website, and provided details surrounding the accident. Balance's memorial service was held near Bristol on 23 November, and was attended by approximately 100 people. November 2014 saw the publication of a retrospective volume of his art called \"Bright Lights and Cats with no Mouths\" by Edition Timeless.",
"score": "1.3332965"
},
{
"id": "166196",
"title": "Steven Kotler",
"text": " Creating Equilibrium, an environmental summit in Lake Tahoe, CA in 2017, was founded by Steven Kotler, Gabrielle Hull, Matt Reardon and Antony Randall. Steven was creator, writer, Co-producer and Key Note speaker of Visions.",
"score": "1.3313723"
},
{
"id": "8075495",
"title": "Melissa Kearney",
"text": " Kearney was the fifth director - and first female director - of The Hamilton Project, following a prestigious group of former directors, all of whom played significant roles in public service, including founding director Peter Orszag, who went on to become director of the Congressional Budget Office and then director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, Jason Furman, who subsequently served as chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers, and Douglas Elmendorf, who subsequently directed the Congressional Budget Office and is now Dean of the Kennedy School at Harvard University. Under Kearney's leadership, the Hamilton Project worked on a variety of policy topics, including domestic poverty, labor market challenges and the future of work, and mass incarceration. Together ",
"score": "1.3238461"
},
{
"id": "25720810",
"title": "John Balance",
"text": " Geoffrey Nigel Laurence Rushton (16 February 1962 – 13 November 2004), better known under the pseudonyms John Balance or the later variation Jhonn Balance, was an English musician, occultist, artist and poet. He was best-known as a co-founder of the experimental music group Coil, in collaboration with his partner Peter \"Sleazy\" Christopherson. Coil was active from 1982 to Balance's death in 2004. He was responsible for the majority of Coil's vocals, lyrics and chants, along with synthesizers and various other instruments both commonplace and esoteric. Outside Coil he collaborated with Cultural Amnesia (at the beginning of the 1980s), Nurse with Wound, Death in June, Psychic TV, Current 93, Chris & Cosey, Thighpaulsandra, and produced several Nine Inch Nails remixes.",
"score": "1.3231701"
},
{
"id": "6860034",
"title": "A Life in the Balance",
"text": " A Life in the Balance is a 1955 American-Mexican thriller film directed by Harry Horner and Rafael Portillo and starring Ricardo Montalban, Anne Bancroft and Lee Marvin. It was shot in Mexico, and distributed in the United States by Twentieth Century Fox. The film's sets were designed by the art director Gunther Gerszo.",
"score": "1.3159876"
},
{
"id": "8742883",
"title": "Jack Lew",
"text": " regarding the Balanced Budget Act of 1997. President Clinton nominated Lew to be Director of the OMB, and the United States Senate confirmed him for that job on July 31, 1998. He served in that capacity until the end of the Clinton administration in January 2001. As OMB Director, Lew had the lead responsibility for the Clinton Administration's policies on budget, management, and appropriations issues. As a member of the Cabinet and senior member of the economic team, he advised the President on a broad range of domestic and international policies. He represented the Administration in budget negotiations with Congress and served as a member of the National Security Council.",
"score": "1.3148957"
},
{
"id": "5573801",
"title": "Balance (1989 film)",
"text": "Olivier Cotte (2007) Secrets of Oscar-winning animation: Behind the scenes of 13 classic short animations. (Making of '\"Balance\"'') Focal Press. ISBN: 978-0-240-52070-4 ",
"score": "1.3146808"
},
{
"id": "27504",
"title": "Stephen J. Luczo",
"text": " In 2004, Luczo founded Balance Vector, Inc. Balance Vector is a privately held company involved in technology and environmental investments (Trade Wins, Inc.), real estate development (Hobo Joe Land and Cattle Company), music (Talking House Productions) and film production (Balance Vector Productions) and sports ownership, with the majority of profits directed to numerous charitable causes. Through Balance Vector Productions and Verso Entertainment, Luczo and NBA star Baron Davis produced the film Crips and Bloods: Made in America, which was directed by Stacy Peralta and premiered at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival. Luczo's Balance Vector Productions also produced the syndicated TV show, Coolfuel Roadtrip. Balance Vector Sports includes ownership interest in the Boston Celtics, the Vancouver Whitecaps FC (with Greg Kerfoot, Steve Nash and Jeff Mallet) and IndyCar Series team Luczo Dragon Racing. In addition, Balance Vector Sports has been the primary sponsor to the world champion adventure racing team from New Zealand, three-time kite surfing world champion Cindy Mosey, two-time world free skiing champion Kit DesLauriers, and big wave champion surfer Garrett McNamara.",
"score": "1.3131523"
},
{
"id": "13632620",
"title": "La Balance",
"text": " La Balance (U.S. title: The Nark; literal translation : The Informer) is a 1982 French film directed by Bob Swaim. It stars Nathalie Baye, Philippe Léotard, Tchéky Karyo, Maurice Ronet and Jean-Paul Comart. It won the César Award for Best Film, Best Actor and Best Actress, and was nominated for Most Promising Actor (twice), Best Director, Best Writing – Original and Best Editing. The film had a total of 4,192,189 admissions in France becoming the 5th highest-grossing film of the year.",
"score": "1.3061593"
},
{
"id": "10209046",
"title": "Deborah Davis (screenwriter)",
"text": " Deborah Davis is a British historian and screenwriter. Her first screenplay, The Favourite (2019), was nominated for numerous awards and accolades. Davis wrote the story 20 years ago with the original title The Balance of Power. She submitted the story to producer Ceci Dempsey and Ed Guiney, who brought in director Yorgos Lanthimos. Lanthimos introduced Davis to Tony McNamara to help polish the screenplay. In 2021 it was announced that Davis was writing a television series based on the life of Marie Antoinette. The Canal+ and BBC production will film in France in locations that include Versailles and Vaux-le-Vicomte.",
"score": "1.301264"
},
{
"id": "5573795",
"title": "Balance (1989 film)",
"text": " Balance is a German surrealist stop-motion animated film, released in 1989. It was directed and produced by twin brothers Wolfgang and Christoph Lauenstein.",
"score": "1.2896783"
},
{
"id": "28357824",
"title": "Balance (band)",
"text": " Balance was an early 1980s American hard rock band. based out of New York City, United States, and fronted by Peppy Castro, formerly of Blues Magoos. They are perhaps best known for their minor 1981 hit, \"Breaking Away\".",
"score": "1.2890773"
},
{
"id": "4309820",
"title": "Emeran Mayer",
"text": "In Search of Balance, 2018. Associate Producer, 2018 ; Interconnected Planet. Producer and co-Director, 2021 ",
"score": "1.2873266"
},
{
"id": "16258719",
"title": "Tony Converse",
"text": " In 1971 Converse joined CBS Television as Program Executive and was responsible for the CBS Daytime 90's, a unit he created for the production of 90-minute tape dramas, developing over 60 original teleplays and executive producing 12. He received an Emmy nomination for this program. Appointed Vice President for Special Programs at CBS in 1974, he was responsible for the development and supervised the production of such films as Minstrel Man, Circle of Children, The Defection of Simas Kudirka, In This House of Brede, The Secret Life of Chapman, Goldenrod, The Deadliest Season and The Amazing Howard Hughes. He was also instrumental in the development of and supervised for the network such shows as Sills and Burnett at the Met, The Body Human, The Chuck Jones Animated Specials and The Carter Inaugural Gala.",
"score": "1.2866681"
},
{
"id": "8985650",
"title": "Donald S. Kellermann",
"text": " was the director of cultural programming. He spent five years in the 1970s as chief of staff to U.S. Senator Jacob K. Javits. He co-authored the 1973 book, The President Versus Congress, with Javits. Kellermann later worked for the Joint Republican Leadership Office. Returning to media, he was hired by the Times Mirror company, publisher of the Los Angeles Times, where he initially worked in Washington, D.C. before moving to Los Angeles to become the firm's director of corporate public affairs. As part of the newspaper company's opinion polling operation, Kellermann was named to serve as the first director of the Times Mirror Center, ",
"score": "1.2821136"
},
{
"id": "5573796",
"title": "Balance (1989 film)",
"text": " The film depicts five individuals living on a small platform floating in space. These men are all identical apart from a number at the back of their coats: 23, 35, 51, 75, and 77. Whenever one of them moves, the platform tilts and the others must move as well to ensure that the platform does not tip over. They all move out to the edge of the platform, take out fishing rods, and cast their lines over the edge. The one numbered 51 reels in a large, heavy box while the others scramble to the opposite side of the platform. One by one, the individuals ",
"score": "1.2792757"
},
{
"id": "4949709",
"title": "Charles Zwick",
"text": " a professor at the institution. He worked for the RAND Corporation from 1956 through 1963, where he researched American military and economic assistance programs for Southeast Asian nations. Zwick joined the Bureau of the Budget in 1965, serving as its deputy director until 1968. During his tenure, Zwick became the last director to submit to Congress a proposal for a balanced budget. He left government at the end of the Johnson administration. Zwick then took a position as CEO of Southeast Banking Corporation, and he served in this capacity for 22 years until his resignation in 1991 due to loses pertaining to real estate investments. Zwick died of cancer in Coral Gables, Florida on April 20, 2018.",
"score": "1.2791715"
}
] |
Who was the director of Faith?
|
[
"James Kirkwood",
"James Kirkwood, Sr."
] |
director
|
Faith (1916 film)
| 4,088,684 | 79 |
[
{
"id": "2201567",
"title": "Forward in Faith",
"text": "John Broadhurst (to 2010); left when he became a Roman Catholic in 2010 ; Jonathan Baker (2010 to 2014) ; Tony Robinson (2014 to 2018) Stephen Parkinson (1993 to 2012) ; Colin Podmore (2013 to 2020) ; Thomas Middleton (from 2020) Chairman Director",
"score": "1.4823108"
},
{
"id": "9021553",
"title": "White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships",
"text": " Following the election of President Donald Trump, the office remained without a director; the website was no longer available. In May 2018, Trump started the Faith and Opportunity Initiative, a new White House office to help faith-based organizations get equal access to government funding.",
"score": "1.4621431"
},
{
"id": "9277477",
"title": "Allen Barton",
"text": " As a director, Barton has helmed the following Los Angeles stage productions: ABOUT FAITH (2001), I MAKE YOU LAUGHING (2004), PINK DOT (2005), BURN THIS (2006), THE LAST FIVE YEARS (2007), RABBIT HOLE (2008), THE REAL THING (2009), ENGAGEMENT (2010), and Project X presentations of THE HEIDI CHRONICLES (2012), OLEANNA (2013), SPEED-THE-PLOW (2014), and GRUESOME PLAYGROUND INJURIES (2016).",
"score": "1.4477229"
},
{
"id": "14994494",
"title": "Faith Chapel Christian Center",
"text": " Dr. Michael D. Moore is the Senior Pastor. As the Executive Director, Dr. Moore heads up a committee of various FCCC Administrators. This team consists of full-time employees that manage different departments and ministries within FCCC.",
"score": "1.4454023"
},
{
"id": "13090237",
"title": "Ken Howard (priest)",
"text": "Episcopal Diocese of Washington – Howard serves as executive director of FaithX under an extension of ministry from the Diocese. ; Datastory – Howard acts as Subject Matter Expert (SME) and FaithX has an affiliate relation. ; Esri – FaithX is an Esri Partner organization. ",
"score": "1.4453679"
},
{
"id": "6559097",
"title": "Faith and Belief Forum",
"text": " KCFO is Chair of the Trustees of the Faith and Belief Forum. He was Chair of the Trustees of the Three Faith Forum from 2009. Phil Champain has been the Director since 2015. Programmes for young people are a key focus of the organisation. In 2004, under the leadership of former Director, Stephen Shashoua, it launched its schools programmes and, in 2007, it launched the ParliaMentors leadership programme for university students. In 2008, it launched a branch in the Middle East. In 2009 and 2010, the arts and culture work was launched to create programmes which build bridges between communities through the arts.",
"score": "1.4337194"
},
{
"id": "2238559",
"title": "Tony Blair Faith Foundation",
"text": " Angela Salt was the executive director of the foundation, which was registered as charity in the UK with Tony Blair as its Patron. The trustees were Robert Clinton, Robert Coke and Jeremy Sinclair. The Foundation was also registered as a charity in the US with the following directors: Alfred E. Smith IV, Linda LeSourd Lader, Ruth Turner, Timothy C. Collins and Tony Blair. Ruth Turner, formerly Director of Government Relations within Tony Blair's Prime Ministerial office, was the first Chief Executive.",
"score": "1.4333696"
},
{
"id": "2641982",
"title": "Joel Edwards (Evangelical Alliance)",
"text": " In 2009 he became International Director for Micah Challenge a global Christian response to extreme poverty where he led the first global Christian response to corruption. He was also a Commissioner of the Equality and Human Rights Commission. and served on the advisory board of Tony Blair's Faith Foundation. He often presented on the BBC Radio 4 feature of The Today programme, Thought for the Day. In 2015, Edwards was appointed Strategic Advisor at Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW) working with the Strategic Leadership Team, Board and staff to explore the relationship between the persecuted Church, freedom of religion or belief and wider human rights. ",
"score": "1.4257519"
},
{
"id": "2238558",
"title": "Tony Blair Faith Foundation",
"text": " The project known as Faith Shorts was announced in March 2010 for short-length movies which increase \"understanding between religions\". Awards were presented for the films rated highest.",
"score": "1.4217591"
},
{
"id": "14636561",
"title": "Helen Whitney",
"text": " Helen Whitney is an American producer, director and writer of documentaries and feature films that have aired on PBS, HBO, ABC and NBC. Whitney's subjects have included youth gangs, the 1996 American presidential candidates, a Trappist monastery in Massachusetts, the McCarthy Era in the United States, Pope John Paul II, and the late photographer Richard Avedon. Faith and Doubt at Ground Zero, was a PBS two-hour television special on the 9/11 attacks, which explored the spiritual aftershocks of this event. Whitney's film, The Mormons, was a four-hour PBS series and the first collaboration between the PBS programs American Experience and Frontline. Whitney's film, Forgiveness: A Time to Love & A Time to Hate, examines the power, limitations - and in rare cases ",
"score": "1.4126217"
},
{
"id": "24950021",
"title": "Jay Hein",
"text": " Jay F. Hein is a former Director of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives (OFBCI), and Deputy Assistant to U.S President George W. Bush. As director of the OFBCI, he was charged with the mission of expanding and strengthening the influence of faith based organizations in providing social welfare services. Hein resigned from the post in September 2008 to take a position with the Institute for Studies of Religion at Baylor University, and to return to his former job as president of the Sagamore Institute for Policy Research, a non-profit Indianapolis, Indiana based think tank. While at the OFBCI, Hein viewed one of its purposes as leveling the playing field for small religious groups ",
"score": "1.4098558"
},
{
"id": "2105275",
"title": "Matt Crouch (TBN)",
"text": " with the King (2006), and Noëlle (2007). In 2009 Crouch co-directed the documentary feature The Cross: The Arthur Blessitt Story. In 2010 Matt and Laurie Crouch resigned their positions at Gener8Xion Entertainment and sold their shares. Crouch subsequently joined TBN's staff full-time as a vice-president, eventually becoming president in 2012 when his father Paul Sr. symbolically \"passed the torch\" to become the head of TBN operations. In addition to his role managing TBN's day-to-day operations, Crouch and Laurie also appear as hosts of Praise the Lord, TBN's signature nightly program. In 2015, he became the president of Trinity Broadcasting Network.",
"score": "1.4059283"
},
{
"id": "27312882",
"title": "Jan Crouch",
"text": " Since its founding, Crouch served as TBN's vice president and director of network programming, as well as the director of programming for TBN's affiliated networks, such as the Smile of a Child children's channel, the JUCE TV youth network, The Church Channel, the TBN Enlace USA Spanish language network, and others. She was also the President and manager of The Holy Land Experience theme park in Orlando, Florida. Jan Crouch and her husband Paul Crouch, senior also signed off on Matt Crouch (TBN) and his wife Laurie—now in charge at TBN, i.e. PTL (Praise the Lord) their signature & original show, as now becoming rather the primary hosts, as well as Behind the Scenes— to have produced over 4 plus major motion pictures, along with other associated and film entertainment groups to make namely Faith-based movies like 'End Times' films The Omega Code (1999) and its sequel Megiddo: The Omega Code 2 (2001).",
"score": "1.399245"
},
{
"id": "31845711",
"title": "Faith Broadcasting Network",
"text": " The demand of increased Christian programming for the five broadcast stations owned by Faith Center was met through the construction of a television production center. Production in the church auditorium was becoming very labor-intensive as it required setting up lights and sets for productions but then having to tear everything down for Wednesday and Sunday church services. This also required the disassembling and reassembly of the rows of folding chairs to accommodate the attendees of the church services. In circa 1973 Faith Center acquired the former Glendale Hardware store located on East Broadway in Glendale. The building was refurbished and converted into a three studio production facility. A microwave link was installed between the production center and Faith Center which allowed live broadcasts to originate from there.",
"score": "1.3991673"
},
{
"id": "14710856",
"title": "Oren Lyons",
"text": " Lyons was among those featured in the one-hour documentary Faithkeeper (1991), produced and hosted by Bill Moyers It was broadcast on PBS, July 3, 1991. He also appeared in the documentary The 11th Hour (2007), directed by Leonardo DiCaprio.",
"score": "1.397784"
},
{
"id": "5745280",
"title": "Imago Film Festival",
"text": " K. Johnston, author of Reel Spirituality (2007); Stephen Vidano, director of Star of Bethlehem and David Dark, author of The Sacredness of Questioning Everything (2008); David McFadzean, creator of Home Improvement and William Romanowski, author of Eyes Wide Open (2009); Darren Wilson, director of Furious Love and Gaye Williams Ortiz, author of Theology and Film (2010); David Nixon, producer/director of To Write Love on Her Arms and Jeffrey Overstreet, author of Through a Screen Darkly (2011); Brooks Douglass, writer of Heaven's Rain and Steve Taylor, producer/director of Blue Like Jazz (2012); Ralph Winter, producer of Star Trek and X-Men films and Dean Batali, writer for That '70s Show (2013); Ron Dean, actor in The Fugitive and ",
"score": "1.3943794"
},
{
"id": "28567736",
"title": "Deepak Verma",
"text": " Verma conceived Faith Shorts, a global film competition to inspire young people to make short films about their faith. This was developed and produced by the Tony Blair Faith Foundation and is an annual event. Tony Blair said: \"By gaining insights into the lives of young people across the world this competition has the potential to build bridges across cultural and religious divides. I hope this competition will provide a platform for creative and talented young people and an opportunity for young filmmakers to see their work promoted on the global stage.” Verma was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2017 Birthday Honours for services to the arts.",
"score": "1.3942912"
},
{
"id": "9021554",
"title": "White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships",
"text": " On February 14, 2021, President Joe Biden reestablished the Office with Melissa Rogers again serving as executive director.",
"score": "1.3867632"
},
{
"id": "31170652",
"title": "Fox Faith",
"text": " Fox Faith (also spelled FoxFaith) was a brand of film studio 20th Century Fox targeting evangelical Christians. Established under 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment in 2006, Fox Faith acquired independent Christian-themed films for theatrical and video release. 20th Century Fox described Fox Faith titles as \"morally-driven, family-friendly programming,\" and requires them to \"have overt Christian [c]ontent or be derived from the work of a Christian author.\" The label's theatrical releases were by arrangement with the AMC Theatres and Carmike Cinemas chains, and most of their films were digital releases.",
"score": "1.3865051"
},
{
"id": "32061991",
"title": "Dolores Faith",
"text": " Faith began as a model and as a dance instructor before acting. In 1959, she was given a screen test by Warner Bros. They chose not to hire her because of her resemblance to both Elizabeth Taylor and Grace Kelly. She became a Hollywood Deb Star in 1962, and was featured in Life magazine in 1963. Faith probably is best remembered for three low-budget science fiction films: The Phantom Planet, The Human Duplicators, and Mutiny in Outer Space. She also appeared in dramas. In V.D., she was a young vixen who gets gonorrhea from the \"hero\" (who got it from a prostitute). In Wild Harvest, she plays the mistress of a ruthless, womanizing vineyard manager whom she sides against after getting fed up. She was also in Shell Shock, a war drama. On television, she appeared in episodes of Ripcord, Have Gun - Will Travel, and The Man from U.N.C.L.E., a two-part episode released theatrically as One of Our Spies Is Missing.",
"score": "1.3800564"
}
] |
Who was the director of On the Run?
|
[
"Ernest Morris"
] |
director
|
On the Run (1958 film)
| 309,956 | 75 |
[
{
"id": "15456792",
"title": "On the Run (1999 film)",
"text": " On the Run is Bruno de Almeida's 1998 feature film debut. It stars Michael Imperioli and John Ventimiglia (both of The Sopranos) and is written by Joe Minion (After Hours) based on a story by Bruno de Almeida and Jonathan Berman It won the award for best film at the 1999 Ourense Film Festival in Spain. On the Run was nominated for a Critic's award at the Paris Film Festival and for an Open Palm at the Gotham Awards in New York in 2000. It was released theatrically and broadcast in Europe and in the US. It had its cable debut on The Independent Film Channel in 2001, and was released on DVD in 2002, becoming a cult classic.",
"score": "1.6411107"
},
{
"id": "3789024",
"title": "On the Run (1958 film)",
"text": " On the Run is a 1958 British drama film directed by Ernest Morris and starring Neil McCallum, Susan Beaumont and William Hartnell. The screenplay concerns a boxer who becomes romantically involved with a woman.",
"score": "1.5837221"
},
{
"id": "13593179",
"title": "Girl on the Run (1953 film)",
"text": " Arthur J. Berkhard, co-writer and co-director of this film, had a background in theatre, having staged 14 Broadway productions beginning with the hit play Another Language, written by Rose Franken, in 1932. Girl on the Run would be his only film directorial credit.",
"score": "1.5528114"
},
{
"id": "13713391",
"title": "Love on the Run (1979 film)",
"text": " Love on the Run (L'amour en fuite) is a 1979 French comedy-drama film directed by François Truffaut, his fifth and final film about the character Antoine Doinel. Told in non-linear fashion, with frequent flashbacks to the four previous films, it stars Jean-Pierre Léaud, Claude Jade, Marie-France Pisier, Dorothée, and Dani. It was entered into the 29th Berlin International Film Festival.",
"score": "1.5470619"
},
{
"id": "15456794",
"title": "On the Run (1999 film)",
"text": "Michael Imperioli as Albert de Santis ; John Ventimiglia as Louis Salazer ; Drena De Niro as Rita ; Nick Sandow as Jack ; Joaquim de Almeida as Ignácio ; Victor Argo as Man shaving ; Sharon Angela as Tina ; John Frey as George ; Anthony Zaccaro as Cop ; Paul Lazar as Cabbie ; Arthur Nascarella as Irwin ; Joseph Gannascoli as Tony ; Tom Gilroy as Tom ; Anna Kohler as Anna ; Agnês Jaoui as Kirstin ; Suzanne Shepherd as Travel Agent ; Bronson Dudley as Doctor Shapiro ; Dwight Ewell as Rasta ",
"score": "1.5454581"
},
{
"id": "389717",
"title": "On the Run (1982 film)",
"text": " The film was not released theatrically.",
"score": "1.5413339"
},
{
"id": "3789025",
"title": "On the Run (1958 film)",
"text": "Neil McCallum ... Wesley ; Susan Beaumont ... Kitty Casey ; William Hartnell ... Tom Casey ; Gordon Tanner ... Bart Taylor ; Philip Saville ... Driscoll ; Gil Winfield ... Joe ; Hal Osmond ... Sam Bassett ",
"score": "1.5401936"
},
{
"id": "8006491",
"title": "Love on the Run (1994 film)",
"text": " Love on the Run is a 1994 American TV film directed by Ted Kotcheff and Julie Lee.",
"score": "1.5206027"
},
{
"id": "1731158",
"title": "Love on the Run (1985 film)",
"text": " Love on the Run is a 1985 television film starring Alec Baldwin and Stephanie Zimbalist. A criminal lawyer goes on the run with her escaped convict lover.",
"score": "1.5112303"
},
{
"id": "389714",
"title": "On the Run (1982 film)",
"text": " On the Run is a 1982 Australian thriller film.",
"score": "1.500721"
},
{
"id": "15456795",
"title": "On the Run (1999 film)",
"text": "Ourense Independent Film Festival Grand Prize, best feature, Ourense, Spain 1999 ; Gotham Awards Nominated Open Palm Award, New York, USA 2000 ; Paris Film Festival Nominated, Paris, France 1999 ",
"score": "1.4957972"
},
{
"id": "10926881",
"title": "Girl on the Run",
"text": " Girl on the Run is a 1958 private detective film starring Efrem Zimbalist Jr., Erin O'Brien, Shepperd Strudwick, Edd Byrnes, and Barton MacLane. The film is (in truth, although not in legal fact) based on characters and situations created by writer Roy Huggins in a series of 1940s novels and novellas. The picture was directed by Richard L. Bare and aired on ABC as the pilot for 77 Sunset Strip after an initial, brief theatrical release in the Caribbean.",
"score": "1.4841609"
},
{
"id": "9515602",
"title": "Woman on the Run",
"text": " Woman on the Run is a 1950 American crime film noir directed by Norman Foster and starring Ann Sheridan and Dennis O'Keefe. The film was based on the April 1948 short story \"Man on the Run\" by Sylvia Tate and filmed on location in San Francisco. The film, which lies in the public domain, was restored and preserved by the UCLA Film & Television Archive.",
"score": "1.4790509"
},
{
"id": "32308312",
"title": "Run (1991 film)",
"text": " It was the second feature directed by Geoff Burrowes.\"If you want to do an action picture, it should be one that doesn't let up and for that reason this movie appealed to me enormously,\" he said. \"In Run, we're projecting a situation which could quite conceivably happen to any member of the audience, a situation with which they can identify through a character who is fundamentally Everyman. We pose the question, `What would happen to me if I were caught up something in which I was an outsider, where all due process fell away and I were left alone?' \" Filming started in Vancouver in April 1990. Kelly Preston replaced Tracy Pollan who bowed out during early filming in May. According to a publicist, \"The part had evolved and both parties agreed that she was no longer right for the role. There were no awful tantrums.\"",
"score": "1.4786887"
},
{
"id": "9515612",
"title": "Woman on the Run",
"text": " Production on the film was announced in trade publications in January 1950, initially with the working title Man on the Run. As part of the casting process, actor J. Farrell MacDonald was then \"borrowed\" from 20th Century Fox for the supporting role of the sea captain before filming began on 20 March. The film was shot on location in San Francisco as well as at Ocean Park Pier in Santa Monica for the amusement park and roller coaster scenes. Ross Hunter worked as dialogue director on the film. He later produced some movies starring Sheridan at Universal helping launch Hunter's producing career.",
"score": "1.4770066"
},
{
"id": "1731160",
"title": "Love on the Run (1985 film)",
"text": "Stephanie Zimbalist as Diana Rockland ; Alec Baldwin as Sean Carpenter ; Constance McCashin as Elizabeth Nellison ; Howard Duff as Lionel Rockland ; Madison Mason as Roy Nellison ; Ernie Hudson as Lamar ; Francine Lembi as Bonnie ; Kit Le Fever as Cherry ; Matthew Cowles as Yancy ; Arnold F. Turner as Rick Wade ; David Hayward as Gary Synder ; Ken Lerner as Aaron ; Savannah Smith Boucher as Martha ; Burke Byrnes as Melvin Small ; Beau Starr as Lt. Sturges ",
"score": "1.4757342"
},
{
"id": "25679047",
"title": "Running on Empty (1988 film)",
"text": " Parents Annie and Arthur Pope are on the run as they were responsible for the anti-war protest bombing of a napalm laboratory in the 1970s. The incident accidentally blinded and paralyzed a janitor who was not supposed to be there. They have been on the run ever since, relying on an underground network of supporters who help them financially. At the time of the incident, their son Danny was two years old. As the film begins, he is in his late teens, and the family, now with younger son Harry, are again relocating and assuming new identities. Danny's overwhelming talent ",
"score": "1.4675753"
},
{
"id": "8006493",
"title": "Love on the Run (1994 film)",
"text": "Anthony Addabbo as Frank Powers ; Noelle Beck as Ava Cross ; Len Cariou as Noah Cross ; Blu Mankuma as Ray Valentine ; Nada Despotovich as Margot ; Byron Lucas as Steve ; Anna Hagan as Ashton ; French Tickner as Airport Guard ; Charles Andre as Leo ; Fred Perron as Doug ; David Lewis as Ranger ; Ken Tremblett as Mountie ",
"score": "1.4672419"
},
{
"id": "26823378",
"title": "The Last Run",
"text": " The Last Run is a 1971 action film shot in Portugal, Málaga and elsewhere in Spain directed by Richard Fleischer, starring George C. Scott, Tony Musante, Trish Van Devere, and Colleen Dewhurst.",
"score": "1.4618522"
},
{
"id": "389715",
"title": "On the Run (1982 film)",
"text": " A small boy (Beau Cox) is orphaned and sent to live with his uncle (Rod Taylor), who is a hitman. When the boy witnesses his uncle kill some people, his uncle orders that his assistant (Paul Winfield) help shoot the boy; the assistant refuses and takes off with the boy.",
"score": "1.4587793"
}
] |
Who was the director of Variety?
|
[
"Adrian Brunel",
"Adrian Hope Brunel"
] |
director
|
Variety (1935 film)
| 6,094,861 | 83 |
[
{
"id": "16110512",
"title": "Variety (1983 film)",
"text": " Variety is a 1983 American independent film directed by Bette Gordon with a screenplay by Kathy Acker from a story by Gordon. The film stars Sandy McLeod, Will Patton, and Richard M. Davidson. The film follows a young woman who takes a job at a New York City pornographic theater and becomes increasingly obsessed with a wealthy patron who may or may not be involved with the mafia.",
"score": "1.7477369"
},
{
"id": "16110515",
"title": "Variety (1983 film)",
"text": " After meeting Kathy Acker, Bette Gordon asked her to collaborate on a screenplay for a new film. Gordon also collaborated with the burgeoning New York film scene: \"The film is a sort of Who’s Who of downtown street cred: music by John Lurie, cinematography by frequent Jarmusch collaborator Tom de Cillo, script by former sex worker and Pushcart Prize-winning feminist novelist Kathy Acker, and roles played by Spalding Gray, Luis Guzman, Mark Boone Junior and photographer Nan Goldin (who also took production stills).\" The film was produced with an initial $80,000 budget, provided by ZDF West German Television, Great Britain's Channel 4, and the New York State Council. It played at the 1983 Toronto Film Festival and the 1984 Cannes Film Festival.",
"score": "1.7379227"
},
{
"id": "26331777",
"title": "Todd McCarthy",
"text": " McCarthy joined Daily Variety in 1979 and worked there as a reporter and film critic until 1989. In 1990, McCarthy wrote the PBS documentary Preston Sturges: The Rise and Fall of an American Dreamer which won him an Emmy Award. He directed four documentaries about film: Visions of Light (1992), Claudia Jennings (1995), Forever Hollywood (1999), and Man of Cinema: Pierre Rissient (2007). Visions of Light was named the Best Documentary of the Year award by the National Society of Film Critics and the New York Film Critics Circle. Forever Hollywood has been played at Grauman's Egyptian Theatre for more than a decade. In 1991 he joined Variety as film review editor of Variety and Daily Variety. He wrote about the producer/director Howard ",
"score": "1.6728044"
},
{
"id": "10793858",
"title": "Variety (magazine)",
"text": " the principal film critic from December 1964 until October 1978. ; Pry - Thomas M. Pryor, editor of Daily Variety from 1959 until his retirement in 1988. ; Rush - Alfred Greason ; Sid or Skig - Sidne Silverman, Variety publisher and Sime's son. ; Sime - Sime Silverman, founder of Variety and the first to write a film review for the paper. ; Sisk - Robert Sisk, formerly a writer of \"news letters\" for The Sun in Baltimore, Maryland. ; Syd - Syd Silverman, Sime's grandson ; The Skirt - Hattie Silverman, Sime's wife ; Ung - Arthur Ungar, first Daily Variety editor ; Whit - Whitney Williams On January 19, 1907, Variety published what is considered the first film ",
"score": "1.6242924"
},
{
"id": "6450997",
"title": "Variety (1925 film)",
"text": " The German director Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck cites being unexpectedly exposed to the film as a child of four as the start of his interest in the medium. This film is believed to contain the first documentation of unicycle hockey – it features a short sequence showing two people playing the game.",
"score": "1.6047835"
},
{
"id": "16211133",
"title": "Variety (1935 film)",
"text": " Variety is a 1935 British musical film directed by Adrian Brunel and starring George Carney, Barry Livesey, Sam Livesey. The film follows a revue show format, with a number of performers playing themselves. It was made at Cricklewood Studios.",
"score": "1.5819314"
},
{
"id": "10793857",
"title": "Variety (magazine)",
"text": "Abel - Abel Green, editor 1931–1973 ; Anby - Vincent Canby, 1951–1957, later chief film critic for The New York Times ; Army - Army Archerd ; Bell - Harry Ennis ; Besa - Peter Besas ; Bige - Joe Bigelow ; Bing - Claude Binyon ; Cart - Todd McCarthy, 1979–1989; film review editor 1991–2010. ; Chic - Epes W Sargeant ; Drek - Derek Elley ; Edba - Ed Barry ; Gene - Gene Arneel ; Har - James Harwood ; Hawk - Robert Hawkins ; Herm - Herman Schoenfeld ; Holl and Hyho - Hy Hollinger, 1953–1960, 1979–1992 ; Jolo - Joshua Lowe ; Lait - Jack Lait ; Ley - Joe Leydon ; Murf - Arthur D. ",
"score": "1.5718589"
},
{
"id": "16110513",
"title": "Variety (1983 film)",
"text": " Christine, an aspiring author, desperately needs a job. Her friend Nan gives her a tip that the Variety, a pornographic theater in Times Square, is looking for a ticket-taker. Christine takes the job and becomes interested in the movies that are playing. Her boyfriend Mark, an investigative journalist, is concerned and confused about her interest in her new job. At the Variety, Christine meets a rich patron, Louie, with whom she spontaneously decides to go on a date. After he abruptly leaves, she follows him in a cab, watching while he meets a mysterious man. Later, she shares her suspicions with Mark that he is involved in some kind of mafia operation. Increasingly obsessed, she follows Louie to Asbury Park, New Jersey, sneaking into his hotel room, from which she steals a pornographic magazine. Her obsession with Louie and her own awakened sexuality ultimately leads her to call and threaten him unless he meets her. The final, mysterious shot is of an empty intersection at Fulton and South Street, where Christine has told Louie to meet her.",
"score": "1.5624223"
},
{
"id": "10793839",
"title": "Variety (magazine)",
"text": " Bart, originally only of the weekly New York edition, with Michael Silverman (Syd's son) running the Daily in Hollywood. Bart had worked previously at Paramount Pictures and The New York Times. Syd Silverman remained as publisher until 1990 when he was succeeded on Weekly Variety by Gerard A. Byrne and on Daily Variety by Sime's great grandson, Michael Silverman. Syd became chairman of both publications. In April 2009 Bart moved to the position of \"vice president and editorial director\", characterized online as \"Boffo No More: Bart Up and Out at Variety\". From mid 2009 to 2013, Timothy M. Gray oversaw the publication as Editor-in-Chief, after over 30 years of various reporter and editor positions in the newsroom.",
"score": "1.5590334"
},
{
"id": "3297515",
"title": "Neil Stiles",
"text": " Neil Stiles is a British magazine executive who is a former CEO of Variety, Inc. As President of Variety, Inc., Stiles was responsible for the global business operations of the Variety franchise including Variety, the former Daily Variety, the former Daily Variety Gotham, and Variety.com. Additionally, he oversaw MarketCast, a provider of market research for the film and television industries. Stiles began his career as a music industry journalist in the mid-1970s and moved into sales management and publishing management positions throughout the 1980s. Before joining Variety in 2008, Stiles was the UK Division Managing Director of Variety's parent company, Reed Business Information. Stiles oversaw several online initiatives; he was CEO of eMedia, an online marketing business, and XpertHR, an online human resources tool. In addition, he managed the print and electronic portfolios of Personnel Today, Hairdressers Journal International, Travel Weekly, Commercial Motor, Motor Transport, Truck and Driver ",
"score": "1.5574782"
},
{
"id": "31767736",
"title": "Variety (1971 film)",
"text": " Variety (Spanish: Varietés) is a 1971 Spanish drama film directed by Juan Antonio Bardem and starring Sara Montiel, Vicente Parra and Chris Avram.",
"score": "1.5568054"
},
{
"id": "6450995",
"title": "Variety (1925 film)",
"text": " Variety (Varieté, also known by the alternative titles Jealousy or Vaudeville) is a 1925 silent drama film directed by Ewald Andre Dupont based on the 1912 novel The Oath of Stephan Huller by Felix Hollaender. In the film, Jannings portrays \"Boss Huller\", a former trapeze artist who was badly injured in a fall from the high wire and who now runs a seedy carnival with his wife (Maly Delschaft) and their child. Huller insists that the family take in a beautiful stranger (Lya De Putti) as a new sideshow dancer, with whom he develops a new trapeze number. He falls in love with the new star, and the story ends in tragedy. The film was heavily censored when it was released in America (except New York), by excising the entire first reel, \"thus destroying the motivation of the tragedy, implying that the acrobat was married to his Eurasian temptress.\" The trapeze scenes are set in the Berlin Wintergarten theatre. The camera swings from long shot to close-up, like the acrobats. The story was loosely remade by Dupont as the 1931 sound film Salto Mortale.",
"score": "1.5524906"
},
{
"id": "10793859",
"title": "Variety (magazine)",
"text": " in history. Two reviews written by Sime Silverman were published: Pathe's comedy short An Exciting Honeymoon and Edison Studios' western short The Life of a Cowboy directed by Edwin S. Porter. Variety discontinued reviews of films between March 1911 until January 1913 as they were convinced by a film producer, believed to be George Kleine, that they were wasting space criticising moving pictures and others had suggested that favourable reviews brought too strong a demand for certain pictures to the exclusion of others. Despite the gap, Variety is still the longest unbroken source of film criticism in existence. In 1930 Variety also started publishing a summary of miniature reviews for the films reviewed that week and in 1951 the editors ",
"score": "1.5375512"
},
{
"id": "27590378",
"title": "Syd Silverman",
"text": " When Silverman's father, Sidne, died in 1950, he became the sole heir to what was then Variety Inc. As he was only 18, a legal guardian oversaw the business until 1956, before he took charge. After that date Syd managed the company as publisher of both the Weekly Variety in New York and the Daily Variety in Hollywood, until the sale of both papers in 1987 to Cahners Publishing for $64 million. He remained as publisher until 1990 and became chairman of both publications.",
"score": "1.5338435"
},
{
"id": "10793835",
"title": "Variety (magazine)",
"text": " of its features into Variety. The same year, he launched the Times Square Daily, which he referred to as \"the world's worst daily\" and soon scrapped. During that period, Variety staffers worked on all three papers. After the launch of The Hollywood Reporter in 1930 Silverman launched the Hollywood-based Daily Variety in 1933 with Arthur Ungar as the editor. It replaced Variety Bulletin that was issued in Hollywood on Fridays as a four-page wraparound to the Weekly. Daily Variety was initially published every day other than Sunday but mostly on Monday to Friday. The Daily and the Weekly were initially run as virtually independent newspapers, with the Daily concentrating mostly on Hollywood news and the Weekly on U.S. and International coverage.",
"score": "1.5296993"
},
{
"id": "10793863",
"title": "Variety (magazine)",
"text": " Variety started reporting box office grosses for films by theatre on March 3, 1922, to give exhibitors around the country information on a film's performance on Broadway, which was often where first run showings of a film were held. In addition to New York City, they also endeavored to include all of the key cities in the U.S. in the future and initially also reported results for ten other cities including Chicago and Los Angeles. They continued to report these grosses for films until 1989 when they put the data into a summarized weekly chart and only published the data by theatre for New York and Los Angeles as well as other ",
"score": "1.5296955"
},
{
"id": "10793836",
"title": "Variety (magazine)",
"text": " Silverman had passed on the editorship of the Weekly Variety to Abel Green as his replacement in 1933. He remained as publisher until his death later that year, soon after launching Daily Variety. Sime's son Sidne succeeded him as publisher of both publications but upon contracting tuberculosis in 1936 he could no longer take a day to day role at the paper. Green, the editor, and Harold Erichs, the treasurer and chief financial officer, ran the paper during his illness. Following Sidne's death in 1950, his only son Syd Silverman, was the sole heir to what was then Variety Inc. Young Syd's legal guardian Erichs, who had started at Variety as an office boy, assumed the presidency. Ungar remained editor of Daily Variety until his death in 1950. He was followed by Joe Schoenfeld. In 1953 Army ",
"score": "1.5294297"
},
{
"id": "10793832",
"title": "Variety (magazine)",
"text": " Variety is an American media company owned by Penske Media Corporation. The company was founded by Sime Silverman in New York City in 1905 as a weekly newspaper reporting on theater and vaudeville. In 1933 it added Daily Variety, based in Los Angeles, to cover the motion-picture industry. Variety.com features breaking entertainment news, reviews, box office results, cover stories, videos, photo galleries and features, plus a credits database, production charts and calendar, with archive content dating back to 1905.",
"score": "1.5283258"
},
{
"id": "15718160",
"title": "Hy Hollinger",
"text": " Manhattan in the late 1970s, Hollinger had a chance encounter with Syd Silverman, his former boss at Variety during the 1950s, and Robert Hawkins, another executive at Variety. That unintended meeting with Silverman and Hawkins led to Hollinger rejoining the staff of Variety in 1979 as an associate editor focused on international issues within the entertainment industry. At the time of Hollinger's hiring, Variety, based in New York City, and Daily Variety, based in Hollywood, essentially operated as distinct, separate media entities. The decision to hire Hollinger in 1979 marked \"the first time in many years that weekly Variety will have its own editorial presence in the film capital,\" ",
"score": "1.5249394"
},
{
"id": "8469174",
"title": "Peter Bart",
"text": " Peter Benton Bart (born July 24, 1932) is an American journalist and film producer, writing a column for Deadline Hollywood since 2015. He is perhaps best known for his lengthy tenure (1989–2009) as the editor in chief of Variety, an entertainment-trade magazine. Bart was also a co-host, with film producer Peter Guber, of the weekly television series, Shootout (formerly Sunday Morning Shootout), carried on the AMC television channel from 2003 to 2008 and subsequently seen in syndication and in 53 countries around the world.",
"score": "1.5246646"
}
] |
Who was the director of The Night Riders?
|
[
"Alexander Butler"
] |
director
|
The Night Riders (1920 film)
| 5,944,707 | 89 |
[
{
"id": "7906548",
"title": "The Night Riders (1939 film)",
"text": " The Night Riders is a 1939 American \"Three Mesquiteers\" Western film starring John Wayne, Ray \"Crash\" Corrigan, and Max Terhune. Wayne played the lead in eight of the fifty-one Three Mesquiteer films. The director was George Sherman. The villain of the film was based on a real-life character in the Old West, James Reavis, who was also known as The Baron of Arizona.",
"score": "1.6304638"
},
{
"id": "29690029",
"title": "The Night Riders (1920 film)",
"text": " The Night Riders is a 1920 British silent western film directed by Alexander Butler and starring Maudie Dunham, Albert Ray and Alexander Butler. It was one of several films made by the British producer G.B. Samuelson at Universal City in California.",
"score": "1.591219"
},
{
"id": "5047267",
"title": "Riders of the Night",
"text": " Riders of the Night is a 1918 American silent drama film directed by John H. Collins and starred his wife Viola Dana. It was produced and distributed by the Metro Pictures company. A print is held at EYE Institute, Amsterdam aka Filmmuseum Amsterdam.",
"score": "1.5862286"
},
{
"id": "7906549",
"title": "The Night Riders (1939 film)",
"text": "John Wayne as Stony Brooke ; Ray Corrigan as Tucson Smith ; Max Terhune as Lullaby Joslin ; Elmer as Elmer (Lullaby Joslin's Ventriloquist Dummy) (uncredited) ; Doreen McKay as Soledad ; Ruth Rogers as Susan Randall ; George Douglas as Talbot Pierce, aka Don Luis de Serrano ; Tom Tyler as Henchman Jackson ; Kermit Maynard as Sheriff Pratt ; Sammy McKim as Tim Randall ; Walter Wills as Hazleton (the Forger) ; Ethan Laidlaw as Henchman Andrews ; Edward Peil Sr. as Rancher ; Tom London as Rancher ; Jack Ingram as Henchman Wilkins ; Bill Nestell as Brawler ; Hank Worden as Rancher (uncredited) ; Horace Murphy as Riverboat Captain Asa Beckett (uncredited) ; Yakima Canutt as Mob Member at Gate (uncredited) ; Bob Card as Rancher (uncredited) ; Allan Cavan as Judge (uncredited) ; Dick Dickinson as Henchman Rent Collector (uncredited ",
"score": "1.5744047"
},
{
"id": "29690030",
"title": "The Night Riders (1920 film)",
"text": " A Cornish emigrant to Canada battles against cattle rustlers in Alberta.",
"score": "1.5559094"
},
{
"id": "29690031",
"title": "The Night Riders (1920 film)",
"text": "Maudie Dunham as Diana Marbolt ; Albert Ray as John Tresler ; \"Andre Beaulieu\" (Alexander Butler) as Jack Marbolt ; Russell Gordon as Jake Harnach ; C. McCarthy as Doctor Ostler ; Joe De La Cruz as Undetermined Role ; Goober Glenn ; William Ryno ",
"score": "1.5549884"
},
{
"id": "9327738",
"title": "The Night Rider (film)",
"text": " The Night Rider is a 1932 American Pre-Code Western film directed by Fred C. Newmeyer and William Nigh.",
"score": "1.5335801"
},
{
"id": "956743",
"title": "The Night Riders (1916 film)",
"text": " The Night Riders is a 1916 American silent Western film, featuring Harry Carey.",
"score": "1.531806"
},
{
"id": "956744",
"title": "The Night Riders (1916 film)",
"text": "Harry Carey ; Olive Carey credited as Olive Fuller Golden ; Peggy Coudray ; Hoot Gibson ; Neal Hart ; Joe Rickson ",
"score": "1.5192027"
},
{
"id": "9327739",
"title": "The Night Rider (film)",
"text": "Harry Carey as John Brown posing as Jim Blake ; Elinor Fair as Barbara Rogers ; George \"Gabby\" Hayes as Altoonie ; Julian Rivero as Manuel Alonzo Valdez ; J. Carlton Wetherby as Dan Rogers ; Nadja as Tula, a Saloon Dancer ; Tom London as Jeff Barton ; Walter Shumway as Sheriff Lynn Ricker ; Bob Kortman as Steve ; Cliff Lyons as Bert Logan ",
"score": "1.5072787"
},
{
"id": "27827942",
"title": "Night Ride (1930 film)",
"text": " Night Ride is a 1930 American pre-Code crime film directed by John S. Robertson and written by Charles Logue, Edward T. Lowe, Jr. and Tom Reed. The film stars Joseph Schildkraut, Barbara Kent, Edward G. Robinson, Harry Stubbs, DeWitt Jennings and Ralph Welles. The film was released on January 12, 1930, by Universal Pictures.",
"score": "1.4945867"
},
{
"id": "25806480",
"title": "Louis Daniel Brodsky",
"text": "The Adventures of the Night Riders, Better Known as the Terrible Trio (with Richard Milsten) (1961)* (* unpublished text)",
"score": "1.4920862"
},
{
"id": "7633128",
"title": "Night Rider (novel)",
"text": " Night Rider is the first novel by American author Robert Penn Warren. It was published in the United States in 1939. The book's main character, Percy Munn, is a young lawyer involved in a fictionalized version of the Black Patch Tobacco Wars, which took place in Kentucky and Tennessee in the early years of the twentieth century.",
"score": "1.4907374"
},
{
"id": "8079345",
"title": "Riders of the Dusk",
"text": " Riders of the Dusk is a 1949 American Western film directed by Lambert Hillyer and written by Adele Buffington and Robert Emmett Tansey. The film stars Whip Wilson, Andy Clyde, Reno Browne, Tris Coffin, Marshall Reed and Myron Healey. The film was released on November 13, 1949, by Monogram Pictures.",
"score": "1.4842235"
},
{
"id": "27827943",
"title": "Night Ride (1930 film)",
"text": "Joseph Schildkraut as Joe Rooker ; Barbara Kent as Ruth Kearns ; Edward G. Robinson as Tony Garotta ; Harry Stubbs as Bob O'Leary ; DeWitt Jennings as Capt. O'Donnell ; Ralph Welles as Blondie ; Hal Price as Mac ; George Ovey as Ed ",
"score": "1.4623277"
},
{
"id": "8365031",
"title": "The Night Horsemen",
"text": " The Night Horsemen is a surviving 1921 American silent Western film directed by Lynn Reynolds and starring Tom Mix. It was produced by William Fox and released by Fox Film Corporation. It was advertised as a sequel to the film The Untamed (1920), but the only actor reprising their role was Mix. A print is preserved in the George Eastman House Motion Picture Collection.",
"score": "1.4397172"
},
{
"id": "1626009",
"title": "Riders (1993 film)",
"text": " Anglia bought the film rights to the best-selling book and hired Charlotte Bingham and her husband Terence Brady to produce a script, giving the job of director to Gabrielle Beaumont. Some sequences were filmed at Heydon, Norfolk. This was the screen debut of Sienna Guillory, only sixteen at the time, chosen largely because her part called for a young actress who could ride.",
"score": "1.4326658"
},
{
"id": "27827944",
"title": "Night Ride (1930 film)",
"text": "A trailer is held by the Library of Congress. ",
"score": "1.4305879"
},
{
"id": "7179170",
"title": "Howard Bretherton",
"text": " He began his career as a propman and then became a film editor during the early 1920s for MGM. He directed his first film, While London Sleeps, in 1926, and thereafter spent more than three decades working mostly as a film director. Of the roughly 100 pictures he directed, most of them were westerns and action/adventure films. The final film he directed was Night Raiders in 1952. Afterwards, he occasionally worked as a director in television through 1958.",
"score": "1.4258337"
},
{
"id": "1315566",
"title": "Night on the Galactic Railroad",
"text": " The story was made into a 1985 anime film directed by Gisaburo Sugii based on a screenplay by Minoru Betsuyaku. It was released on July 13, 1985, and features Mayumi Tanaka as Giovanni and Chika Sakamoto as Campanella.",
"score": "1.4164255"
}
] |
Who was the director of You and I?
|
[
"Wolfgang Liebeneiner"
] |
director
|
You and I (1938 film)
| 1,352,311 | 96 |
[
{
"id": "12990275",
"title": "You and Me (1975 film)",
"text": " You and Me is a 1975 American film directed by David Carradine in his directorial debut and starring Carradine, Bobbi Shaw, Barbara Hershey, and Gary Busey as well as Carradine's brothers Keith Carradine and Robert Carradine.",
"score": "1.4393013"
},
{
"id": "32206158",
"title": "Robert Mandel",
"text": " Festival at Lincoln Center. Mandel went on to become a successful film director, as well as a television series director, having directed Lost, Nash Bridges and The Practice. He was the director of the pilot for The X-Files and the sixth episode of Prison Break. Mandel was the original director hired on for what was then titled Carrie 2: Say You're Sorry but quickly left the production over \"creative differences.\" Katt Shea took over as director for the film, which was eventually released as The Rage: Carrie 2. Mandel was the dean of AFI Conservatory for nine years from 2005 to 2014. He was the first alumnus of the program to be selected a dean.",
"score": "1.4263592"
},
{
"id": "2828242",
"title": "You and I (2008 film)",
"text": " You And I has been pushed-back severely, but was eventually announced for releases. The film premiered at the 61st Cannes Film Festival in May 2008. On 25 January 2011 You And I premiered in Moscow, Russia. Mischa Barton, the lead actress of the film, decided to show up alongside t.A.T.u. to promote the film. The other lead, Shantel VanSanten, was reported to have been too busy to make an appearance at the premiere. On 16 October 2007, the official t.A.T.u. blog released a preview featuring clips from the film. On 31 January 2012, You and I was released direct-to-dvd in the United States. Then in June 2012, You and I was released on DVD in Australia and New Zealand.",
"score": "1.3979676"
},
{
"id": "426493",
"title": "You and Me (1971 film)",
"text": " The film tells about two doctors who have not completed their work. One of them realized that he had done wrong and decided to change his life.",
"score": "1.3824533"
},
{
"id": "6634382",
"title": "International Festival of Independent Cinema Off Camera",
"text": " the role of Ted Mosby in the show How I Met Your Mother. He made his directorial debut with the film Happythankyoumoreplease ; Tom Kalin – scriptwriter, director, producer, one of the most important representatives of the New Queer Cinema. He also teaches experimental film at European Graduate School in Saas-Fee. ; Colleen Atwood – American costume designer. She worked on such movies as: Edward Scissorhands, Ed Wood, Sweeny Todd, Chicago, Nine, Memoirs of a Geisha and Mars-Attacks! Michael Radford – British director and scriptwriter. He directed Nineteen Eighty-Four, based on George Orwell's novel and The Postman ; Margery Simkin – casting director. She cast such ",
"score": "1.3764635"
},
{
"id": "9228449",
"title": "The Director (play)",
"text": " Directed by Evan Bergman, set design by John Farrell, lighting design by Steve Rust, and costumes by Jill Kliber. Starring John Shea as Peter, Tasha Lawrence as a playwright who persuades Peter to direct the play the studio is putting on, and Tanya Clarke, Todd Simmons, Shula Van Buren and Warren Press as the actors. Incidental music was Rachmaninoff's Concerto #2.",
"score": "1.370145"
},
{
"id": "11705049",
"title": "Jack Gage (director)",
"text": " Jack Gage (December 26, 1912 – January 4, 1989) was an American film and television director. From 1934 to 1940, and billed as John Gordon Gage, he worked as a stage manager and occasional actor on Broadway. In 1942, he began his career in films as a dialogue director; his credits in that capacity include I Married a Witch, Double Indemnity, A Stolen Life, Sister Kenny, and Mourning Becomes Electra, the latter two films starring Rosalind Russell. After directing the feature The Velvet Touch, also starring Russell, Gage turned to the emerging medium of television. His small-screen credits include an adaptation of Jane Eyre for Studio One, the comedy series The Egg and I, the drama series Foreign Intrigue, Schlitz Playhouse of Stars, the documentary series You Are There, and The New Adventures of Charlie Chan.",
"score": "1.3696511"
},
{
"id": "10011892",
"title": "Aaron Director",
"text": " Aaron Director (September 21, 1901 – September 11, 2004) was a Russian-born American economist and academic who played a central role in the development of the field Law and Economics and the Chicago school of economics. Director was a professor at the University of Chicago Law School, and together with his brother-in-law, Nobel laureate Milton Friedman, Director influenced some of the next generation of jurists, including Robert Bork, Richard Posner, Antonin Scalia and Chief Justice William Rehnquist.",
"score": "1.353129"
},
{
"id": "32550822",
"title": "Jack Kinney",
"text": " (1952) ; Man's Best Friend (director) (1952) ; Hello Aloha (director) (1952) ; Donald's Diary (director) (1953) ; How to Sleep (director) (1953) ; Football Now and Then (director) (1953) ; How to dance (director) (1953) ; Father's Week-end (director) (1953) ; For Whom the Bulls Toil (director) (1953) ; Father's Day Off (director) (1953) ; Canvas Back Duck (writer) (1953) ; Two for the Record (director) (1954) ; The Lone Chipmunks (director) (1954) ; Pigs Is Pigs (director) (1954) ; Casey Bats Again (director) (1954) ; Social Lion (director) (1954) ; Chips Ahoy (director) (1955) ; Contrast in Rhythm (director) (1956) ; How to Have an Accident in the Home (writer) (1956) ; How to Have an Accident at Work (writer) (1959) ",
"score": "1.3468537"
},
{
"id": "25315339",
"title": "Arthur Hiller",
"text": " Arthur Hiller, (November 22, 1923 – August 17, 2016) was a Canadian-American television and film director with over 33 films to his credit during a 50-year career. He began his career directing television in Canada and later in the U.S. By the late 1950s he began directing films, most often comedies. He also directed dramas and romantic subjects, such as Love Story (1970), which was nominated for seven Oscars. Hiller collaborated on films with screenwriters Paddy Chayefsky and Neil Simon. Among his other films were The Americanization of Emily (1964), Tobruk (1967), The Hospital (1971), The Out-of-Towners (1970), Plaza Suite (1971), The Man in the Glass Booth (1975), Silver Streak (1976), The In-Laws (1979) and Outrageous Fortune (1987). Hiller served as president of the Directors Guild of America from 1989 to 1993 and president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences from 1993 to 1997. He was the recipient of the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award in 2002. An annual film festival in Hiller's honor was held from 2006 until 2009 at his alma mater, Victoria School of Performing and Visual Arts.",
"score": "1.3438852"
},
{
"id": "5070199",
"title": "Shep Fields",
"text": "Various Soundies (1941-1946) ; You Came To My Rescue (1937) - director Dave Fleischer ; The Big Broadcast of 1938 (1938) - director Mitchell Leisen with W.C. Fields, Martha Raye, Dorothy Lamour, and Bob Hope ; Kreisler Bandstand (1951) - TV series director Perry Lafferty ; Handle with Care (1977 film) (Citizens Band) - executive producer ",
"score": "1.3428578"
},
{
"id": "381756",
"title": "Joseph Hardy (director)",
"text": " Joseph Hardy (born March 8, 1929) is an American Tony Award-winning stage director, film director, television producer, and occasional performer. In 1967, he won the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Director for You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown, and won the Tony Award for Best Direction of a Play in 1969 for Child's Play. His 1974 film Great Expectations was entered into the 9th Moscow International Film Festival in 1975.",
"score": "1.341517"
},
{
"id": "14786238",
"title": "Elliott Nugent",
"text": " Splendor (1935, director) ; Wives Never Know (1936, director) ; It's All Yours (1937) ; Thunder in the City (1937) - Casey (uncredited) ; Professor Beware (1938, director) ; Give Me a Sailor (1938, director) ; Never Say Die (1939, director) ; The Cat and the Canary (1939, director) ; Nothing But the Truth (1941, director) ; The Male Animal (1942, director) ; The Crystal Ball (1943, director) ; Stage Door Canteen (1943) - Himself ; Up in Arms (1944, director) ; My Favorite Brunette (1947, director) ; Welcome Stranger (1947, director) - Dr. Morton (uncredited) ; My Girl Tisa (1948, director) - Man on Boat (uncredited) ; Mr. Belvedere Goes to College (1949, director) ; The Great Gatsby (1949, director) ; The Skipper Surprised His Wife (1950, director) ; My Outlaw Brother (1951, director) - Ranger Captain (uncredited) ; Just for You (1952, director) ",
"score": "1.337759"
},
{
"id": "10360991",
"title": "List of film director and editor collaborations",
"text": " (1983). ; Randal Kleiser: Jeff Gourson (1986–1998), Shadow of Doubt (1998). ; Stanley Kubrick: Ray Lovejoy (1968–1980), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). ; Spike Lee: Samuel D. Pollard (1990–2000), 4 Little Girls (1997). ; Mervyn LeRoy: Harold F. Kress (1941–1954), Random Harvest (1942). ; Kevin Lima: Gregory Perler (1995-2007), Enchanted (2007). ; Justin Lin: Kelly Matsumoto (2006–2016), Fast & Furious (2013). ; Jerry London: Michael Brown (1988–1998), Beauty (1998). ; Joseph Losey: Reginald Mills (1954–1964), The Servant (1963). ; Baz Luhrmann: Jill Bilcock (1992–2002), Moulin Rouge! (2002). ; David Lynch: Mary Sweeney (1992–2001), Mulholland Drive (2001). ; David Mackenzie: Jake Roberts (2002–present), Hell ",
"score": "1.3358307"
},
{
"id": "10360990",
"title": "List of film director and editor collaborations",
"text": " George Tomasini (1954–1964), North by Northwest (1959). ; Peter H. Hunt: Frank Morriss (1979–1992), Secrets (1992). ; Tim Hunter: Howard E. Smith (1982–1996), The People Next Door (1996). ; Peter Hyams: Jeff Gullo (1999–2009), Beyond a Reasonable Doubt (2009). ; James Ivory: Andrew Marcus (1987–1996), Howards End (1992). ; Norman Jewison: Stephen E. Rivkin (1994–2003), The Statement (2003). ; Glenn Jordan: John Wright (1979–1991), Sarah, Plain and Tall (1991). ; Jeremy Kagan: David Holden (1985–1994), Roswell (1994). ; Jonathan Kaplan: O. Nicholas Brown (1975–1988), The Accused (1988). ; Shekhar Kapur: Jill Bilcock (1998–present), Elizabeth (1997). ; Philip Kaufman: Douglas Stewart (1972–1983), The Right ",
"score": "1.3348867"
},
{
"id": "9285075",
"title": "Jack Shea (director)",
"text": " Jack Shea (August 1, 1928 – April 28, 2013) was an American film and television director. He was the president of the Directors Guild of America from 1997 to 2002.",
"score": "1.3342807"
},
{
"id": "10170445",
"title": "Mike Nichols on screen and stage",
"text": " Nichols was also known as a film director breaking out with Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966) starring Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, and The Graduate (1967) starring Dustin Hoffman and Anne Bancroft. Nichols continued directing acclaimed film such as the war film Catch-22 (1970), the sexual coming of age drama Carnal Knowledge (1971), the drama Silkwood (1983), the romantic comedy Working Girl (1988), the farce comedy The Birdcage (1996), the political drama Primary Colors (1998), the romantic drama Closer (2004) and biographical drama Charlie Wilson's War (2007). Nichols also became known for his work on television directing HBO adaptations of Margaret Edson's Wit (2001) and Tony Kushner's Angels in America (2003) starring Meryl Streep and Al Pacino.",
"score": "1.3339753"
},
{
"id": "14368612",
"title": "Director (band)",
"text": " Director were an Irish art rock quartet from Malahide in County Dublin. The group consisted of Michael Moloney (vocals/guitars), Eoin Aherne (guitars), Shea Lawlor (drums) and Rowan Averill (bass guitar). The band's 2006 debut album We Thrive On Big Cities was a critical and commercial success in Ireland. A follow-up album, I'll Wait For Sound was released in 2009.",
"score": "1.3314658"
},
{
"id": "9107508",
"title": "Franklin J. Schaffner",
"text": " Franklin James Schaffner (May 30, 1920 – July 2, 1989) was an American film, television, and stage director. He won an Academy Award for Best Director for Patton (1970), and is known for the films Planet of the Apes (1968), Nicholas and Alexandra (1971), Papillon (1973), and The Boys from Brazil (1978). He served as president of the Directors Guild of America between 1987 and 1989.",
"score": "1.3309711"
},
{
"id": "2153840",
"title": "Lee Hyun-seung (director)",
"text": " Film (2010), as well as for the human rights-themed projects If You Were Me (2003), If You Were Me 4 (2009), and Fly Penguin (2009). Lee also served in several cinema-related capacities, such as being the first commissioner of the Gyeonggi Performing Arts & Film Commission, vice-chairman of the Korean Film Council, executive director of the Mise-en-scène Short Film Festival, film professor at Chung-Ang University, and founder of the Director's Cut Awards, among others. During this period, his only directorial efforts were the short films Between (2002), Twenty Millimeter Thick (2004, starring Yum Jung-ah), and Relay (2009, starring Park Bo-young and Son Eun-seo). In ",
"score": "1.3296212"
}
] |
Who was the director of La cruz?
|
[
"Alejandro Agresti"
] |
director
|
La cruz (film)
| 4,904,058 | 76 |
[
{
"id": "29591717",
"title": "La cruz (film)",
"text": " La cruz is a 1997 Argentine drama film directed by Alejandro Agresti. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1997 Cannes Film Festival.",
"score": "1.7342148"
},
{
"id": "9480408",
"title": "Lito Cruz",
"text": " He was named director of the Argentine Actors' Association and \"Action for Culture, Theatre and Visual Arts,\" a leading advocacy group for its field in Argentina. This work led to his appointment as National Theatres Director in 1995, a position he leveraged to help have Congress pass the \"National Theatre Law\" in 1998. The bill helped protect struggling stages against demolition and guaranteed annual subsidies for the art. Lito Cruz continued his work as head of the drama school that now bears his name, while having accepted more starring roles in film. Some of the most notable have been that of ",
"score": "1.6877296"
},
{
"id": "2086047",
"title": "La cruz y la espada",
"text": " La cruz y la espada is a 1934 American Spanish language drama film directed by Frank Strayer, which stars José Mojica, Juan Torena, and Anita Campillo. The screenplay was written by Paul Schofield and William DuBois from a story by Miguel de Zárraga.",
"score": "1.6475135"
},
{
"id": "9480403",
"title": "Lito Cruz",
"text": " Lito Cruz (May 14, 1941 – December 19, 2017) was a prominent Argentine stage director and motion picture actor.",
"score": "1.6271555"
},
{
"id": "29591718",
"title": "La cruz (film)",
"text": "Norman Briski - Alfredo ; Mirta Busnelli - Eloisa ; Carlos Roffé - Pablo ; Laura Melillo - Claudia ; Harry Havilio ; Silvana Silveri ; Sebastián Polonski ; Silvana Ramírez ; Pascual Condito ; Alejandro Agresti ",
"score": "1.5810184"
},
{
"id": "30953055",
"title": "Juan Cruz (director)",
"text": " Juan Cruz (born 1966) is a television and film director and screenwriter. He co-directed the 2005 film Tapas as his directorial film debut.",
"score": "1.5654361"
},
{
"id": "28902301",
"title": "Amada Cruz",
"text": " Artists in Los Angeles, where she was responsible for all programming activities of a Ford and Rockefeller Foundations initiative. She also has been Executive Director of Artadia: The Fund and Dialogue in New York City, which awarded grants to visual artists in San Francisco, Houston and Chicago. Much of Cruz's career, as a museum director, has been marked by controversy. While director of the Phoenix Art Museum, some said her actions and treatment of staff had a negative impact on donations and employee retention. In June 2021, as CEO and director of Seattle Art Museum, Amada Cruz drew ire from staff ",
"score": "1.5351562"
},
{
"id": "14923668",
"title": "Vladimir Cruz",
"text": "2005: ¿Soy yo acaso el guardián de mi hermano? ; 2010: Afinidades (co-directed with Jorge Perugorría) ",
"score": "1.532517"
},
{
"id": "2086052",
"title": "La cruz y la espada",
"text": " In December 1933 it was revealed that Miguel de Zárraga, Paul Schofield, and William DuBois were writing the original screenplay for the film. Also announced was that Ernesto Lecuona, José Mojica, and Troy Sanders would be composing music for the film. The picture was the first of several scheduled by Fox Pictures, after a renewed interest in producing Spanish language films for the Latin American market, rather than simply releasing English language films with subtitle.",
"score": "1.5295427"
},
{
"id": "7605774",
"title": "Joe De La Cruz (actor)",
"text": " Joe De La Cruz was a Mexican-American character actor who worked in Hollywood from the late 1910s through the early 1940s. He often played villains.",
"score": "1.5098834"
},
{
"id": "9784544",
"title": "Virginia de la Cruz",
"text": " Virginia de la Cruz was a Paraguayan actress whose career was most prolific in Argentina. She starred in the 1950 film Arroz con leche under director Carlos Schlieper. She was married actor and conductor Carlos Ginés.",
"score": "1.5076544"
},
{
"id": "30559268",
"title": "La Cruz (canton)",
"text": " the administration of former president Teodoro Picado Michalski. In the government of José Joaquín Trejos Fernández, on July 23, 1969, law No. 4354, was granted the title of Villa of the town of La Cruz, head of canton set up with that purpose. Later, in Act No. 4574 of May 4, 1970, promulgated the Municipal Code, third article, that confirmed that this villa was now a City because of being head of the canton. On August 10, 1970 was held the first meeting of the Council of La Cruz, composed of the following owners: Piedad Loáiciga Salgado, President: Victor Manuel Hernandez Ortega, Vice President: Carlos Manuel Rodriguez Campos. The Municipal Executive was Sancho Felix Gallo and the City Clerk: Jose Luis Fallas Leitón.",
"score": "1.5017996"
},
{
"id": "7787221",
"title": "The Criminal Life of Archibaldo de la Cruz",
"text": " The Criminal Life of Archibaldo de la Cruz (original Spanish title: Ensayo de un crimen, \"Rehearsal for a Murder\" ) is a 1955 Mexican crime film by Spanish-born writer-director Luis Buñuel. It focuses on a would-be serial killer whose plans, although elaborate, never result in an actual murder.",
"score": "1.4971126"
},
{
"id": "148885",
"title": "Victoria Santa Cruz",
"text": "She received a scholarship by the French government and traveled to Paris to study choreography. Here, she succeeded as the creator and designer of the wardrobe for the play El Retablo de Don Cristóbal by Federico García Lorca. ; Best Folklorist, 1970 ; Appointed Director of the National Folklore Ensemble of the National Institute of Culture in 1973 ",
"score": "1.4969978"
},
{
"id": "11714742",
"title": "Aravind Enrique Adyanthaya",
"text": " Aravind Enrique Adyanthaya (born 1965) is a Puerto Rican writer, performer, and theater director. He is the founding artistic director of Casa Cruz de la Luna, an experimental theater company and cultural center based in an old house in the historical district of San Germán, Puerto Rico. He holds a PhD in theatre historiography from the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis and an MD from the Mayo Medical School.",
"score": "1.4941193"
},
{
"id": "3537147",
"title": "Eugenio Cruz Vargas",
"text": " and Asia looking for new projects. During a long stay in Paris, he studied in the École du Louvre, where he attended courses of Art History. Later on he moved to United States with the goal of raising funds for joint Chilean-American film productions, being able to produce two films: The comedy \"Antonio\", filmed in Quintay fishermans dwarf, Santiago and Pirque, under the direction of the Chilean filmmaker and television producer, Claudio Guzmán and as Larry Hagman and Trini López as actors; and the drama \"Autorretrato\", directed by Maurice McEndree and starred by the Canadian actor Joby Baker, the U.S. actress Pamela ",
"score": "1.4888505"
},
{
"id": "1247039",
"title": "Juan de la Cruz (actor)",
"text": " Juan de la Cruz was a Danish actor and singer of Spanish descent who appeared in Hollywood films from the 1910s through the 1950s.",
"score": "1.4830912"
},
{
"id": "4543527",
"title": "David Antonio Cruz",
"text": " He was the 2015 Resident at Gateway Project Spaces. His films have been shown at the Big Screen Project, the Anthology Film Archives, Arte Americas, El Museo del Barrio, and various installations in Philadelphia, Chapel Hill, Los Angeles, and Miami. Cruz was commissioned by El Museo del Barrio with support from the Franklin Furnace Fund to create The Opera. The project was presented as part of Performa 13, and it involved thirty performers, including ten actors, an opera singer, a jazz singer, and a small orchestra. The artists Elia Alba and Mickalene Thomas were also part of the performance. The work, like the artist, has an emotional intensity. ",
"score": "1.4744781"
},
{
"id": "9480405",
"title": "Lito Cruz",
"text": " adaptation of his Los taitas (\"The Uncles\") and the following year, co-founded the Experimental Theatre Team of Buenos Aires (ETEBA) with Augusto Fernándes. ETEBA produced an adaptation of Henrik Ibsen's Peer Gynt, La leyenda de Pedro, which was well received and earned Cruz international esteem following its tour through festivals at Nancy, Berlin and Florence. ETEBA was invited to perform their El sapo y la serpiente (\"The Toad and the Serpent\") at the Munich Olympics in 1972. Cruz was Professor of Acting at the National Drama Conservatory between 1972 and 1975, where he directed Peter Handke's The Ward Wants to be Warden ",
"score": "1.4721696"
},
{
"id": "12421132",
"title": "Elena de la Cruz",
"text": " Before working for the government, Elena de la Cruz worked as a professor at the School of Art of Guadalajara. In May 2015, after the electoral victory of Emiliano Garcia-Page, De la Cruz joined the government of Castilla-La Mancha as Minister of Public Works. During her time as Minister of Public Works she was characterized by a moderate style and focused on the execution of her infrastructure plans and the “battle for water.” One of her principle priorities as Minister of Public Works was to fight against the Tagus-Segura Water Transfer.",
"score": "1.4658439"
}
] |
Who was the director of The Love Nest?
|
[
"Thomas Bentley"
] |
director
|
The Love Nest (1933 film)
| 5,939,352 | 92 |
[
{
"id": "25559106",
"title": "The Nest (1988 film)",
"text": " The Nest is an 1988 American science-fiction horror film directed by Terence H. Winkless in his directorial debut. Based on the 1980 novel of the same name by Eli Cantor (published under the pseudonym Gregory A. Douglas), the film's screenplay was written by Robert King. The film was produced by Julie Corman and stars Robert Lansing, Lisa Langlois, Franc Luz, and Terri Treas. The Nest takes place in a small New England town that is overrun by genetically engineered killer cockroaches. The local sheriff (Luz) joins forces with his former girlfriend (Langlois) and a pest control agent (Stephen Davies) to defeat the insects. The film was released in the United States on May 13, 1988, by Concorde Pictures, and received mixed reviews from critics.",
"score": "1.5540879"
},
{
"id": "8583653",
"title": "Love Nest",
"text": " Love Nest is a 1951 American comedy-drama film directed by Joseph Newman and starring June Haver, William Lundigan, Frank Fay, and Marilyn Monroe. The post-World War II comedy features an early supporting role for Monroe. It is one of the few films future Tonight Show host Jack Paar made prior to his television career, and the last film appearance by Fay, who had been a popular stage comedian in the 1920s and revived his career starring in the long-running Broadway comedy Harvey. It was also the last appearance by silent star Leatrice Joy. The film borrows its name from the song \"Love Nest\" with music by Louis Hirsch and lyrics by Otto A. Harbach. The song is sung by a chorus over the opening credits and was used as a theme song for The Burns and Allen Show on both radio and TV.",
"score": "1.5536178"
},
{
"id": "26646521",
"title": "The Love Nest (1933 film)",
"text": "Gene Gerrard - George ; Camilla Horn - Fifi ; Nancy Burne - Angela ; Gus McNaughton - Fox ; Garry Marsh - Hugo ; Amy Veness - Ma ; Charles Paton - Pa ; Marian Dawson - Mrs. Drinkwater ; Judy Kelly - Girl ",
"score": "1.5250807"
},
{
"id": "26646520",
"title": "The Love Nest (1933 film)",
"text": " On the eve of his own marriage, a man offers shelter to a runaway wife with whom he strikes up an unexpected bond.",
"score": "1.5123746"
},
{
"id": "30088306",
"title": "The Love Nest (1923 film)",
"text": " In order to escape from his life and his lost love, Keaton sets off on his small boat, Cupid, but runs into the whaling ship, The Love Nest. The whaler's merciless captain (Joe Roberts) throws crew members overboard for even the slightest offense. After his steward accidentally pours hot tea over the captain's hand, the captain tosses him overboard and replaces him with Keaton. Despite a series of mishaps, Keaton manages to avoid the fate of other crewmen.",
"score": "1.5062168"
},
{
"id": "30088305",
"title": "The Love Nest (1923 film)",
"text": " The Love Nest is a 1923 American short comedy silent film written and directed by and starring Buster Keaton.",
"score": "1.4951303"
},
{
"id": "26646519",
"title": "The Love Nest (1933 film)",
"text": " The Love Nest is a 1933 British comedy film directed by Thomas Bentley and starring Gene Gerrard, Camilla Horn and Nancy Burne.",
"score": "1.4799639"
},
{
"id": "26330843",
"title": "The Love Nest",
"text": "The Love Nest (1922 film) aka Das Liebesnest, is a 1922 German silent film directed by Rudolf Walther-Fein. ; The Love Nest (1922), an American film directed by Wray Bartlett Physioc. ; The Love Nest (1923 film), an American short silent comedy by Buster Keaton ; The Love Nest (1933 film), a British comedy directed by Thomas Bentley The Love Nest may refer to:",
"score": "1.4767561"
},
{
"id": "1520959",
"title": "Franz Xaver Kroetz",
"text": " contain less violence and sexuality, and are more influenced by Bertolt Brecht. Oberösterreich (Upper Austria, 1972) and Das Nest (The Nest, 1974) garnered popular and critical acclaim. The former marked a shift from portraying (in Kroetz's words) the \"milieu of the extreme\" to portraying average people who lack pent-up frutrations and communicate more effectively. Donna L. Hoffmeister wrote that the work \"was presented, according to my count, by forty different theaters between 1974 and 1976 and the play Das Nest (1974) by about twenty theaters in the 1976/77 season\". In The Nest, the protagonist is a truck driver. His boss orders him to dump toxic waste into a lake, thus soiling his \"nest.\" After the ",
"score": "1.4692032"
},
{
"id": "1705439",
"title": "The Sex Nest",
"text": " The Sex Nest (Das gelbe Haus am Pinnasberg) is a 1970 West German sex comedy directed by Alfred Vohrer. The film is about a brothel for neglected wives that is predominantly staffed by men. It is based on the novel by.",
"score": "1.4639602"
},
{
"id": "30088307",
"title": "The Love Nest (1923 film)",
"text": "Buster Keaton - Buster Keaton ; Joe Roberts - Captain of the Whaler ; Virginia Fox - The Girl ",
"score": "1.4483476"
},
{
"id": "5436635",
"title": "Robert N. Zagone",
"text": " before returning to his freelance work. Zagone won two Emmys from the San Francisco chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for Evening Magazine, one of the winning shows having featured comedian Steve Martin and Rolling Stone journalist Ben Fong-Torres. Inside the Cuckoo's Nest (1976) Director This groundbreaking PBS documentary was shot at the Oregon State Mental Hospital in Salem, Oregon, the same hospital used in the Academy Award-winning feature film One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. The film included a graphic sequence that showed the preparation, the actual process, and the aftermath of an electroshock treatment for a patient. The ",
"score": "1.4385436"
},
{
"id": "27855148",
"title": "The Nest (2020 film)",
"text": " The Nest is a 2020 psychological thriller film written, directed, and produced by Sean Durkin. It stars Jude Law, Carrie Coon, Charlie Shotwell, Oona Roche, and Adeel Akhtar. It had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on January 26, 2020, and was released in the United States and Canada on September 18, 2020, by IFC Films and Elevation Pictures respectively.",
"score": "1.433481"
},
{
"id": "27855156",
"title": "The Nest (2020 film)",
"text": " The project was announced in April 2018, with Jude Law and Carrie Coon set to star for writer and director Sean Durkin. Filming began in September 2018 in Canada for one week before moving to England.",
"score": "1.4308915"
},
{
"id": "27397432",
"title": "Love Nest on Wheels",
"text": " Love Nest on Wheels is a 1937 Educational Pictures short subject directed by Buster Keaton and Charles Lamont. The film borrows heavily from Keaton's 1918 film The Bell Boy. The film is notable because it is one of the rare times that Buster Keaton appeared onscreen with his family, whom he had performed with in vaudeville.",
"score": "1.4205396"
},
{
"id": "8349959",
"title": "Hal Ashby",
"text": " 1973, Ashby was hired to direct One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, though he would be replaced by Miloš Forman before filming started. Aside from Shampoo, Ashby's most commercially successful film was the Vietnam War drama Coming Home (1978). Starring Jane Fonda and Jon Voight, both in Academy Award-winning performances, it was for this film that Ashby earned his only Best Director nomination from the Academy. Arriving in the post-Jaws and Star Wars era, Coming Home was one of the last films to encapsulate the modestly budgeted, socially realistic ethos of the New Hollywood era, earning nearly $15 million in returns and rentals on a $3 million budget.",
"score": "1.4204072"
},
{
"id": "25511089",
"title": "The Marriage Nest",
"text": " The Marriage Nest (Das Heiratsnest) is a 1927 German silent film directed by Rudolf Walther-Fein and starring Livio Pavanelli, Harry Liedtke, and Wolfgang Zilzer. The film's sets were designed by Botho Hoefer and August Rinaldi. It was made by the Berlin-based Aafa-Film.",
"score": "1.418321"
},
{
"id": "3501156",
"title": "Tina Howe",
"text": " Howe’s first full-length play to receive a professional production was The Nest, which premiered in the summer of 1969 at the Act IV Theater in Provincetown, Massachusetts. It was directed by Larry Arrick and the cast included Sally Kirkland and Richard Jordan among others. From Provincetown, the show was transferred Off-Broadway to New York's Mercury Theater, opening on April 9, 1970. Howe later recalled: \"My first play, 'The Nest,' was about courtship and how women compete with each other to land a husband. That play closed [off-Broadway] in one night.\" The play follows the trials of three young women competing for husbands at a dinner ",
"score": "1.4181564"
},
{
"id": "2797189",
"title": "The Nest (1980 film)",
"text": " In a small village near Salamanca, Alejandro, a rich 60-year-old widower falls in love with Goyita, a 13-year-old girl.",
"score": "1.4120022"
},
{
"id": "2797188",
"title": "The Nest (1980 film)",
"text": " The Nest (El Nido) is a 1980 Spanish drama film written and directed by Jaime de Armiñán, starring Héctor Alterio and Ana Torrent. The plot follows the emotionally intense relationship between an old widower and a precocious thirteen-year-old girl. The film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 53rd Academy Awards.",
"score": "1.4090253"
}
] |
Who was the director of The Resolve?
|
[
"Henry Otto"
] |
director
|
The Resolve
| 5,951,347 | 75 |
[
{
"id": "32824905",
"title": "Resolved (film)",
"text": " Resolved is a 2007 documentary film concerning the world of high school policy debate. The film was written and directed by Greg Whiteley of New York Doll fame. The film captured the \"Audience Award\" title at its debut on June 23, 2007 at the Los Angeles Film Festival. The film was produced by One Potato Productions. The film made its television debut on HBO in the summer of 2008 and subsequently received two Emmy nominations: one nomination for Best Documentary; the other for Editing for the 2009 Emmy Awards held in September 2009. In July 2009, it was released on DVD by Image Entertainment.",
"score": "1.4485103"
},
{
"id": "2145594",
"title": "Michael Davis (author)",
"text": " Control was registered with The Charity Commission in London in 1981. In 1984, he became the director of the Institute for Negotiation and Conciliation, registered with The Charity Commission. Trustees included Sir Peter Blaker and General Sir Hugh Beach. From 1983 to 1988, he founded and served as director of The Foundation for International Conciliation, based in Geneva. He led confidential negotiations with political leaders in many parts of the world to resolve national and international conflicts. The foundation was registered in the Canton of Geneva. Foundation board members included Ambassador Olivier Long former Swiss Ambassador to London and Ambassador :Felix Schnyder former Swiss Ambassador to Washington and UN ",
"score": "1.3888612"
},
{
"id": "28046020",
"title": "High Resolves",
"text": " Author and venture capital entrepreneur Mehrdad Baghai, a member of the Initiative, was short-listed as a finalist for the first Aspen Institute, John P. McNulty Prize in 2008, and ultimately was the winner of the award in 2018, the prize's eleventh year, citing extraordinary leadership. High Resolves won the 2015 Patrons Prize in the national Good Design Awards.",
"score": "1.3871069"
},
{
"id": "32020706",
"title": "Joseph Blatchford",
"text": " the five-year rule as one way to help assemble his own team, just as Jack Vaughn had done when he became director in 1966. \"The loudest and most outraged of political partisanship came in 1971 when Blatchford used an important Peace Corps policy, generally ignored by his predecessor, to terminate nearly one hundred staff members, including twenty-seven country directors. The rule was instituted to ensure that the agency would never suffer the fate of other government bureaucracies: premature calcification resulting from an aged and spent permanent staff.\" Author P. David Searles says that Shriver's concerns about finding \"competent overseas directors\" proved groundless.",
"score": "1.3841364"
},
{
"id": "1805958",
"title": "The Resolve",
"text": " The Resolve is a 1915 American silent short drama film directed by Henry Otto starring Ed Coxen, Lizette Thorne, and Winifred Greenwood.",
"score": "1.3764019"
},
{
"id": "8165723",
"title": "Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service (United States)",
"text": " Clinton) ; 14) C. Richard Barnes (1999; Clinton) ; 15) Peter J. Hurtgen (2002; G. W. Bush) ; 16) Arthur F. Rosenfeld (2006; G. W. Bush) ; 17) George H. Cohen (2009; Obama) ; 18) Allison Beck (2014; Obama), the first woman to serve as director ; 19) Richard Giacolone (2018; Donald J. Trump) Directors of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service (with the date they took office listed and the President who made the appointment shown in parentheses), are as follows: On June 15, 2021, President Biden announced his intent to nominate Javier Ramirez to be the next Director. ",
"score": "1.3549029"
},
{
"id": "25472150",
"title": "Resolution (film)",
"text": " At Macabro 2013, the directors were awarded Best Director. At the Toronto After Dark Film Festival, the film won four awards, including best screenplay and most innovative film. The directors won Best Director at the 2013 Fantastic Planet film festival.",
"score": "1.3432236"
},
{
"id": "9295445",
"title": "Scott Lumley",
"text": " Lumley started researching liquidation sales and returns. He eventually turned a $250 pallet of products bought from overseas and flipped them into $4800 over several weeks. Lumley founded Resolve Commercial in 2010 and he currently acts as the CEO. Resolve Commercial focuses on developing large residential developments in the Middle Tennessee area.",
"score": "1.3311794"
},
{
"id": "15432102",
"title": "Carolyn R. Payton",
"text": " Brown ended in an argument during a trip to Morocco, when Brown openly berated Dr. Payton before Action Corps officials and later went to her hotel room and pounded on her door for fifteen minutes, demanding to be let in to continue his harassment. Payton resigned in 1978 after thirteen months as Director citing, in part, policy differences between ACTION and the Peace Corps saying \"as Director, I could not, because of the peculiar administrative structure under which the Peace Corps operates, do anything about this situation. As an ex-director, I am free to sound the alarm.\" After Payton's resignation, President Carter issued an executive order taking the Peace Corps out from under ACTION and making it a fully autonomous agency.",
"score": "1.3276751"
},
{
"id": "32824909",
"title": "Resolved (film)",
"text": "Louis Blackwell ; Richard Funches ; Jon Bruschke ; Matthew Andrews ; Sam Iola ; Samuel A. Alito ; Jane Pauley ; Josh Lucas ; Juan Williams ; David Wiltz ",
"score": "1.3252795"
},
{
"id": "28887283",
"title": "Joseph F. Finnegan",
"text": " Joseph Francis Finnegan (September 12, 1904 – February 12, 1964) was an American labor mediator who was appointed by President of the United States Dwight D. Eisenhower to serve as the fourth Director of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service from 1955 to 1961, and served as the first director of the equivalent body in New York State.",
"score": "1.3238266"
},
{
"id": "9170684",
"title": "New York University Press",
"text": "Arthur Huntington Nason, 1916–1932 ; no director, 1932–1946 ; Jean B. Barr (interim director), 1946–1952 ; Filmore Hyde, 1952–1957 ; Wilbur McKee, acting director, 1957–1958 ; William B. Harvey, 1958–1966 ; Christopher Kentera, 1966–1974 ; Malcolm C. Johnson, 1974–1981 ; Colin Jones, 1981–1996 ; Niko Pfund, 1996–2000 ; Steve Maikowski, 2001–2014 ; Ellen Chodosh, 2014–present ",
"score": "1.3232558"
},
{
"id": "25700961",
"title": "J. Curtis Counts",
"text": " James Curtis Counts (August 2, 1915 – June 30, 1999) was a labor mediator who served as the sixth Director of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, appointed by President of the United States Richard Nixon.",
"score": "1.3201857"
},
{
"id": "32020709",
"title": "Joseph Blatchford",
"text": " Blatchford would have been re-appointed at Director of Action will never be known because Blatchford accompanied his pro forma resignation with a real one. Blatchford was an enigma in the Nixon administration, a Republican who held ideas that seemed liberal. He had resisted pressure to bust heads when the Committee of Returned Volunteers had occupied Peace Corps Headquarters in 1969 and Nixon's Chief of Staff H. R. Haldeman considered Blatchford \"soft\" in dealing with dissent. Whatever the outcome, Blatchford had taken himself out of the running and on November 21, 1972 Blatchford announced that he was resigning as head of the Action Corps effective December 31, 1972. A source added that Blatchford had been urged by a number of people to enter the Los Angeles mayoral race.",
"score": "1.3176699"
},
{
"id": "8540154",
"title": "Shantilal Bhagat",
"text": " Shantilal Premchand Bhagat (1923 - 7 July 2017) was the Director of Eco-Justice Concerns for the Church of the Brethren and the denomination's representative to the United Nations. He was an ordained minister in the denomination. He was also the Brethren representative to the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA's Eco-Justice Working Group.",
"score": "1.3128396"
},
{
"id": "31599478",
"title": "Neale Fong",
"text": " Fong was the director and chair of Youth Vision WA from 1990- 2015, having completed 41 years in youth work in the Churches of Christ. He was deputy chair of the WA Community Foundation established by former WA Governor Lieutenant Colonel John Sanderson. He is an inaugural director of Mindful Mediation Australia, a charity established to further mindfulness and better mental health in schools and in business. Fong is National and WA state President of the Australasian College of Health Service Management and was made an Honorary Fellow in 2011. He is also Chairman of the Rhonda Wyllie Foundation (2012–present), Chairman of the Bethesda Foundation and Fellow of the Australian Institute of Company Directors (AICD).",
"score": "1.3127711"
},
{
"id": "1515730",
"title": "The Glorious Resolve",
"text": " The film tells the story of the heavily outnumbered infantry soldiers who fought off an assault by 1500 attackers who raided a section level outpost of an Infantry Battalion in South Waziristan Agency on the night of 29 May 2009. 43 Punjab jawans were killed in the battle, and their deaths are reenacted in the film, as well as the actions of two \"Ghazis\"—Sepoy Mashooq and Sepoy Muslim—who held their positions until reinforcements came. The film aims to depict the sacrifices and achievements of the Pakistan Army in the Global War on Terrorism as well as the Pakistan Army's \"glorious resolve\" to uproot the menace of terrorism from the \"land of the pure\".",
"score": "1.3125389"
},
{
"id": "15432101",
"title": "Carolyn R. Payton",
"text": " Payton was appointed Director of the Peace Corps by President Jimmy Carter in 1977. As Peace Corps Director Payton clashed with Sam Brown, Director of ACTION, which had been created in 1971 by President Richard Nixon to administer the Peace Corps, Volunteers in Service to America and other service programs. Brown wanted to \"send volunteers for short periods to developing countries and then bring back the skills they had learned to fight poverty in the United States\". According to Payton, Brown's policy went against the original goals of the Peace Corps and said that Brown was \"trying to turn the corps into an arrogant, elitist political organization intended to meddle in the affairs of foreign governments.\" According to Senate testimony Payton's differences ",
"score": "1.3094059"
},
{
"id": "1515729",
"title": "The Glorious Resolve",
"text": " The Glorious Resolve: Death Before Disgrace is a 2011 Pakistani documentary film made by the Inter-Services Public Relations department of the Pakistan Armed Forces. The film stars Hamza Ali Abbasi, Hassan Waqas Rana and Bilal Lashari in leading roles. The executive director was Brigadier Syed Mujtaba Tirmizi, whereas it was written by Irfan Aziz. It was created specifically to counter Taliban and Al-Qaeda propaganda videos by depicting the army and the fight against terror in a positive light. Glorious Resolve won Jury special award in the recently held International film festival \"Eserciti-e-Popoli\" held at Bracciano, Italy. The festival saw the participation of NATO and 24 other countries with 60 films produced by renowned film makers which were evaluated by qualified and reputed jury. Glorious Resolve received the medal from the Chairman of the Italian Senate with the citation \"A technically outstanding and emotionally powerful dramatization of the story of courageous soldier under fire in combat situation\".",
"score": "1.3086977"
},
{
"id": "25591777",
"title": "Garth Hewitt",
"text": " Amos Trust began organizing trips to the international projects it supports, to introduce people to the problems in different countries, with a view both to enlarging a global understanding of poverty and encouraging activism when visitors returned to the UK. Hewitt served as director from the trust's inception until 2011 when the Reverend Chris Rose was appointed to the role of director, while Hewitt retained the position of founder. In his period as director he was Guildford Diocesan World Affairs and World Mission Advisor from 1994 to 1996. Toward the end of this advisory role he wrote a book for Lent called Pilgrims & Peacemakers, which by way of featuring Palestinian and Jewish mediators, espoused his progressive approach to Christian mission.",
"score": "1.3082902"
}
] |
Who was the director of Out?
|
[
"Lionel Rogosin"
] |
director
|
Out (1957 film)
| 5,360,069 | 68 |
[
{
"id": "1075600",
"title": "Out (2020 film)",
"text": " Out is the seventh film in Pixar's \"SparkShorts\" program. It was directed and written by Steven Clay Hunter, known for animation work on Finding Nemo and WALL-E, and produced by Max Sachar, known for his work on Coco and Toy Story 3.",
"score": "1.6563122"
},
{
"id": "30875983",
"title": "Out (magazine)",
"text": " the next editor-in-chief. Despite editorial changes, the parent company and magazine were still rife with financial issues and frequent complaints from freelancers and contract employees. Picardi left Out in December 2019, announcing his abrupt departure via Twitter. In December 2018, Raquel Willis was appointed as executive editor, becoming the first trans woman to take on a leadership position at the publication. While at Out, Willis won a GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Magazine Article for \"The Trans Obituaries Project\". In September 2020, David Artavia was appointed as the magazine's new editor-in-chief. In January 17, 2020 Diane-Anderson-Minshall was named CEO of Pride Media and later that year became the Editorial Director of OUT.",
"score": "1.6058156"
},
{
"id": "14397468",
"title": "Out (2002 film)",
"text": " Out is a 2002 Japanese film directed by Hideyuki Hirayama.",
"score": "1.5979067"
},
{
"id": "982553",
"title": "Phillip Picardi",
"text": " In August 2018, Pride Media Inc. announced Picardi as the new editor-in-chief of Out. Picardi was let go from Out in December 2019, describing it as “the most complex chapter of my career so far”.",
"score": "1.5579765"
},
{
"id": "6205144",
"title": "Word Is Out: Stories of Some of Our Lives",
"text": " finished in 1977, was on its surface a very simple idea answering the simple question, \"Who Are We?\" For the film, I, and the five other principle [sic] people I worked with spent a year doing research interviews on videotape of 250 lesbians and gay men all across the country. In the end, twenty-two were chosen to tell their stories in the film. Word Is Out took five years, over 200 interviews, and six co-directors to make. Documentary filmmaker Peter Adair came up with the idea for the film. According to Adair: The directors of the film, collectively known as the Mariposa Film Group, ",
"score": "1.551594"
},
{
"id": "10017561",
"title": "Joe Wilson (director)",
"text": " Wilson was born and raised in Oil City, Pennsylvania. He graduated from the University of Pittsburgh in 1986 and served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in the West African country of Mali from 1988 to 1990. Prior to filmmaking, he served as Director of the Human Rights program at the Public Welfare Foundation in Washington, D.C. Wilson's 2010 film Out in the Silence focused on the challenges of LGBT people in his small hometown of Oil City, Pennsylvania. It was motivated by the controversy that occurred when the local paper published the announcement of his wedding to partner and fellow filmmaker Dean Hamer. Out in the Silence was supported ",
"score": "1.5252761"
},
{
"id": "30875978",
"title": "Out (magazine)",
"text": " Out was founded by Michael Goff in 1992 as editor in chief and president. The executive editor was Sarah Pettit (since deceased). In 1996, owner Robert Hardman fired Goff and hired Henry E. (Hank) Scott, a former New York Times Co. executive, as president of Out Publishing Inc., with the charge to rescue the financially troubled magazine company. When Scott joined Out, the company had annual revenues of less than $4 million and expenses of $7 million. Scott changed Out LGBT focus, arguing that gay men and lesbians had little in common other than political and legal issues. He fired Pettit and hired James Collard, editor of Attitude, a gay magazine published in ",
"score": "1.5244448"
},
{
"id": "691045",
"title": "Out (Sons of Anarchy)",
"text": " \"Out\" is the fourth season premiere of the FX television series Sons of Anarchy. It was written by Kurt Sutter, the original series creator and directed by Paris Barclay. It originally aired in the United States on September 6, 2011. This episode marks the first appearance of Rockmond Dunbar (Lt. Eli Roosevelt) and Ray McKinnon (Lincoln Potter)",
"score": "1.4956286"
},
{
"id": "7823950",
"title": "In and Out (1989 film)",
"text": " In and Out is a Canadian animated short film, directed by Alison Snowden and David Fine and released in 1989.",
"score": "1.4894037"
},
{
"id": "30875980",
"title": "Out (magazine)",
"text": " Media in 2000. In 2001 the circulation was 100,000. Judy Wieder, who was the first female Editor in Chief of The Advocate, became the first female Editorial Director of Out. By 2006, when the magazine was acquired by PlanetOut, Out circulation had reached 130,000. Out attracted international attention when it published its debut Power Issue in May 2007, with a cover that featured two models wearing masks of journalist Anderson Cooper and actor Jodie Foster above the cover line, \"The Glass Closet\". Some lesbians have criticized Out for primarily focusing on gay men. A writer for the website After Ellen noted that in 2008, no lesbians were featured on the magazine's cover, and ",
"score": "1.4874201"
},
{
"id": "19270",
"title": "The Outies",
"text": "2013 – Kevin Jones ; 2011 – Brian McNaught ; 2008 – Selisse Berry, Founding Executive Director of Out & Equal Recognizes an exceptional individual whose visionary leadership, tireless efforts, and remarkable accomplishments have been a critical contribution toward achieving LGBT workplace equality. In addition to leading change in the world of employment, this leader inspires countless individuals to champion workplace equality for all inclusive of sexual orientation, gender identity, expression, or characteristics.",
"score": "1.4842533"
},
{
"id": "6205141",
"title": "Word Is Out: Stories of Some of Our Lives",
"text": " Word Is Out: Stories of Some of Our Lives is a 1977 documentary film featuring interviews with 26 gay men and women. It was directed by six people collectively known as the Mariposa Film Group. Peter Adair conceived and produced the film, and was one of the directors. The film premiered in November 1977 at the Castro Theater in San Francisco and went into limited national release in 1978. It also aired on many PBS stations in 1978. The interviews from the film were transcribed into a book of the same title, which was published in October 1978.",
"score": "1.4812527"
},
{
"id": "1075596",
"title": "Out (2020 film)",
"text": " Out is a 2020 American 3D animated short film directed and written by Steven Hunter, produced by Max Sachar, and distributed by Pixar Animation Studios and Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures. The plot features a young gay man who has not yet come out to his parents, who unexpectedly has his mind magically swapped with his dog's. The seventh short film in the SparkShorts series, it is both Disney's and Pixar's first short to feature a gay main character and storyline, including an on-screen same-sex kiss. The short was released on Disney+ on May 22, 2020. The short was shortlisted for the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film at the 93rd Academy Awards.",
"score": "1.4728968"
},
{
"id": "33078825",
"title": "Neo da Matrix",
"text": "\"Gunz Is Out\" ",
"score": "1.4686537"
},
{
"id": "31295118",
"title": "The Outs",
"text": " The Outs is a web series which premiered on Vimeo in 2012. Filmed and set in Brooklyn, New York, the show tells the story of Mitchell (played by Adam Goldman), his best friend Oona (Sasha Winters), and his ex-boyfriend Jack (Hunter Canning). It debuted in March 2012 with a run of six episodes, with a \"Chanukah Special\" in April 2013. A second season of six episodes began in March 2016, followed by a special December 2016 episode.",
"score": "1.4652338"
},
{
"id": "6260950",
"title": "Acting out",
"text": "Acting out ",
"score": "1.4412744"
},
{
"id": "26643151",
"title": "Greater Than One",
"text": "Out Is In (1999) ",
"score": "1.4385054"
},
{
"id": "8033864",
"title": "Inside Out (2015 film)",
"text": " The development of Inside Out began in late 2009, when director Pete Docter felt anxiety about his adolescent daughter Elie's progressing introversion. Docter approached Ronnie del Carmen to become a co-director, and he eventually accepted the offer, citing his \"accidental\" animation work. They remembered their past experiences and histories, and the emotions were repurposed for use in the film, which depicts biased and caricatured personalities. Docter had been impressed on making it after del Carmen determined most of the film's aspects were narrow. The directors and producer Jonas Rivera researched the mind with the help of psychologist Paul Ekman and the University of California, Berkeley professor of psychology Dacher Keltner, while Pixar animator Dan Holland ",
"score": "1.4368701"
},
{
"id": "6205147",
"title": "Word Is Out: Stories of Some of Our Lives",
"text": " much the film meant to them — and many of them related how viewing the film saved their lives. \"People who were alone and hopeless in Idaho, Utah and Kansas for the first time saw realistic and positive images of gay people on screen,\" said production assistant Janet Cole. In the New York Times, David Dunlop wrote in 1996: \"Understated though it was, Word Is Out had a remarkable impact, coming at a time when images of homosexuals as everyday people, as opposed to psychopaths or eccentrics, were rare.\" In 2011, a book examining the film's impact was published, titled Word Is Out: A Queer Film Classic by Greg Youmans.",
"score": "1.4366786"
},
{
"id": "15044067",
"title": "Out (1982 film)",
"text": " The film is structured in a 10 part journey/road film across America from the East to the West. The characters appear and disappear, morphing into other personalities and often using lines from previous scenes, thus the film, though linear, is a cyclic story. The movie was immortalized by O-Lan Jones's heartrending lines \"allow simmer\" and \"you can't have the schleung\".",
"score": "1.4256444"
}
] |
Who was the director of While There is Still Time?
|
[
"Charles Chauvel",
"Charles Edward Chauvel"
] |
director
|
While There is Still Time
| 6,163,772 | 80 |
[
{
"id": "27045666",
"title": "There Is a Time",
"text": "Produced by Marvin Holtzman ; Arranged and conducted by Ray Ellis ",
"score": "1.5180061"
},
{
"id": "5275738",
"title": "While There's War There's Hope",
"text": " While There's War There's Hope (Finché c'è guerra c'è speranza) is a 1974 satirical Commedia all'italiana film written, directed and starring Alberto Sordi. A top-level tragicomedy, the movie was so successful in Italy that its title has become a proverb.",
"score": "1.4559326"
},
{
"id": "13864640",
"title": "Lawrence Schiller",
"text": "Double Jeopardy (1992) Producer/Director ; I Love My Friends (1985 Kris Kardashian music video) Director ; The Man Who Skied Down Everest (1975 documentary) USA Director ; Lenny (1974) Material supplier ; Soon There Will Be No More Me (1972 documentary) Producer/Director ; Lady Sings The Blues (1972) Titles/Still montage director ; The American Dreamer (1971 documentary) Producer/Co-Director/Writer ; The Lexington Experience (1971 documentary) Producer/Director ; Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969) Still montage director ",
"score": "1.4556552"
},
{
"id": "6097966",
"title": "Ferhat Atik",
"text": " Culture Against Time\". \"The Lambousa Kingdom\" is a novel published by Destek Publishing House and it is available for sale with both e-book and paperback versions all over the world. \"While There Is Time\" - 2011: A novel about the reality of life and trade after World War II and also the story of two brothers, who created a commercial adventure for over 70 years, achieving success while going through hard periods of the history. \"While There is Time\" is a work of the author that you can find all of the details of the Flaubert School it represents, which have been started with the novel \"Autumn\" and showed itself ",
"score": "1.4547764"
},
{
"id": "580494",
"title": "Steven Cantor",
"text": " Figure banner executive produced, as well as a non-fiction book Rumspringa by Tom Shachtman (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2007). \"American Masters: Willie Nelson: Still is Still Moving\" (2004) – Director/Producer: An inside look at an American icon as he deals with two families, his relations and his nearly lifelong bandmates. What Remains (2005) Director/Producer: Studies a further project of Mann’s, a provocative photo series exploring the way in which nature assimilates the body once life has left it, directly confronting American attitudes towards death. The film screened first at The Sundance Film Festival in 2006 before premiering on HBO. loudQUIETloud (2006) Director/Producer: Follows the ups and downs of alternative music group The Pixies in ",
"score": "1.4427886"
},
{
"id": "603189",
"title": "Still There",
"text": " Still There is a point-and-click adventure video game developed by GhostShark Games and published by Iceberg Interactive.",
"score": "1.4192994"
},
{
"id": "6375332",
"title": "James Still (playwright)",
"text": " Tricklock Productions in Albuquerque, New Mexico. His stage play was later turned into the feature film The Velocity of Gary, for which Still also wrote the screenplay. Still is also a working director in the theatre and most recently directed productions of Red, The Mystery of Irma Vep, Other Desert Cities, God of Carnage, I Love to Eat, Doubt, Mary's Wedding, Becky's New Car, Rabbit Hole, The Immigrant, Dinner With Friends, and many others at theaters across the country as well as at the Tennessee Williams Festival in New Orleans. Still's work in television and film and has been nominated for ",
"score": "1.4187541"
},
{
"id": "603191",
"title": "Still There",
"text": " Still There was developed by four people: Davide Barbieri (GhostShark Games), Daniele Giardini (Demigiant), Gaetano Leonardi (La Boite) and Ben Burnes (Abstraction Music). The engine used to develop the game was Unity 3D. Still There was announced on 8 August 2019. and showcased at Gamescom on 22 August 2019. The game was published by Iceberg Interactive and released for Windows, macOS and Nintendo Switch on 20 November 2019.",
"score": "1.4047552"
},
{
"id": "29931927",
"title": "Melly Still",
"text": " Melly Still (born 22 August 1962) is a British stage director, designer and choreographer. She has worked as designer and co-director on many productions including the RSC's version of Tales from Ovid and Haroun and the Sea of Stories by Salman Rushdie at the National Theatre. Since the early 2000s, she principally directs and has worked regularly with the RSC, Bristol Old Vic, Rose Theatre, Birmingham Rep, Wales Millennium Centre, Glyndebourne Festival Opera and on several occasions for the National Theatre including with her multi-award nominated production of Coram Boy in London and on Broadway, The Revenger's Tragedy, From Morning to Midnight, and My Brilliant Friend – Parts 1 & 2 which transferred from Rose Theatre. She is an Associate Artist at Bristol Old Vic and Rose Theatre, and a fellow at York St John University. She often works closely with the designer Anna Fleischle and designer Ti Green and also the British director Tim Supple.",
"score": "1.3928919"
},
{
"id": "13056172",
"title": "And Then There Were None (play)",
"text": " Director: Albert de Courville",
"score": "1.3865066"
},
{
"id": "12473962",
"title": "List of films: T",
"text": " a Crooked Man... (1970) ; There Was a Father (1942) ; There Will Be Blood (2007) ; There Will Be No Leave Today (1959) ; There's Always Vanilla (1971) ; There's a Girl in My Soup (1970) ; There's No Business Like Show Business (1954) ; There's No Place Like This Place, Anyplace (2020) ; There's Someone Inside Your House (2021) ; There's Something About Mary (1998) ; There's Something About a Soldier: (1934 & 1943) ; There's Something About Susan (2013 TV) ; There's Something in the Water (2019) ; There's Something Wrong with Aunt Diane (2011 TV) ; Theresienstadt (1944) ; These Are the Damned (1963) ; These Three (1936) ; They (2002) ; They All Laughed (1981) ; They Call ",
"score": "1.3861755"
},
{
"id": "11895159",
"title": "There Is No 13",
"text": " There Is No 13 is a 1974 American surrealist drama film directed by William Sachs and starring Mark Damon. It was entered into the 24th Berlin International Film Festival.",
"score": "1.3841066"
},
{
"id": "4715499",
"title": "There's Nothin",
"text": " The video was released in February 2008.",
"score": "1.3802823"
},
{
"id": "29230799",
"title": "Whit Stillman",
"text": " John Whitney Stillman (born January 25, 1952) is an American writer-director and actor known for his 1990 film Metropolitan, which earned him a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay. He is also known for his other films, Barcelona (1994), The Last Days of Disco (1998), Damsels in Distress (2011), as well as his most recent film, Love & Friendship, released in 2016.",
"score": "1.3789432"
},
{
"id": "27690163",
"title": "Time Stood Still (film)",
"text": " Time Stood Still is a 1956 Warner Brothers Scope Gem travelogue, filmed the previous year in Dinkelsbühl, and presented in the wide-screen format of CinemaScope. Filmmaker André de la Varre handled a great many of that studio's documentary shorts of the forties and fifties. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film at the 29th Academy Awards.",
"score": "1.3779901"
},
{
"id": "12474280",
"title": "List of films: U–W",
"text": " Sleeps: (1920 & 1938) ; While No One Is Watching (2013) ; While Parents Sleep (1935) ; While Paris Sleeps: (1923 & 1932) ; While the Patient Slept (1935) ; While Satan Sleeps (1922) ; While She Was Out (2009) ; While the Sun Shines (1947) ; While There is Still Time (1943) ; While There's Life (1913) ; While There's War There's Hope (1974) ; While We're Young (2014) ; While You Were Sleeping (1995) ; While the Women Are Sleeping (2016) ; Whimsical Illusions (1909) ; The Whip and the Body (1963) ; Whip It (2009) ; Whiplash: (1948, ",
"score": "1.3767653"
},
{
"id": "33162476",
"title": "Still Time (album)",
"text": " The album lead single \"Cassiopeia Coming Through\" (a 4:30 edit of the album opening track which runs 5:15) was video premiered on 6 November 2020. A second single, the eponymous \"Still Time\" (actually the 4:17 album edit) was released on 2 February 2021 as a SoundCloud streaming.",
"score": "1.373934"
},
{
"id": "27045662",
"title": "There Is a Time",
"text": " There Is a Time is Liza Minnelli's third solo studio album, her last with Capitol Records, released on November 21, 1966. It contained her interpretations of eleven pop standards. It was recorded at Capitol Records' New York studio at 151 West 46th Street.",
"score": "1.3697317"
},
{
"id": "27045664",
"title": "There Is a Time",
"text": "1) \"There Is a Time (Le Temps)\" (Gene Lees, Charles Aznavour, Jeff Davis) ; 2) \"I (Who Have Nothing)\" (Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, Mogol, Carlo Donida) ; 3) \"M'Lord\" (Marguerite Monnot, Georges Moustaki) ; 4) \"Watch What Happens (\"Husband theme\" from The Umbrellas of Cherbourg)\" (Jacques Demy, Norman Gimbel, Michel Legrand) ; 5) \"One of Those Songs\" (Gerard Calvi, Will Holt) ; 6) \"Days of the Waltz\" (Jacques Brel, Will Holt) ",
"score": "1.3670285"
},
{
"id": "3325413",
"title": "Time (2020 film)",
"text": " Time is a 2020 American documentary film produced and directed by Garrett Bradley. It follows Sibil Fox Richardson, fighting for the release of her husband, Rob, who is serving a 60-year prison sentence for engaging in an armed bank robbery. Sibil Fox served three and a half years for her role in the armed robbery while Robert was granted clemency in 2018 after serving 21 years in prison for his crimes. The film had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on January 25, 2020, where Bradley won the US Documentary Directing Award, the first African-American woman to do so. It was released theatrically on October 9, 2020, and digitally on Amazon Prime Video on October 16, 2020 by Amazon Studios. At the 93rd Academy Awards, the film was nominated for Best Documentary Feature.",
"score": "1.3667927"
}
] |
Who was the director of Den store gavtyv?
|
[
"Johan Jacobsen"
] |
director
|
Den store gavtyv
| 3,893,092 | 72 |
[
{
"id": "28457329",
"title": "Den store gavtyv",
"text": " Den store gavtyv is a 1956 Danish comedy film directed by Johan Jacobsen and starring Dirch Passer.",
"score": "1.9628828"
},
{
"id": "13752686",
"title": "Nils R. Müller",
"text": " Nils R. Müller (17 January 1921 – 6 March 2007) was a Norwegian film director. He was born in Shanghai. His debut was Så møtes vi imorgen (1946), and he broke through with the comedy Vi gifter oss (1951). Later films include Skøytekongen (1953), Kasserer Jensen (1954), Kvinnens plass (1956), Det store varpet (1960), Tonny (1962), Elskere (1963), Broder Gabrielsen (1966), and Min Marion (1975). Det store varpet was entered into the 2nd Moscow International Film Festival. He directed 21 films in total, and was awarded the Amanda Committee's Honorary Award in 1996. Nils R. Müller was the brother of the Stalag Luft III POW escapee Jens Müller.",
"score": "1.5619876"
},
{
"id": "3949461",
"title": "The Blonde Around the Corner",
"text": "Tatyana Dogileva as Nadezhda, shopgirl ; Andrey Mironov as Nikolay Gavrilovich Poryvaev, scientist-astronomer ; Mark Prudkin as Gavrila Maksimovich, Nikolay's father ; Yevgeniya Khanayeva as Tatyana Vasilyevna, Nikolay's mother ; Yelena Solovey as Regina, Nikolay's former bride ; Anatoly Slivnikov as Gena 'Crocodile', Nadezhda's brother ; Baadur Tsuladze as Rashid Rashidovich, head of meat department store ; Anatoly Ravikovich as store clerk ; Aleksei Zharkov as store clerk (voice by Yevgeny Kindinov) ; Pavel Kadochnikov as Ogurtsov, scientist-astronomer, Nikolay's chief (voice by Igor Efimov) ",
"score": "1.5033904"
},
{
"id": "13925605",
"title": "Milners of Leyburn",
"text": " entitled 'The Department Store'. Produced by Richard Macer, it was about independent department stores and how they are surviving in the modern world in the face of stiff competition from chain stores. The first programme in the series, on Milners, was filmed by the BBC from September 2007 to April 2008. It was initially shown on BBC Four on 17 November 2008 and subsequently on BBC Two on 7 April 2009. David Milner, who was featured in the programme, has retired and even assisted with a charity expedition to the Gambia in January 2010. His daughter, Leonie, with her husband, Keith Garrard, are now Managing Directors of the store which continues to trade after 130 years of serving the Dales.",
"score": "1.5028787"
},
{
"id": "13640045",
"title": "Yevgen Synelnykov",
"text": " the first season when presenting was Alan Badoev and Zhanna Badoeva, Synelnykov became the permanent director of the program. Later, Yevgen became the director of \"Oryol i Reshka. Shopping\". As a presenting Yevgen Synelnykov tried recently: the fall of the 2014, when he had to Bordeaux to replace in the frame is late to the plane Kolya Serga. February 2015, the show started the 10th season of the program \"Oryol i Reshka\", where Yevgen attended. August 2015 aired the second part of this season, where Yevgen was a co-presenter. December 2015 Yevgen went on a trip around the world with the TV show, which lasted 9 months.",
"score": "1.4994977"
},
{
"id": "11058359",
"title": "Stu Maschwitz",
"text": " Stuart T. Maschwitz, commonly known as Stu Maschwitz, was the co-founder and chief technology officer of The Orphanage, a visual effects company that was based in California. He has worked as senior visual effects supervisor on several films. He previously worked at Industrial Light and Magic. Maschwitz was writer, director, cinematographer, and editor for the film The Last Birthday Card (2000). He directed the \"Song For The Lonely\" Cher video in 2001 as seen in The Very Best of Cher: The Video Hits Collection. His film Skate Warrior is an example of guerrilla filmmaking. He studied animation at the California Institute of the Arts. In 2007 he authored the book The DV Rebel's Guide: An All-Digital Approach to Making Killer Action Movies on the Cheap for Peachpit Press. In 2008 following the suspension of The Orphanage he became software director of Red Giant Software. In October 2009 it was announced in The Hollywood Reporter that he would direct Psy-Ops.",
"score": "1.4931502"
},
{
"id": "25069494",
"title": "NTV (Russia)",
"text": " present an interview with Malika Yandarbieva, widow of Chechen rebel leader Zelimkhan Yandarbiev. Zelimkhan Yandarbiev had been assassinated in exile in Qatar earlier that year. Parfyonov had shared this decision with the public on 31 May. On 5 July 2004, Senkevich was replaced by Vladimir Kulistikov (b. 1952) as director general of NTV. Tamara Gavrilova, formerly a fellow student with Vladimir Putin at Leningrad State University, was appointed deputy director general. Soon the political programmes Freedom Of Speech hosted by Savik Shuster (Shuster works in Ukraine since 2005 ), Personal Contribution hosted by Aleksandr Gerasimov and Red Arrow, were closed down.",
"score": "1.4903276"
},
{
"id": "27939019",
"title": "Aziz Beishenaliev",
"text": " (Параграф 78) Director: Mikhael Khleborodov, Russia, 2007 ; Paragraph 78:Second movie (Параграф 78 - филм второй), Director: Mikhael Khleborodov, Russia, 2007 ; Mustafa Shokai (Мустафа Чокай - Мустафа Шокай) Director: Satybaldy Narymbetor, Kazakhstan, 2008 ; Fields, clowns, apples... (Поле, клоуны, яблоко ... ), Director: Șota Gomisoniia Russia 2008 ; Semin (Семин), TV series, Director: Gennadi Baisak, Aleksandr Franskevich, Russia 2009 ; The House near the Lake, (Дом на Озерной), Director Serik Aprymov, Russia, 2009 ; Jumping Delfin Bottlenose, (Прыжок Афалины), Director: Eldor Magomatovich Urazbayev Russia, Kazakhstan, 2009 ; The story of the pilot (История летчика), Director Yelena Nikolayeva, Arkadi Kaplun, Kazakhstan 2009 ; The Liquidator (Лектор), Director: Vadim Shmelev Kazakhstan, 2010 ",
"score": "1.4839864"
},
{
"id": "8334421",
"title": "Vsevolod Gakkel",
"text": " Generator. In 2003, he took part in organizing Paul McCartney's visit to Saint Petersburg. He appeared in the interview segments of the concert film Paul McCartney in Red Square. From 2010 to 2012, Gakkel worked as the art director of («Китайский Лётчик Джао Да»), a club in Saint Petersburg. In March 2010, Gakkel began hosting the podcast Priznaki Vremeni («Признаки Времени»), a program about art and creativity. In 2012, he launched the Saint Petersburg branch of the international project BalconyTV. In 2017, Gakkel appeared in TAMTAM: Muzyka smutnogo vremeni («ТАМТАМ: Музыка смутного времени»), a documentary film about TaMtAm directed by Ivan Bortnikov. , he worked as a production manager at the club A2 in Saint Petersburg.",
"score": "1.4755023"
},
{
"id": "24967184",
"title": "Freedom of religion in Belarus",
"text": " was part of the Khristianskaya Initsiativa company, whose general director often wrote xenophobic articles. The store continued to distribute the anti-Semitic and xenophobic newspaper Russkiy Vestnik despite a 2003 order by the Prosecutor General and the Ministry of Information to remove copies from the store. The official BOC website honors Gavril Belostokskiy, a young child allegedly murdered by Jews near Grodno in 1690, as one of its saints and martyrs. A memorial prayer to be said on the anniversary of his death alleges the \"martyred and courageous\" Gavril \"exposed Jewish dishonesty.\" The book Demons on the Russian Land: Globalism as a ",
"score": "1.4712962"
},
{
"id": "14994116",
"title": "Nukus Museum of Art",
"text": " five exhibition catalogues, including the best selling Avangard, ostanovlennyi na begu (Avant-Garde Stopped on the Run). Babanazarova was controversially fired from the museum in 2015 but resolved differences with the Art & Culture Development Foundation and was on the interview panel to appoint Tigran Mkrtychev to the post of director in 2019. Gulbahar Izentaeva replaced Marinika Babanazarova as director and curator of the museum. Tigran Mkrtychev is a Russian archeologist and art historian who knew Igor Savitsky personally. He became the deputy director of the Museum of Oriental Art in Moscow, then director of the Roerich Museum. He has also been an Andrew W. Mellon Fellow at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. It is hoped Mkrtychev will take up his position at the Nukus Museum of Art after travel restrictions resulting from the COVID crisis are removed.",
"score": "1.4510009"
},
{
"id": "26141482",
"title": "Varuhuset",
"text": " Varuhuset (The Department Store) is a Swedish drama series that aired on SVT in 60 episodes between 19 March 1987 and 8 April 1989. Amongst the actors that appeared in the series were Görel Crona, Lena Endre, Sharon Dyall and Christina Schollin. The series was created by Peter Emanuel Falck.",
"score": "1.4487076"
},
{
"id": "7275524",
"title": "GaraSh",
"text": "Aleksandr Kullinkovich: Boris Grigorievich, senior mechanic ; Yuri Naumov: Auto Electrician ; Vitaly Kuren: Artem Borzov, «American» ; Vasily Nitsko: Ivan Ivanovich, a government official ; Elizaveta Shukova: a client of the garage, the daughter of an official ; Vadim Gaidukovsky: Seller of auto parts ; Evelina Sakuro: Stripper ; Oleg Hrushetsky: Mechanic ; Egor Zabelov: Grisha, musician ",
"score": "1.4459171"
},
{
"id": "28339090",
"title": "In the Aisles",
"text": " In the Aisles (In den Gängen) is a 2018 German drama film, directed by Thomas Stuber, that looks at the lives of people filling shelves in an out-of-town supermarket. It was selected to compete for the Golden Bear in the main competition section at the 68th Berlin International Film Festival. At Berlin it won the Prize of the Ecumenical Jury award.",
"score": "1.4398413"
},
{
"id": "5493079",
"title": "Einar Sverdrup",
"text": " Einar Sverdrup (18 December 1895 – 13 May 1942) was a Norwegian mining engineer and businessman. He was the CEO of the Store Norske Spitsbergen Kulkompani, operating at Svalbard. When the integrity of Svalbard was threatened during World War II, he volunteered for a military operation, but was killed in action during Operation Fritham.",
"score": "1.4347987"
},
{
"id": "27809584",
"title": "Det store varpet",
"text": " Det store varpet (The Big Hoard) is a 1961 Norwegian drama film directed by Nils R. Müller, starring Finn Bernhoft, Per Christiansen and Jack Fjeldstad. The film is about two brothers who are working as fishermen with their father. It was entered into the 2nd Moscow International Film Festival.",
"score": "1.4341608"
},
{
"id": "926608",
"title": "Igor Chepusov",
"text": " He worked as a director of photography at the Dovzhenko Film Studios in Kiev, the Odessa Film Studio (1980-1990), and the Gorky Film Studio. As a director of photography, he filmed eight full-length motion pictures, to include The Golden Chain (1986) based on the novel by Alexander Grin, The Golden Wedding (1987), and Sanitary Zone (1990). Other titles include his debut picture Krupni Razgovor (Large Conversation - 1980) and Ozjog (The Burn) with actress Lyudmila Gurchenko.",
"score": "1.4300948"
},
{
"id": "27423173",
"title": "Mikhail Lesin",
"text": " \"Game Appliances\". From 1990 to 1993, he was Director of Youth creative production of the TV company RTV. In the late 1980s, he directed the television show Funny Guys (Весёлые ребята). In the late 1980s, the New York firm National Video Industry attempted to establish its Moscow subsidiary Video Industry but could not obtain a proper registration although the firm had printed stationery and stored them in Moscow warehouses. In 1988, as head of the Alexander Zavenovich Akopov (Александр Завенович Акопов) founded 1988 cooperative \"Igrotekhnika\" (\"Игротехника\") which produced television shows, Lesin became aware of the items, obtained them, and with support from Yuri ",
"score": "1.427757"
},
{
"id": "10187647",
"title": "Gaute Storaas",
"text": " Mal (director Hilde Rognskog) 1993 ; Nils Klipper seg (director Bjørn Rørvik) 1996 ; Hammerhaien (director Eva Dahr, part of the movie Pust på meg) Norsk Film 1997 ; Millers bod (director Bjørn Rørvik) 2000 ; Himmelstormeren (director Sara Johnsen) 2000 ; Hormoner og andre demoner (director Sara Johnsen) 2001 ; Hotellrommet (director Torstein Bieler Østtvedt) Filmkameratene 2002 ; Elevkonsert (director Jan Otto Ertesvåg) 2008 Composer of Program Profiles for TV ; Musikkprofil TV2 Music for all the TV2's own vignettes. 1992-2004 (the film vignettes and Document 2 are still on the air) ; Brennpunkt (Vignette musikk) magazine program, NRK 1995 ; Sentrum (Vignette ",
"score": "1.4269636"
},
{
"id": "6856458",
"title": "Ainārs Šlesers",
"text": " Šlesers started his business in Norway, becoming President of the Latvian Information and Commerce Center in Norway in 1992. Through joint ventures together with Frank Varner and Stein Erik Hagen, he opened numerous shopping centres as well as real estate and commercial properties in Latvia. During 1994–1998 he was Director General at Norwegian retail chain \"Varner Baltija\" and Director General of \"Varner Hakon Invest\", both ventures of Varner-Gruppen. He also was Chairman of the Board and President of JSC Supermarket \"Centrs\" (1995–1998) and Director General of Rimi Baltija, Ltd (1996–1997). Šlesers has been credited for bringing among the first foreign investors to Latvia. Through his joint ventures, he has opened and developed Rimi Baltic, Narvesen, Cubus, Bik Bok, Dressmann store chains; major shopping malls in Riga – Galerija Centrs, Mols, Dole, Alfa, Minsk, Origo and Olympia; hotels Radisson Blu Ridzene and Radisson Blu Latvija, as well as large real estate developments – Saules Akmens and Saliena.",
"score": "1.425782"
}
] |
Who was the director of The Physician?
|
[
"Georg Jacoby"
] |
director
|
The Physician (1928 film)
| 2,934,585 | 73 |
[
{
"id": "7488524",
"title": "Marlboro Psychiatric Hospital",
"text": "The first medical director of the hospital was Dr. J. Berkely Gorden. He started at the inception of the hospital and retired in 1962. ; Dr. D. W. McCreight was acting director and appointed to fill the seat till a permanent medical director could be located following the retirement of Dr. Gorden. His tenure was from 1962 to 1963. ; He was replaced by Dr. Robert P, Nenno. Dr Nenno started as medical director in 1963 and was there till 1968. Prior to his appointment at Marlboro Hospital, he was a chairman of Medicine at Seton Hall College. ; Dr. Michael R. Simon was medical director from 1968 to 1973. ; Dr. Harold J. Knobb, took over as acting medical director at the resignation of Dr. Simon. He served from 1973 to 1974. ; Dr Herbert Saexinger became medical director in 1974 ",
"score": "1.5495696"
},
{
"id": "25477893",
"title": "Medical director",
"text": " A medical director is a physician who provides guidance and leadership on the use of medicine in a healthcare organization. These include the emergency medical services, hospital departments, blood banks, clinical teaching services and others. A medical director devises the protocols and guidelines for the clinical staff and evaluates them while they are in use.",
"score": "1.4531991"
},
{
"id": "29479537",
"title": "Bruce Keogh",
"text": " of NHS England is to \"turn taxpayers money into good clinical outcomes\". Following the Lansley reforms of the NHS, he was appointed National Medical Director in NHS England from 2013, where he is responsible for promoting a focus on quality, clinical leadership and innovation. To facilitate these aims he was responsible for overseeing the establishment of Academic Health Science Networks, Strategic Clinical Networks and Clinical Senates. He put clinicians at the heart of NHS England through the Chief Pharmaceutical, Dental, Scientific and Allied Health Professions officers, a primary care deputy, a medical director for specialised commissioning, regional medical directors and pharmacists, area medical directors, over 20 expert national clinical ",
"score": "1.4416003"
},
{
"id": "29479530",
"title": "Bruce Keogh",
"text": " As medical director of the NHS (2007–13) he was a director general in the Department of Health where he led the Medical Directorate, which had oversight for clinical policy and strategy in the NHS. This included the work of the National Clinical Directors and their associated strategies such as those for coronary heart disease, stroke, cancer, respiratory disease, renal disease, liver disease, trauma, and transplantation. He established the Healthcare Quality Improvement Partnership (HQIP)a joint venture between the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges and the Royal College of Nursing to develop and run the national clinical audits. Keogh's role also included oversight of ",
"score": "1.4330254"
},
{
"id": "7488525",
"title": "Marlboro Psychiatric Hospital",
"text": " 1976. ; Dr. Charles Webber, became acting medical director in 1976 when Dr. Saexinger resigned and was in office till 1977 when a replacement was found. ; Roy S. Ettlinger - chief executive officer from 1977 to 1983. He left the job to become director of a hospital in Boston. ; Dr. David Sorensen was chief executive officer from 1984 to 1987, when he was removed from office following allegations of patient abuse, staff neglect and sexual assaults while he was in charge. ; Dr. Michael Ross was the acting chief executive officer at the hospital starting in 1987. Dr. Ross was the chief executive officer at Graystone Park Hospital prior to this post. ; Dr. Norbert Binkowski was the Clinical Director from 1978 to 1990. Given the length of the hospital's operation; the hospital saw a number of medical directors:",
"score": "1.4104404"
},
{
"id": "9764644",
"title": "North General Hospital",
"text": "Michael Palese, MD, chief of urology at the North General Hospital from 2004 to 2008 ; Myron Ross Gershberg, MD (1934–2014), MD, head of psychiatry. Among other things, Gershberg designed and managed addiction and child abuse programs ; Gregory A. Miller, MD, served first as the residency program director, then as chair of psychiatry, and finally as the medical director and chief medical officer of NGH ; Stanley Reichman, MD (1926–2009), was named acting director of medicine at NGH in 1980 ",
"score": "1.4084802"
},
{
"id": "26952709",
"title": "Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality",
"text": " Gopal Khanna, MBA was appointed as Agency director on May 9, 2017, and resigned on January 11, 2021 in response to the January 6 Capitol riot. Prior to that, Dr. Andrew Bindman was the director of AHRQ from April 2016 until January 2017. Prior to joining AHRQ, Dr. Bindman served as faculty of UCSF School of Medicine. Sharon Arnold Ph.D. was acting director from February - April 2016, replacing Richard Kronick in February 2016. Richard Kronick, Ph.D. was director from 2013 to March 2016. Carolyn Clancy M.D. was the director from 2002-2014. Following Khanna's resignation, deputy director Dr. David Meyers, M.D. has served as acting director.",
"score": "1.3901961"
},
{
"id": "14136522",
"title": "Stephen Powis",
"text": " Professor Stephen H. Powis is national medical director for England, in the National Health Service (NHS), appointed at the start of 2018 to succeed Sir Bruce Keogh. He is also a professor of renal medicine at University College London.",
"score": "1.3816552"
},
{
"id": "543139",
"title": "The Physician",
"text": " The Physician is a novel by Noah Gordon. It is about the life of a Christian English boy in the 11th century who journeys across Europe in order to study medicine among the Persians. The book was initially published by Simon & Schuster on August 7, 1986. The book did not sell well in America, but in Europe it was many times a bestseller, particularly in Spain and Germany, selling millions of copies in translation. Its European success caused its subsequent sequelization. The film rights to the book were purchased.",
"score": "1.3802257"
},
{
"id": "12867018",
"title": "Faculty of Medical Leadership and Management",
"text": " The chief executive and medical director is Peter Lees. It is governed by a Board of Trustees and Council of members. While the organisation was becoming established, the faculty's governing body was the Founding Council, with representatives drawn from all of the member Colleges and Faculties. This arrangement was in place from May 2011 until March 2013, at which point the new Council took over. In January 2014, a Board of Trustees was established.",
"score": "1.3773918"
},
{
"id": "33078656",
"title": "Steven K. Galson",
"text": " Steven Kenneth Galson (born 1956) is an American public health physician. He is currently Senior Vice President for Global Regulatory Affairs & Strategy at Amgen, the California-based biopharmaceutical company. He is also Professor-at-Large at the Keck Graduate Institute for Applied Life Sciences in Claremont, California. He is a retired rear admiral in the United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps and public health administrator who served as the acting Surgeon General of the United States from October 1, 2007 – October 1, 2009. He served concurrently as acting Assistant Secretary for Health from January 22, 2009 to June 25, 2009, and as the Deputy Director and Director of the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) at the Food and Drug Administration from 2001 to 2007. As the Acting Surgeon General, he was the commander of the United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps and, while serving as the Assistant Secretary for Health, was the operational head of the Public Health Service.",
"score": "1.3760966"
},
{
"id": "15949581",
"title": "Orlando Henderson Petty",
"text": " from a complaint the nature of which was unrevealed. Last September Dr Petty was appointed Director of the Department of Public Health to fill the vacancy created by the Dr A A Cairns. He also was person physician to Mayor Mackey and accompanied the latter on his European trip. GRADUATE OF JEFFERSON Dr Petty was graduated from Franklin College, New Athens, Ohio in 1900, and from Jefferson Medical College in 1904 and served as an intern in St Timothy's Hospital. He was an associate surgeon with Dr John B Lowman, of Johnstown, for one year and then returned here and was connected with the teaching staff of Jefferson ",
"score": "1.3757874"
},
{
"id": "27614791",
"title": "Flash Gordon (physician)",
"text": " Flash Gordon was director of the medical section of Haight Ashbury Free Clinics in the late 1980s. He directed the emergency medicine residency at San Francisco General Hospital from 1978 until 1980. He currently is a primary care physician seeing patients in Greenbrae, California.",
"score": "1.3682632"
},
{
"id": "927597",
"title": "Donald A. B. Lindberg",
"text": " Donald Allen Bror Lindberg (September 21, 1933 – August 17, 2019) was the Director of the United States National Library of Medicine from 1984 until his retirement in 2015. He was known for his work in medical computing, especially the development of PubMed. He won the 1997 Morris F. Collen Award from the American College of Medical Informatics.",
"score": "1.3674322"
},
{
"id": "16051831",
"title": "Halfdan T. Mahler",
"text": " Halfdan Theodor Mahler (21 April 1923 – 14 December 2016) was a Danish physician. He served three terms as director-general of the World Health Organization (WHO) from 1973 to 1988, and is widely known for his effort to combat tuberculosis and his role in having shaped the landmark Alma Ata Declaration that defined the Health for All by the Year 2000 strategy.",
"score": "1.3672361"
},
{
"id": "9483676",
"title": "Robert Stone (scientist)",
"text": " Robert S. Stone (February 10, 1922 – October 20, 2016) was an American physician. He served as the Director of The National Institutes of Health from May 29, 1973 to January 31, 1975. Stone also served as the vice president for health services and dean of the school of medicine at the University of New Mexico, dean of the School of Medicine of the University of Oregon Health Sciences Center and vice president of the Health Sciences Center, and dean of the Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine.",
"score": "1.3669596"
},
{
"id": "10835670",
"title": "Tony Jewell (doctor)",
"text": "1996–1999 – Director of Public Health for North West Anglia ; 1999–2002 – Director of Public Health for Cambridgeshire. ; 2002–2006 – Clinical Director and Director of Public Health in Norfolk, Suffolk and Cambridgeshire Strategic Health Authority. ; 2002–2006 – President of the UK Association of Directors of Public Health Jewell trained in medicine at Christ's College, Cambridge and The London Hospital Medical College. After qualifying he undertook vocational training in general practice in East London going on to become a GP in inner London for 10 years. During this time he helped develop a teaching and research focussed group practice by merging single-handed practices and designed a new ",
"score": "1.3651693"
},
{
"id": "10917954",
"title": "Thomas C. Chalmers",
"text": " Shattuck Hospital in Boston. He also held academic positions at Tufts University School of Medicine and Harvard Medical School. From 1968 to 1973 he held a number of appointments in Washington, DC: assistant director at the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, followed by concurrent positions as associate director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and Director of the NIH Clinical Center. From 1973 to 1983 he was President and Dean of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine (MSSM). While at MSSM, he established the Department of Geriatrics (the first in the United States), and, following his commitment to the application of the scientific method and biostatistics to medical practice he established the Department of Biostatistics. After leaving Mount Sinai, he became Chairman of the Board of Directors of ",
"score": "1.3560867"
},
{
"id": "10560884",
"title": "Ronald Davis (physician)",
"text": " director of health promotion and disease prevention for the Henry Ford Health System in Detroit. In 1992, he was the founding editor-in-chief of the medical journal Tobacco Control, published by the British Medical Association. He became the first resident ever named to board of the American Medical Association, serving from 1984 to 1987. He was elected to the AMA's board again in 2001 and re-elected in 2005. He served as AMA's 162nd president from June 2007 to June 2008. He was the first physician specializing in Preventive Medicine to be named president of the AMA. After being diagnosed with the disease ",
"score": "1.355864"
},
{
"id": "33078663",
"title": "Steven K. Galson",
"text": " this profession. Prior to his appointment as Acting Surgeon General, he served as the Director of the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) at the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). In this role, RADM Galson oversaw CDER's broad national and international programs in pharmaceutical regulation during a period of unprecedented scrutiny by Congress and outside groups. To that end, he initiated a landmark Institute of Medicine assessment of the US drug safety system and launched a broad action plan to address work culture challenges at CDER. He provided leadership for 2300 physicians, statisticians, chemists, pharmacologists other scientists, and administrators whose work promotes and protects public ",
"score": "1.3489451"
}
] |
Who was the director of El Último perro?
|
[
"Lucas Demare"
] |
director
|
El Último perro
| 4,009,276 | 95 |
[
{
"id": "25828001",
"title": "El Último perro",
"text": " El Último perro is a 1956 Argentine film directed by Lucas Demare. It was entered into the 1956 Cannes Film Festival.",
"score": "1.7493447"
},
{
"id": "7273767",
"title": "Manuel R. Ojeda",
"text": "La rosa del desierto (1921) ; Almas tropicales (1924) ; El Cristo de oro (1926) ; Conspiración (1927) ; El coloso de mármol (1929) ; Águilas de América (1933) ; Judas (1936) ; The Tragic Circus (1939) ; La canción del huérfano (1940) ; La última aventura de Chaflán (1942) ; De Nueva York a Huipanguillo (1943) La insaciable (1947) ; Zorina (1949) ; La mujer que yo perdí (1949) ; Ultraje al amor (1956) ; Tizoc (1957) ; Pueblo en armas (1959) ; ¡Viva la soldadera! (1960) ; The Happy Musketeers (1961) ; La tórtola del Ajusco (1962) The Law of the North (1918) ; Rustling a Bride (1919) ; The Man Who Turned White (1919) ; Pinto (1920) ; A Double-Dyed Deceiver (1920) ; The Scuttlers (1920) As director: As screenwriter: As actor: ",
"score": "1.5733113"
},
{
"id": "12661767",
"title": "José Ulloa",
"text": " José Ulloa (born 1934) is a Spanish film director, screenwriter and actor. He is known for directing El refugio del miedo (1974), starring Patty Shepard, a science fiction film in which a matrimony exists in a fallout shelter. With Manuel Vázquez Montalbán he penned Tatuaje (1978). He also directed Juventud sin freno (1978), La amante ingenua (1977), Juventud sin freno (1978), and Andalucía chica (1989). He wrote the screenplay and was the assistant director of Tu fosa será la exacta... amigo (1972).",
"score": "1.5666292"
},
{
"id": "27575566",
"title": "Antonio Isasi-Isasmendi",
"text": " Antonio Isasi-Isasmendi Lasa (22 March 1927 – 28 September 2017) was a Spanish film director and producer. Isasi-Isasmendi began working in the production firm Emisora Films as an assistant manager, film editor, scriptwriter, lead producer, and finally director. In 1955 he founded his own production company, Producciones Isasi in Barcelona. He founded a second firm, Moon Films, in Madrid. In the mid-1960s he directed a series of action films designed for the wider European market including Scaramouche (The Adventures of Scaramouche) in 1963 and Estambul 65 (That Man in Istanbul) in 1965. He made some English-language films, most notably They Came to Rob Las Vegas. He abandoned directing for a decade after making El Perro (The Dog) in 1977 in favour of producing and distributing films before returning to the director's chair with El Aire de un Crimen (The Hint of a Crime) in 1987. He directed 13 feature films, wrote eleven and produced eight. In 1981, he was a member of the jury at the 31st Berlin International Film Festival.",
"score": "1.5545486"
},
{
"id": "7014409",
"title": "Alberto Vázquez-Figueroa",
"text": "El perro, directed by Antonio Isasi-Isasmendi (1977, based on the novel El perro) ; Oro rojo, directed by Alberto Vázquez-Figueroa (1978) ; Ashanti, directed by Richard Fleischer (1979, based on the novel Ébano) ; Manaos, directed by Alberto Vázquez-Figueroa (1979, based on the novel Manaos) ; Last Harem, directed by Sergio Garrone (1981, based on the novel El último harén) ; Tuareg – The Desert Warrior, directed by Enzo G. Castellari (1984, based on the novel Tuareg) ; Crystal Heart, directed by Gil Bettman (1986) ; Iguana, directed by Monte Hellman (1988, based on the novel Iguana) ; Rottweiler, directed by Brian Yuzna (2004, based on the novel El perro) ",
"score": "1.5527136"
},
{
"id": "32733107",
"title": "Universidad Iberoamericana",
"text": " President and CEO of Grupo Bimbo ; Alejandro Soberón Kuri – President and CEO of CIE ; Olegario Vázquez Aldir – CEO of Grupo Empresarial Ángeles and son of Olegario Vázquez Raña Miguel Rico Tavera – Film screenwriter, producer and director (Padre Pro, Espiritu de Triunfo and more than 2,500 TV commercials and documentaries) ; Guillermo Arriaga – Film screenwriter, Novelist, and Director (Amores Perros, 21 Grams and Babel) ; Daniel Birman Ripstein – Film Producer (El Crimen del Padre Amaro, El callejón de los milagros and other films) ; Alejandro González Iñárritu – Filmmaker (Amores Perros, 21 Grams, Babel, Birdman, and ",
"score": "1.5430597"
},
{
"id": "2083737",
"title": "Joan Capri",
"text": "1953 Vuelo 971. Director: Rafael J. Salvia. ; 1953 Concierto mágico. Director: Rafael J. Salvia. ; 1953 Juzgado permanente. Director: Joaquín Luis Romero Marchent. ; 1954 El padre Pitillo. Director: Juan de Orduña. ; 1954 Cañas y barro. Director: Juan de Orduña. ; 1955 Zalacaín el aventurero. Director: Juan de Orduña. ; 1955 El fugitivo de Amberes. Director: Miguel Iglesias. ; 1956 La legión del silencio. Director: José María Forqué. ; 1956 Sucedió en mi aldea ; 1957 Juanillo, papá y mamá. Director: Lorenzo Gicca Palli. ; 1957 Un tesoro en el cielo ; 1958 El azar se divierte ; 1958 Avenida Roma, 66 ; 1961 Juventud a la intemperie. Director: Ignacio F. Iquino ; 1962 Los castigadores. Director: Alfonso Balcázar. ; 1964 Los felices 60. Director: Jaime Camino ; 1968 En Baldiri de la costa. Director: Josep Maria Font ; 1969 L'advocat, l'alcalde i el notari. Director: Josep Maria Font. ",
"score": "1.5284467"
},
{
"id": "16527595",
"title": "Agustín Bernal",
"text": " la Sierra (also director) (2001) ; La Cheyenne Pesada (also director) (2000) ; Cholos Empericados (2000) ; El Último de los Cholos (2000) ; El Regreso de Camelia la Chicana (2000) ; Monjas Narcotraficantes (1999) ; Acosados por la Mafia (1999) ; La Fuga de Arizmendi 2 (1999) ; Peleas Salvajes (also director) (1998) ; Los 3 de la Sierra (1998) ; La Fuga de Arizmendi (1998) ; Violencia Policiaca (1997) ; La Cheyenne del Año (1997) ; Puños de Acero (1996) ; Escuadrón Aguila (also director) (1995) ; El Castrado (also director) (1995) ; El Asesino del Zodiaco (1993) ; Operación Narcóticos (1991) ; Cazador de Recompensas (1989) ; Grave Robbers (1989) ; Salvador (1986) La Leyenda del Manco 1987",
"score": "1.5262266"
},
{
"id": "32578279",
"title": "César A. Amigó",
"text": " César Alfredo \"Amigó\" Aguilar (born August 23, 1981) is a Mexican film producer, screenwriter, director, cinematographer, actor, and founder of Oscuro Deseo Producciones. He is known as the creator of the film series Serial Comic, and as a screenwriter of the shortfilms Sesiones and the critically acclaimed Un aliado en el tiempo (An ally in time). He is also a make-up artist known for his work on Sus satánicas majestades.",
"score": "1.5219849"
},
{
"id": "1651527",
"title": "Paco Jamandreu",
"text": " Jamandreu made his debut as a movie costume designer in 1942, working for leading lady Zully Moreno in a movie named Historia de crímenes (\"Crime Story\"). He followed that by designing for El muerto falta a la cita (\"The Dead One Missed the Appointment\"), released in 1944, and in 1947's El misterioso Tío Silas (\"The Mysterious Uncle Silas\"). Jamandreu, who admitted his homosexuality to his father at age 15, became known among friend and clients not only for his talent, but also for his candor. He began his friendship with Eva Duarte before she married populist leader Juan Perón in 1945. ",
"score": "1.5151138"
},
{
"id": "11913963",
"title": "Salvador Roselli",
"text": "Mala época (1998) El Perro (2004) aka Bombón: El Perro ; Sofacama (2006) aka Sofabed ; Liverpool (2008) aka Liverpool ; Las Acacias (2011) ; El muerto y ser felíz (2012) aka The Dead Man and Being Happy Director and writer Screenplay",
"score": "1.5089803"
},
{
"id": "13381156",
"title": "José Antonio Torres (director)",
"text": "Astral (2001) (Director) ; De entre los zapatos (2002) (Cinematographer) ; De Eros & Danza (2002) (Director) ; KCl Doce y cuarto (2003) (PA) ; La voz de las cigarras (2005) (PA) ; Barragán en corto (2010) (Editor) ; Octavio (2011) (Director, Executive producer) ; Bostik (2012) (Director) ",
"score": "1.4920931"
},
{
"id": "30622868",
"title": "Juan Ibáñez",
"text": "Un alma pura, (1965) writer, director ; Los caifanes (a.k.a. The Outsiders) (1967) writer, director ; Fear Chamber (1968) co-director ; House of Evil (1968) co-director ; The Adolescents (1968) writer ; The Incredible Invasion (a.k.a. Alien Terror) (1971) co-director ; La generala (1971) writer, director ; Isle of the Snake People (1971) writer, co-director (as Jhon Ibanez) ; Divinas palabras (1978) writer, director ; A fuego lento (1980) writer, director ; Olimpica, (1975(?) theater director ",
"score": "1.4919828"
},
{
"id": "14904195",
"title": "Oscar Kramer",
"text": "Eversmile, New Jersey (1989) ; Alambrado (1991) a.k.a. Barbed Wire ; La Peste (1992) a.k.a. The Plague ; De eso no se habla (1993) a.k.a. I Don't Want to Talk About It ; Corazón iluminado (1996) a.k.a. Foolish Heart ; The Tango Lesson (1997) ; El Impostor (1997) a.k.a. The Impostor ; Plata quemada (2000) a.k.a. Burnt Money ; Kamchatka (2002) ; El Último tren (2002) a.k.a. The Last Train ; Carandiru (2003) ; El Perro (2004) a.k.a. Bombón: El Perro ; Tiempo de valientes (2005) ; El Camino de San Diego (2006) a.k.a. The Road to San Diego ; Crónica de una fuga (2006) a.k.a. Chronicle of an Escape ; El Pasado (2007) a.k.a. The Past ; Los Marziano (2011) ",
"score": "1.4913523"
},
{
"id": "32433612",
"title": "José Vivó",
"text": " perro (1977) - Sebastián ; El último guateque (1978) - (uncredited) ; El sacerdote (1978) - Obispo ; Cabo de vara (1978) ; Traffic Jam (1979) - Mercedes passenger ; El día del presidente (1979) - Ministro de Sanidad ; Mama Turns 100 (1979) - Juan ; El buscón (1979) - Alonso ; The Crime of Cuenca (1980) - Don Rufo ; Los fieles sirvientes (1980) - Álvarez ; La plaça del Diamant (1982) - Mossèn Vivó ; Asesinato en el Comité Central (1982) - Fonseca ; La colmena (1982) - Prestamista ; Femenino singular (1982) - Padre de Luisa ; El Sur (1983) - Camarero ; Panic Beats (1983) - Dr. Rigaud ; La bestia y la espada mágica (1983) ",
"score": "1.4909481"
},
{
"id": "15650493",
"title": "Miguel A. Reina",
"text": " El Hombre que detuvo el tiempo is a documentary about Andrés Henestrosa (a Mexican writer and politician) for cultural television Canal 22. In addition to writing, Reina directed the film. It is somewhat unusual for televisión writers to be credited directors. Reina continued this close involvement in directing on several of his later films. The film, was a big hit in Mexico, and was enthusiastically received around the world. Grupo Pegaso's director Emilio Braun Burillo was so impressed with El Hombre que detuvo el tiempo that he hired Reina to direct Trazos mágicos de Oaxaca, a documentary film produced for the group in 2007.",
"score": "1.4844273"
},
{
"id": "27642393",
"title": "Carlos Cores",
"text": " Demare. ; El último perro (1955) (Narrator, unacredited) dir. Lucas Demare. ; El juramento de Lagardere (1955) dir. León Klimovsky. ; El amor nunca muere (1955) dir. Luis César Amadori. ; El hombre que debía una muerte (1955) dir. Mario Soffici. ; Guacho (1954) dir. Luis César Amadori. ; El grito sagrado (1954) dir. Luis César Amadori. ; Del otro lado del puente (1953) dir. Carlos Rinaldi. ; La muerte en las calles (1952) dir. Leo Fleider. ; La Parda Flora (1952) dir. León Klimovsky. ; Enseñame a besar (1952) (México) dir. Tito Davison. ; Paco the Elegant (1952) (México) dir. Adolfo Fernández Bustamante. ; María Cristina (1951) (México) dir. ",
"score": "1.4811611"
},
{
"id": "32139407",
"title": "Ernesto McCausland",
"text": " McCausland has directed three films, El último Carnaval, Champeta Paradise and Siniestro, which won the award as the best Colombian film of 2000. He has also directed 14 short films and several documentaries.",
"score": "1.4776835"
},
{
"id": "6560918",
"title": "Charo López",
"text": "Plan Jack cero tres (1967) ; El hueso (1967) ; La vida sigue igual (1969) ; Ditirambo (1969) ; El extraño caso del doctor Fausto (1969) ; Pastel de sangre (1971) ; Me enveneno de azules (1971) ; El bandido Malpelo (1971) ; El sol bajo la tierra (1972) ; The Guerrilla (1973) ; Don Yllán, el mágico de Toledo (1973) ; Leyenda del alcalde de Zalamea, La (1973) ; Las estrellas están verdes (1973) ; La regenta (1974) directed by Gonzalo Suárez ; Unmarried Mothers (1975) ; La Raulito en libertad (1975) ; Largo retorno (1975) ; Las cuatro novias de Augusto Pérez (1976) ; Manuela (1976) ; El límite del amor (1976) ; Ah ",
"score": "1.4738933"
},
{
"id": "29067477",
"title": "Gerardo Romano",
"text": "1979 - El Fausto criollo ; 1984 - Atrapadas, Nacho ; 1985 - Los Gatos ; 1986 - Miss Mary ; 1987 - El año del conejo, Las esclavas, Entregador ; 1988 - Abierto de 18 a 24, La clínica loca ; 1990 - Cuerpos perdidos, Negra medianoche, Yo, la peor de todas ; 1992 - Al Filo de la Ley (1992 film) ; 1992 - El Sur ; 1993 - Las boludas ; 1994 - El amante de las películas mudas ; 1996 - Policía corrupto ; 2001 - La fuga, Nada por perder ; 2004 - Dos ilusiones ",
"score": "1.4705565"
}
] |
Who was the director of The Easiest Way?
|
[
"Albert Capellani"
] |
director
|
The Easiest Way (1917 film)
| 801,964 | 78 |
[
{
"id": "13751140",
"title": "The Easiest Way",
"text": " The Easiest Way is a 1931 American pre-Code MGM drama film directed by Jack Conway. Adapted from the 1909 play of the same name written by Eugene Walter and directed by David Belasco, the film stars Constance Bennett, Adolphe Menjou, Robert Montgomery, Marjorie Rambeau, Anita Page, and Clark Gable",
"score": "1.7251475"
},
{
"id": "9111453",
"title": "The Easy Way (film)",
"text": " The Easy Way (Sans arme, ni haine, ni violence; ) is a 2008 French heist film directed by Jean-Paul Rouve, who also stars in the titular role as the real life thief Albert Spaggiari, who organized a break-in into a Société Générale bank in Nice, France in 1976. The original French title refers to the note Albert Spaggiari left in the bank after completing the robbery. Part of the movie was shot in Portugal at the Hotel Palácio Estoril, a 5-star hotel where some scenes of the James Bond film On Her Majesty's Secret Service were also shot.",
"score": "1.6212184"
},
{
"id": "13751146",
"title": "The Easiest Way",
"text": "Lynton Brent as Brockton Associate (uncredited) ; Jack Hanlon as Andy Murdock (uncredited) ; John Harron as Chris Swoboda, Laura's Suitor (uncredited) ; Dell Henderson as Bud Williams (uncredited) ; Hedda Hopper as Mrs. Clara Williams (uncredited) ; Charles Judels as Mr. Gensler (uncredited) ",
"score": "1.5997684"
},
{
"id": "27741745",
"title": "His Way (film)",
"text": " His Way is a 2011 television documentary film about Jerry Weintraub, an American film producer and former chairman and CEO of United Artists. The film was directed by Douglas McGrath. The film features interviews with Weintraub, Jane Morgan, George H. W. Bush, Barbara Bush, George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Julia Roberts, Elliott Gould, Ellen Barkin, James Caan, Matt Damon and Bruce Willis.",
"score": "1.5937495"
},
{
"id": "13751154",
"title": "The Easiest Way",
"text": " Warner Archive Collection released the first Region 1 DVD on March 10, 2010.",
"score": "1.5401204"
},
{
"id": "3083220",
"title": "Mabel Katz",
"text": " She is the author of The Easiest Way book series based on Ho'oponopono. The first book of the series was The Easiest Way; Solve Your Problems and Take The Road to Love, Happiness, Wealth and The Life of Your Dreams. In the book, she told her own story about finding her identity and freedom using this technique. The book has been translated into 15 languages. Other books in the series include The Easiest Way to Live, The Easiest Way Pocket Edition and The Easiest Way to Understanding Ho’oponopono that later became part of The Easiest Way and then was released as The Easiest Way Special Edition. In 2011, she wrote the fifth book of this series titled, Easiest Way to Grow.",
"score": "1.5384659"
},
{
"id": "9111454",
"title": "The Easy Way (film)",
"text": " In 1977 in Nice, Albert Spaggiari is arrested by the police and brought to a judge's office for interrogation, but he manages to escape by jumping out of the window and riding off on a motorcycle with an accomplice. He travels to South America where he meets new faces including a mysterious journalist who wants to interview him about the heist and his whereabouts.",
"score": "1.532163"
},
{
"id": "5380602",
"title": "Easy Way (song)",
"text": " An accompanying music video for \"Easy Way\" was directed by Parris Stewart. It was released on January 29, 2020.",
"score": "1.5189211"
},
{
"id": "717214",
"title": "The Best Way to Walk",
"text": " The Best Way to Walk (French: La meilleure façon de marcher) is a 1976 French film directed by Claude Miller, his directorial debut. It stars Patrick Dewaere, Patrick Bouchitey, Christine Pascal, Claude Piéplu and Michel Blanc.",
"score": "1.512305"
},
{
"id": "3777924",
"title": "The Way/Solitaire",
"text": " \"The Way\" music video was directed by Diane Martel. Instead of the traditional Hollywood types Aiken hired everyday people to play the couples shown in this video.",
"score": "1.5092962"
},
{
"id": "31385466",
"title": "The Way (2010 film)",
"text": " The Way is a 2010 American-Spanish drama film directed, produced and written by Emilio Estevez and starring Martin Sheen, Deborah Kara Unger, James Nesbitt, and Yorick van Wageningen. In it, Martin Sheen's character walks the Camino de Santiago, a traditional pilgrimage route in France and Spain.",
"score": "1.4959767"
},
{
"id": "25829893",
"title": "My Way Film Company",
"text": " List of the films produced and directors:",
"score": "1.4905838"
},
{
"id": "11281558",
"title": "Way Out of Here",
"text": "Lasse Hoile – director. ",
"score": "1.4853494"
},
{
"id": "9111455",
"title": "The Easy Way (film)",
"text": "Jean-Paul Rouve as Albert Spaggiari ; Alice Taglioni as Julia ; Gilles Lellouche as Vincent Goumard ; Florence Loiret Caille as Nathalie Goumard ; Patrick Bosso as The gangster ; Anne Marivin as The cop ; Pom Klementieff as NHI ; Gérard Depardieu as The godfather ",
"score": "1.4807171"
},
{
"id": "13751153",
"title": "The Easiest Way",
"text": " According to MGM records the film earned $654,000 in the United States and Canada and $249,000 elsewhere resulting in a profit of $193,000.",
"score": "1.4724281"
},
{
"id": "31252341",
"title": "Way Out (film)",
"text": " Way Out is a 1967 film directed by Irvin Yeaworth and starring Franklin Rodríguez and Sharyn Jimenez.",
"score": "1.4662764"
},
{
"id": "12225396",
"title": "Find a Way (Amy Grant song)",
"text": " The song featured a music video that was played heavily on MTV and VH1, the first music video directed by television director and producer Thomas Schlamme. It was produced by Fred Seibert, Alan Goodman and Albie Hecht and commissioned by A&M Records creative director Richard Frankel. The video is included on the Find a Way VHS and LaserDisc and has not been released on DVD.",
"score": "1.46326"
},
{
"id": "4510324",
"title": "Ashley Way",
"text": " Ashley Way (born 16 December 1971) is a film and television director born in Cardiff, Wales, in 1971.",
"score": "1.4632058"
},
{
"id": "31905142",
"title": "The Easy Way Out",
"text": " The Easy Way Out (French title: L'Art de la fugue) is a 2014 French comedy-drama film directed by Brice Cauvin, based on the novel The Easy Way Out by Stephen McCauley, which was published in French as L'Art de la fugue. The plot concerns three brothers: Antoine is gay, in his mid-30s, and lives with his boyfriend Adar; Louis, the youngest, is having an affair while engaged to his high school sweetheart; and Gérard, the oldest, has separated from his wife and works for his parents in their slowly failing clothing store. Antoine introduces his friend Ariel into this family dynamic just as each of the brothers tries to come to terms with his failed or strained relationship.",
"score": "1.4610441"
},
{
"id": "615319",
"title": "Chapman Way",
"text": " Chapman Way is an American documentary film director and producer. He is best known for producing the Netflix documentary series Untold, Wild Wild Country and The Battered Bastards of Baseball.",
"score": "1.4597485"
}
] |
Who was the director of The Betrayed?
|
[
"Frans Weisz"
] |
director
|
The Betrayed (1993 film)
| 2,043,035 | 89 |
[
{
"id": "507881",
"title": "The Betrayed (2008 film)",
"text": " The Betrayed is a 2008 American thriller film, directed by Amanda Gusack from her own screenplay and starring Melissa George, Oded Fehr and Christian Campbell.",
"score": "1.5433397"
},
{
"id": "29584755",
"title": "The Betrayed (1993 film)",
"text": " The Betrayed (Op Afbetaling) is a 1993 Dutch drama film made for television directed by Frans Weisz. It was entered into the 43rd Berlin International Film Festival.",
"score": "1.4941897"
},
{
"id": "32869023",
"title": "Betrayed (1954 film)",
"text": " Betrayed is a 1954 Eastmancolor US/British international co-production war drama film directed by Gottfried Reinhardt from a screenplay by Ronald Millar and George Froeschel, and starring Clark Gable, Lana Turner, Victor Mature, and Louis Calhern. The musical score was by Walter Goehr and Bronislau Kaper, and the cinematography by Freddie Young. The picture, Gable's last for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, was filmed on location in the Netherlands and England, and was based on the story of turncoat Dutch resistance leader Christiaan Lindemans, also known as \"King Kong\". The supporting cast features O. E. Hasse, Wilfrid Hyde-White, Ian Carmichael, Niall MacGinnis, and Theodore Bikel. Betrayed was the fourth and final movie in which Gable played opposite Turner, and their third pairing set during World War II. (They played comrades, not simply lovers, in all three war films.) Diana Coupland provided Turner's singing voice in the song \"Johnny Come Home\". Betrayed was spoofed in the film Top Secret! (1984).",
"score": "1.4763944"
},
{
"id": "32869024",
"title": "Betrayed (1954 film)",
"text": " Betrayed is an espionage thriller set in the Nazi-occupied Netherlands during World War II, and revolves mostly around the Dutch resistance movement. Colonel Pieter Deventer (Clark Gable) is an intelligence agent of the exiled Dutch government, working to liberate his homeland from Nazi occupiers. He divides his time between secret missions in the Netherlands and trips to England to consult his superiors and a British general. Deventer is ordered to keep an eye on singer Fran Seelers (Lana Turner), who's suspected of collaborating with the Germans. Both Deventer and Seelers join the shadowy Dutch underground, making contact with a flamboyant resistance leader known as \"The Scarf\" (Victor Mature). As \"Carla Van Oven\", Seelers is assigned is to use her feminine charms to gain the ",
"score": "1.461271"
},
{
"id": "11772092",
"title": "Act of Betrayal",
"text": " Act of Betrayal is a 1988 mini-series that was a co-production between Ireland, Australia and the US. Directed by Lawrence Gordon Clark, it stars Lisa Harrow, Elliott Gould, Patrick Bergin, Deborra-Lee Furness, and Max Cullen. It had a budget of $6 million and was later cut down to a 117-minute TV movie.",
"score": "1.4584411"
},
{
"id": "29419499",
"title": "Betrayal (1983 film)",
"text": " Screenwriter Harold Pinter based the drama on his seven-year (1962-69) clandestine affair with television presenter Joan Bakewell, who was married to producer-director Michael Bakewell. At the time, Pinter was married to actress Vivien Merchant.",
"score": "1.4471935"
},
{
"id": "4905388",
"title": "America Betrayed",
"text": " America Betrayed is a 2008 American documentary political film directed by Leslie Carde and featuring President Barack Obama, Senators John McCain and Mary Landrieu.",
"score": "1.4462352"
},
{
"id": "32869027",
"title": "Betrayed (1954 film)",
"text": " The film was at one stage known as The True and the Brave, with Kirk Douglas mentioned as a possible star. Richard Widmark was at one stage a forerunner for the part played by Victor Mature. Ava Gardner was to play the female lead, but was eventually replaced by Lana Turner. Filming took place in late 1953 and early 1954, on location in Holland and England. It was the final film Gable made for MGM under his contract, which ended in March 1954.",
"score": "1.4457897"
},
{
"id": "8182575",
"title": "Betrayed Women",
"text": " Betrayed Women is a 1955 American crime film directed by Edward L. Cahn and written by Steve Fisher. The film stars Carole Mathews, Beverly Michaels, Peggy Knudsen, Tom Drake, Sara Haden, John Dierkes and Esther Dale. The film was released on July 17, 1955, by Allied Artists Pictures.",
"score": "1.4358747"
},
{
"id": "27076035",
"title": "Betrayal (Revenge)",
"text": " The episode was written by supervising producer Salvatore Stabile, while CSI: Miami veteran Matt Earl Beesley directed.",
"score": "1.4301305"
},
{
"id": "32869026",
"title": "Betrayed (1954 film)",
"text": "Clark Gable as Colonel Pieter Deventer ; Lana Turner as Carla Van Oven ; Victor Mature as \"The Scarf\" ; Louis Calhern as General Ten Eyck ; O. E. Hasse as Colonel Helmuth Dietrich ; Wilfrid Hyde-White as General Charles Larraby (credited as Wilfrid Hyde White) ; Ian Carmichael as Captain Jackie Lawson ; Niall MacGinnis as \"Blackie\" ; Nora Swinburne as \"The Scarf's\" Mother ; Roland Culver as General Warsleigh ; Leslie Weston as \"Pop\" ; Christopher Rhodes as Chris ; Lily Kann as Jan's Grandmother (credited as Lilly Kann) ; Brian Smith as Jan ; Anton Diffring as Captain Von Stanger ",
"score": "1.4233233"
},
{
"id": "10124958",
"title": "Seduced and Betrayed",
"text": " Seduced and Betrayed is a 1995 American television erotic thriller film directed by Félix Enríquez Alcalá. It stars Susan Lucci, David Charvet, Mary Ellen Trainor & Gabrielle Carteris. The film debuted on April 24, 1995 on NBC.",
"score": "1.4232543"
},
{
"id": "507882",
"title": "The Betrayed (2008 film)",
"text": " The story follows a young woman as she's put through a psychological journey under the thumb of a mysterious figure who suspects her husband of stealing millions from a crime syndicate.",
"score": "1.422729"
},
{
"id": "389772",
"title": "Point of Betrayal",
"text": " At the request of the director, Rod Taylor assisted writing some scenes and helped choreograph a fight between him and Rick Johnson.",
"score": "1.422713"
},
{
"id": "3888516",
"title": "Betrayed (1917 film)",
"text": " Betrayed is a 1917 silent drama film directed and written by Raoul Walsh, starring Hobart Bosworth, Miriam Cooper, and Monte Blue, and released by Fox Film Corporation. It is not known if the film currently survives, which suggests that it is a lost film.",
"score": "1.4064693"
},
{
"id": "10549566",
"title": "The Bourne Betrayal",
"text": " In the prologue, CIA Deputy Director Martin Lindros is in Ras Dejen, the tallest peak in the Semien mountain range, tracking major shipments of yellowcake uranium and atomic bomb weaponry. Lindros is then kidnapped by the terrorist leader, Fadi, one of the leaders of Dujja. Fadi's real name is Abu Ghazi Hadir al-Jamuh ibn Hamid ibn Ashef al-Wahhib. His brother, Karim al-Jamil and he are the leaders of Dujja.",
"score": "1.4038634"
},
{
"id": "29419496",
"title": "Betrayal (1983 film)",
"text": " Betrayal is a 1983 British drama film adaptation of Harold Pinter's 1978 play of the same name. With a semi-autobiographical screenplay by Pinter, the film was produced by Sam Spiegel and directed by David Jones. It was critically well received. Distributed by 20th Century Fox International Classics (USA), it was first screened in movie theaters in New York in February 1983.",
"score": "1.4031425"
},
{
"id": "27741151",
"title": "Betrayal (2009 film)",
"text": " Betrayal (Svik) is a 2009 Norwegian historic action film directed by Håkon Gundersen, starring Fridtjov Såheim, Lene Nystrøm, Götz Otto and Kåre Conradi. The film is based on a true story.",
"score": "1.3992693"
},
{
"id": "5885446",
"title": "Carl Jaffe",
"text": " Betrayed (1954) - Major Plaaten (uncredited) ; Child's Play (1954) - Carl Blotz ; The Awakening (1954) - The Tailor ; Cross Channel (1955) - Otto Dagoff ; Timeslip (1955) - Dr. Marks (uncredited) ; Port of Escape (1956) - Ship's Officer ; Satellite in the Sky (1956) - Bechstein ; House of Secrets (1956) - Walter Dorffman ; The Hostage (1956) - Dr. Pablo Gonzuelo ; The Traitor (1957) - Stefan Toller ; Escapement (1958) - Dr. Hoff ; I Accuse! (1958) - Col. von Schwarzkoppen ; Battle of the V-1 (1958) - General ; Rockets Galore! (1958) - Dr. Hamburger ; Operation Amsterdam (1959) - Diamond Merchant ; ",
"score": "1.3982147"
},
{
"id": "29584756",
"title": "The Betrayed (1993 film)",
"text": "Gijs Scholten van Aschat\t... \tHenk Grond ; Renée Soutendijk\t... \tOlga Grond ; Coen Flink\t... \tGrewestein ; Annet Malherbe\t... \tMien ; Willem Nijholt\t... \tKrynie Woudema ; Adriaan Adriaanse\t... \tFlorist ; Belou Den Tex\t... \tFried Folters ; Frans de Wit\t... \tGorilla ; Marieke Heebink\t... \tAlie ; Damien Hope\t... \tCharly ; Ferry Kaljee\t... \tKnockouter ; Mark Rietman\t... \tSurgeon ; Gerardjan Rijnders\t... \tPsychiatrist ; Johan Simons\t... \tDetective 1 ; Wouter Steenbergen\t... \tSjel van Relte ; Evert van der Meulen\t... \tDetective 2 ; Marisa Van Eyle\t... \tEmmy ; Jack Wouterse\t... \tPees ",
"score": "1.3925598"
}
] |
Who was the director of Sacrifice?
|
[
"Frank Reicher"
] |
director
|
Sacrifice (1917 film)
| 1,425,159 | 82 |
[
{
"id": "25834652",
"title": "Sacrifice (2011 film)",
"text": " Sacrifice is a 2011 American/Canadian action thriller film written and directed by Canadian film director Damian Lee, and starring Cuba Gooding Jr. and Christian Slater. It was filmed in Ottawa, Ontario. The movie was produced by Zed Filmworks based in Ottawa, as well as Styx Productions. This film was released direct-to-video.",
"score": "1.6504209"
},
{
"id": "14319490",
"title": "Sacrifice (2016 film)",
"text": " Sacrifice is a 2016 American thriller film that was written and directed by Peter A. Dowling, and starred Radha Mitchell and Rupert Graves. It was filmed in Ireland, in Shetland in the United Kingdom, and New York City. The film is based on the book Sacrifice by Sharon Bolton.",
"score": "1.6078099"
},
{
"id": "5063598",
"title": "The Sacrifice (1986 film)",
"text": " Tarkovsky had directed in Nostalghia. Cinematographer Sven Nykvist, a friend of Josephson and frequent collaborator with Bergman, was asked to join the production. Despite a contemporaneous offer to shoot Sydney Pollack's Out of Africa, Nykvist later said it was \"not a difficult choice\", and like Josephson, he became a co-producer when he invested his fees back into the film. Production designer Anna Asp, who worked on Bergman's Autumn Sonata and After the Rehearsal and had won an Academy Award for Fanny and Alexander, also joined the project, as well as Daniel Bergman, one of Ingmar's children, who worked as a camera assistant. Many critics commented on The Sacrifice in the context of Bergman's work.",
"score": "1.5773914"
},
{
"id": "25359608",
"title": "The Sacrifice (2005 film)",
"text": " The Sacrifice is an independent film by James Fessenden that was first shown at Gaylaxicon in 2005. It is a horror/psychological thriller that centers on a high school boy who becomes embroiled in an occult mystery in a quiet New Hampshire town.",
"score": "1.5767827"
},
{
"id": "1600765",
"title": "Sacrifice (2014 film)",
"text": " Sacrifice is a 2014 American thriller drama film written and directed by Michael Cohn and starring Dermot Mulroney, Melora Walters and Austin Abrams.",
"score": "1.5628463"
},
{
"id": "32359135",
"title": "Sacrifice (2000 film)",
"text": " Sacrifice is a 2000 thriller television film, starring Michael Madsen. It was written by Randall Frakes, based on a novel by Mitchell Smith and directed by Mark L. Lester.",
"score": "1.5564482"
},
{
"id": "25834655",
"title": "Sacrifice (2011 film)",
"text": " The casting of this film was done by Stephanie Gorin and Ilona Smyth, the costume designer was Ton Pascal, and the production designer was Lisa Soper. This film was also executively produced by Jeff Sackman, Darren Bell, and Adrian Love. In this film Kim Coates and Stephanie Gorin were also responsible for co-executive producing. The production began March 28, 2010 in Ottawa, Ontario on the indie crime film into late April. The reported budget of the film is $6.8 million. Although the film is set in Los Angeles and Toronto, the production team dressed the streets of Ottawa to look more like these cities while making the most of their surroundings. The movie being filmed outside of Toronto had to do with the preferable provincial tax breaks given to filmmakers who film in other areas of the province. With this push, it was reported that in the year of 2011 Canadian owned and controlled distributors were responsible for 77% of films released in Canada (both Canadian and non-Canadian films). According to Robert Menzies of the production team \"the movie has a lot of religious overtones...it's a no-holds barred action film with lots of interesting themes.\"",
"score": "1.5397575"
},
{
"id": "1600766",
"title": "Sacrifice (2014 film)",
"text": "Luke Kleintank ; Austin Abrams ; Lewis Tan ; Brandon Mychal Smith ; James McDaniel ; Melora Walters ; Dermot Mulroney ",
"score": "1.5287187"
},
{
"id": "16141380",
"title": "1986 in film",
"text": "The Sacrifice (Offret), directed by Andrei Tarkovsky - (Sweden/U.K./France) ; Salvador, directed by Oliver Stone, starring James Woods, James Belushi, Michael Murphy ; Sarraounia - (Burkina Faso/France/Mauritania) ; Saving Grace, starring Tom Conti ; Say Yes, directed by Larry Yust, starring Lissa Layng, Art Hindle, Logan Ramsey, Jonathan Winters ; Scene of the Crime (Le lieu du crime), directed by André Téchiné, starring Catherine Deneuve - (France) ; The Sea and Poison (Umi to dokuyaku) - (Japan) ; Seize the Day, starring Robin Williams ; Shadows in Paradise, directed by ||Aki Kaurismäki ; Shanghai Surprise, directed by Jim Goddard, starring Madonna and Sean Penn - (U.K.) ; She's Gotta Have It, directed by Spike Lee ; Short Circuit, directed by John Badham, starring Ally Sheedy and Steve Guttenberg ; Sid and Nancy, directed by Alex Cox, starring Gary Oldman and Chloe Webb - (U.K.) ; Solarbabies, starring Jason Patric, ",
"score": "1.5282857"
},
{
"id": "12046763",
"title": "Sacrifice (1917 film)",
"text": " Sacrifice is a 1917 American drama silent film directed by Frank Reicher and written by Charles Kenyon, Beatrice DeMille and Leighton Osmun. The film stars Margaret Illington, Jack Holt, Noah Beery, Sr. and Winter Hall. The film was released on May 3, 1917, by Paramount Pictures.",
"score": "1.5225106"
},
{
"id": "5063601",
"title": "The Sacrifice (1986 film)",
"text": " Tarkovsky and Nykvist performed significant amounts of color reduction on select scenes. According to Nykvist, almost 60% of the color was removed from them.",
"score": "1.5058191"
},
{
"id": "5063589",
"title": "The Sacrifice (1986 film)",
"text": " The Sacrifice (Offret) is a 1986 drama film written and directed by Andrei Tarkovsky. Starring Erland Josephson, it centers on a middle-aged intellectual who attempts to bargain with God to stop an impending nuclear holocaust. The Sacrifice was Tarkovsky's third film as a Soviet expatriate, after Nostalghia and the documentary Voyage in Time, and was also his last, as he died shortly after its completion. Like 1972's Solaris, it won the Grand Prix at the Cannes Film Festival.",
"score": "1.5035309"
},
{
"id": "27872447",
"title": "Sacrifice (2020 film)",
"text": " The film premiered at the 2020 London FrightFest Film Festival. It was later released as video on demand on 9 February 2021 and on Blu-ray on 23 February 2021.",
"score": "1.5017781"
},
{
"id": "32837101",
"title": "Eugene Boyko",
"text": " as director of photography of Donald Brittain's 1964 film Fields of Sacrifice. Fields was one of the films he was most proud of as it provided a sense of dignity of the fallen, without glorifying war. During the early 1970s he worked with a number of aboriginal film makers as part of the NFB efforts to help people tell their own stories, including the 1970 documentary film This Was the Time. He worked on films across Canada and around the world, including India, Afghanistan, Ghana and throughout Europe. His films won many awards including Genies. He attended the Oscars when his film \"Helicopter Canada\" was nominated. The ",
"score": "1.5005724"
},
{
"id": "32359137",
"title": "Sacrifice (2000 film)",
"text": "Michael Madsen as Tyler Pierce ; Bokeem Woodbine as Agent Gottfried ; Jamie Luner as Naomi Cohen ; Diane Farr as Karen Yeager ; Deborah Shelton as Margaret Sackett ",
"score": "1.4997725"
},
{
"id": "1600768",
"title": "Sacrifice (2014 film)",
"text": " The film premiered at the Woodstock Film Festival in October 2014.",
"score": "1.4992639"
},
{
"id": "13838140",
"title": "Fields of Sacrifice",
"text": " Fields of Sacrifice is considered Brittain's first major film as director. It received an Order of Merit at the Canadian Film Awards.",
"score": "1.4940426"
},
{
"id": "11341272",
"title": "Sacrifice (2010 film)",
"text": " Sacrifice is a 2010 Chinese historical drama film directed by Chen Kaige, starring Ge You, Wang Xueqi, Huang Xiaoming, Fan Bingbing and Vincent Zhao. It is based on the Yuan dynasty play The Orphan of Zhao by Ji Junxiang. It was distributed in the United States by Samuel Goldwyn Films.",
"score": "1.486832"
},
{
"id": "677138",
"title": "The Sacrifice (1979 film)",
"text": " The Sacrifice (Adak) is a 1979 Turkish drama film, directed by Atıf Yılmaz and written by Başar Sabuncu based on a true story by Faruk Erem, featuring a peasant who sacrifices his youngest child to God. The \"pathological tale,\" according to Rekin Teksoy, \"focuses on superstitious belief through the interjection of eyewitness accounts.\" It was scheduled to compete in the cancelled 17th Antalya Golden Orange Film Festival, for which it received Belated Golden Oranges for Best Screenplay and Best Actor.",
"score": "1.486119"
},
{
"id": "5063597",
"title": "The Sacrifice (1986 film)",
"text": " earlier films because, while his recent films had been \"impressionistic in structure\", in this case he not only \"aimed...to develop [its] episodes in the light of my own experience and of the rules of dramatic structure\", but also to \"[build] the picture into a poetic whole in which all the episodes were harmoniously linked\", and because of this, it \"took on the form of a poetic parable\". At the 1984 Cannes Film Festival, Tarkovsky was invited to film in Sweden, as he was a longtime friend of Anna-Lena Wibom of the Swedish Film Institute. He decided to film The Sacrifice with Erland Josephson, who was best known for his work with Ingmar Bergman, and ",
"score": "1.4855856"
}
] |
Who was the director of Women Who Work?
|
[
"Manuel Romero",
"Manuel Romeo"
] |
director
|
Women Who Work (1938 film)
| 4,156,313 | 94 |
[
{
"id": "8075495",
"title": "Melissa Kearney",
"text": " Kearney was the fifth director - and first female director - of The Hamilton Project, following a prestigious group of former directors, all of whom played significant roles in public service, including founding director Peter Orszag, who went on to become director of the Congressional Budget Office and then director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, Jason Furman, who subsequently served as chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers, and Douglas Elmendorf, who subsequently directed the Congressional Budget Office and is now Dean of the Kennedy School at Harvard University. Under Kearney's leadership, the Hamilton Project worked on a variety of policy topics, including domestic poverty, labor market challenges and the future of work, and mass incarceration. Together ",
"score": "1.5785214"
},
{
"id": "29414759",
"title": "Women Make Movies",
"text": " In 1983, Debra Zimmerman became the executive director of WMM.",
"score": "1.5153055"
},
{
"id": "6387477",
"title": "Karen Nussbaum",
"text": " female office workers in 1975. In 1977, 9to5 merged with Cleveland Women Working to create a national coalition of like-minded associations, the Cleveland-based Working Women Organizing Project, headed by Nussbaum. In 1981, 9to5 worked as a partner with the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) known as District 925. She served as director from 1981 to 1993. During the Clinton Administration, Nussbaum served as the director of the Women's Bureau, in the United States Department of Labor from 1993 to 1996. As director of the Women’s Bureau, she surveyed working women about their jobs and initiated programs in response to their concerns. Nussbaum is the founding director of Working America, a community affiliate of the AFL-CIO. She co-founded the organization in 2003 and formerly served as executive director. She was inducted into the Ohio Women’s Hall of Fame in 1984.",
"score": "1.4997189"
},
{
"id": "26934826",
"title": "Women in film",
"text": " Amy Pascal is the Sony studio chief and is the only female head of a major studio. In 1988, Pascal joined Columbia Pictures; she left in 1994 and went to work for Turner Pictures as the president of the company. In her first years at Columbia she worked on films such as Groundhog Day, Little Women, and A League of Their Own. When Pascal first started her career she was the Vice President of production at 20th Century Fox in 1986–1987. Before Pascal joined Fox, she was a secretary for Tony Garnett who was an independent producer with Warner Bros.",
"score": "1.4901819"
},
{
"id": "14172791",
"title": "Original Six (directors)",
"text": " Although DGA v. WB/CPI was dismissed, the threat of legal action and the accompanying publicity still may have been a \"galvanizing event\". Filing of the suit was followed by an increase in the number of women employed as directors. When they founded the WSC, the Original Six presented statistics showing that only 0.5 percent of all directing assignments for films and TV shows were going to women. Following the court case, the percentage of women directing television episodes increased, reaching a peak of women directing 16% of television shows in 1995. The number of women film directors has also risen, albeit erratically. Since 2007 Stacy L. Smith, Founder and Director of the Annenberg Inclusion Initiative at the ",
"score": "1.4895645"
},
{
"id": "12082607",
"title": "Mary Beth Maxwell",
"text": " Mary Beth Maxwell was the founding executive director of American Rights at Work and the author of the organization's inaugural report. Maxwell was chosen in April 2009 by President Barack Obama to be senior advisor in the United States Department of Labor. While at Labor she has served as both the acting administrator of the U.S. Department of Labor's Wage and Hour Division, and principal deputy assistant secretary for policy.",
"score": "1.4820272"
},
{
"id": "3429825",
"title": "Activist Women's Voices",
"text": " and community service center) - clip ; Lillian Roberts: Associate Director, New York State Commissioner of Labor DC 37 (public employee organizing) ; Rosalba Rolon: Founder and Artistic Director, Pregones Theater (arts and culture, theater) ; Marie Runyon: Director, Harlem Restoration Project (housing, jobs, and assistance to women returning from prison) ; Iesha Sekou: Education Coordinator, BEGIN Project of Literacy Partners (education for employment) ; Peggy Shepard: Director, West Harlem Environmental Action Committee (environmental justice and racism) – clip ; Norma Stanton: President and Founder, HACER (job training, concerns of Hispanic women) ; Evelyn Sumpter: Director, Family Services Network (health and human services) ; Sandy Warshaw: Founder, Older Women’s League (concerns of aging women) - clip ; Debra Zimmerman: Executive Director, Women Make Movies (arts and culture, media, film) – clip ",
"score": "1.4732728"
},
{
"id": "11181774",
"title": "Alice K. Leopold",
"text": " resigned to be director of the United States Women's Bureau, first as a recess appointment by President Dwight D. Eisenhower and then confirmed by the Senate in January 1954. Eisenhower probably replaced the previous director, Frieda S. Miller, in an effort to mute Women's Bureau opposition to the Equal Rights Amendment. Leopold focused the Bureau more on the problems of professional women and on women re-entering the workforce after raising children, as she had herself. In 1954 she was given the additional title of Assistant to the Secretary of Labor for Women's Affairs. In 1956 she persuaded Eisenhower to add a call for equal pay ",
"score": "1.4727356"
},
{
"id": "4169100",
"title": "Federal Women's Film Program",
"text": "Attention: Women at Work!, 1983. Directed by Anne Henderson, produced by Margaret Pettigrew. 28 min. ; Head Start: Meeting the Computer Challenge, 1984. Directed and produced by Diane Beaudry. 27 min. ; Doctor, Lawyer, Indian Chief, 1986. Directed by Carole Geddes, produced by Barbara Janes. 29 min. ; The Impossible Takes a Little Longer, 1986. Directed by Anne Henderson, produced by Barbara Janes. 46 min. ; No Time to Stop ,1990. Directed by Helene Klodawsky, produced by Chantal Bowen. 29 min. ",
"score": "1.4710484"
},
{
"id": "13402821",
"title": "Women in the National Park Service",
"text": " Kennedy. ; Karen Wade, Intermountain Region Isabelle Story (1888–1970) was secretary to Director Steve Mather. Fran P. Mainella was the first female director of the National Park Service (the 16th director), named by Secretary of the Interior Gale Norton. ; Mary A. Bomar was appointed the 17th director in 2006. She served through the end of President George W. Bush's second term. Among the women who held leadership and upper-level management positions within the National Park Service, or had a strong influence on National Park Service policy or gender relations, are: Early superintendents (not comprehensive) Deputy regional directors Regional directors Secretary to the Director (not comprehensive) Director",
"score": "1.4638318"
},
{
"id": "119291",
"title": "Marie C. Wilson",
"text": " Between 1978 and 1981, Wilson was the Director of Women's Programs at Drake University; creating one of the largest programs of its kind in America. During this time, Wilson designed and administered educational programs and services for women who are entering or re-entering the workforce. During a five-year term as the Director of Women's Programs, Wilson created special career and professional development and re-training programs that met the needs of 3,000 women annually. Wilson also initiated career programs for women in the community, including men and women managing together, alternative work arrangements, and career development for minority women. After having built the largest university-based women's program in the county, Wilson worked at the Iowa Bankers Association, serving as its Vice President, and Director of Education and Human Resources.",
"score": "1.4635186"
},
{
"id": "28264169",
"title": "Ellen Sullivan Woodward",
"text": " Woodward was the director of the Women's Division of the Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA) from 1933 to 1935, a division started through pressure from Eleanor Roosevelt to support unemployed women. Part of her work included creating jobs for women through the Civil Works Administration (created in 1933). Starting these job programs was hampered both because public opinion didn't often see women as the head of the household and had beliefs about which job types would be appropriate for women to hold. Some direct relief was given out, but Woodward preferred training women for jobs instead of giving out direct monetary relief. Woodward then became the ",
"score": "1.4541602"
},
{
"id": "14645995",
"title": "Susan Bay",
"text": " In 1979, Bay and other members of the Original Six, a group of women directors, created the Women's Steering Committee of the Director's Guild of America, to protest against gender discrimination in Hollywood and support female employment on film and television sets at the directing level. Bay was a production consultant on \"The Good Mother\" (1988), which was directed by Leonard Nimoy. In 1998, Susan Bay was the executive producer for the documentary film Liza Lou, on the glass bead artist Liza Lou. She has also worked on documentaries about Twyla Tharp and the magazine Mother Jones. In 2007, Bay directed the American ",
"score": "1.4528813"
},
{
"id": "7278796",
"title": "Cary Brown",
"text": " Brown served two terms as a VCW commissioner before joining being appointed Director in October 2012. Prior to this role, she was the Director of Girls’ Programs for Vermont Works for Women, a non-profit organization supporting education and job training in non-traditional fields for women and girls, directed the Women in Technology Project at Vermont Technical College, and served as the Internship Coordinator at Norwich University. During her tenure, Brown has shifted the focus of the commission from being an informational resource to more active promotion of women's economic issues, including the promotion of an equal pay compact adopted by more than 100 employers, programs promoting flexible work opportunities for women, and workplace pregnancy accommodations. The commission serves as an information and research resource for the Vermont legislature on issues such as paid family leave. Under Brown the VCW, in collaboration with Vermont Works for Women and the Vermont Women's Fund, co-launched the Change the Story project which promotes and supports women's economic security. Brown also serves as an elected Justice of the peace in Montpelier, Vermont.",
"score": "1.4503045"
},
{
"id": "1217331",
"title": "Maria Giese",
"text": " Giese is an activist for women directors. She is a member of the Director's Guild of America where she is an active member of the Women's Steering Committee and where she served as the inaugural “Women Directors Category Representative” and the inaugural co-chair of the DGA-WSC Proposals Subcommittee, the first ever conduit between the Women's Steering Committee and the DGA National Board. On this committee, she and co-chair, Melanie Wagor, were able to move proposals for women DGA members into the 2014 DGA-studio Collective Bargaining Negotiations. She is also a member of the Alliance of Women Directors. She co-founded, and frequently writes for, the advocacy website Women Directors in Hollywood. Her articles ",
"score": "1.4500496"
},
{
"id": "5625601",
"title": "Kate JasonSmith",
"text": " working as a professional actor and I've got a year at Design School. So I wrote and said I was interested in being trained as a director. And they wrote a letter back to me saying that they didn't train women as directors because they got married and had children.' To make it worse, Sam Neill applied at the same time for the same position and was accepted.\" JasonSmith was also among a number of women who \"were told they couldn't be camerawomen because the gear was too heavy—even though in Kate's case she had been carrying heavy mail bags up and down the ",
"score": "1.4450116"
},
{
"id": "14172798",
"title": "Original Six (directors)",
"text": " In 2014, the 35th anniversary of the founding of the Women's Steering Committee was marked by the Director's Guild of America with speeches by Nell Cox, Joelle Dobrow, Lynne Littman, Vicki Hochberg, and Susan Nimoy and a ceremony recognizing the role of the Original Six. It almost didn't happen. When the idea was first proposed, it was claimed that the Original Six had not been an official committee, and that an official women's committee was not formed until 1991. That claim was refuted by other members of the Director's Guild, but it illustrates how women's history can be erased. The 2018 documentary This Changes Everything was ",
"score": "1.4420171"
},
{
"id": "14172784",
"title": "Original Six (directors)",
"text": " The Original Six are a group of women directors who created the Women's Steering Committee (WSC) of the Director's Guild of America (DGA). Dolores Ferraro, Joelle Dobrow, Lynne Littman, Nell Cox, Susan Bay Nimoy and Victoria Hochberg formed the Women's Steering Committee of the Director's Guild of America in 1979. They carried out landmark research showing that women held only 0.5% of directing jobs in film and television, which they reported to the Guild, the studios and the press. As a result of the Original Six's research, the Director's Guild of America filed a class-action lawsuit against Warner Brothers and Columbia Pictures in 1983 on the grounds of gender discrimination. On March 5, 1985, the case was dismissed when the judge removed the DGA as the class representative. The risk of legal action, along with pressure from the public and the DGA, was followed by a slow (but not smooth) increase in the number of women directors working in the entertainment industry. Members of the Original Six continue to make films and television shows, to protest against gender discrimination in Hollywood and to support female employment on film and television at the directing level.",
"score": "1.4408808"
},
{
"id": "27600677",
"title": "Lilyan Chauvin",
"text": " Chauvin was on the Women's Steering Committee of the Directors Guild of America and had over 35 credits as a DGA Director since 1979. She was a member of Screen Actors Guild, the Writers Guild of America, the American Federation of Television and Radio Artist and Equity. Committed to furthering women's causes, especially in the industry, Chauvin was a 39-year member of Women in Film. She served on the organization's Board five times, twice as the Board's vice president.",
"score": "1.4391629"
},
{
"id": "29984238",
"title": "Joan Shigekawa",
"text": " as producers and directors….” She gained skills and experience in a series of early jobs, including working on NBC's Today Show, at New York's public television network WNET, in theatrical production, and as a field director of admissions at Barnard College. In 1963, she helped two friends produce a low-budget documentary series about the circus, earning her first associate producer's credit. In 1973, while working as an independent producer, she received a call from Ronnie Eldridge, who spearheaded special projects for the newly created feminist monthly publication Ms., about an hour-long special the magazine was planning for national television. Shigekawa signed on as producer of what became Woman Alive!,a feminist documentary series made by and for women that showcased the changing role of women in society. The series, which ",
"score": "1.4389633"
}
] |
Who was the director of Trail?
|
[
"Luis Moglia Barth"
] |
director
|
Huella
| 4,337,456 | 97 |
[
{
"id": "30923499",
"title": "Gudy Gaskill",
"text": " Gudrun \"Gudy\" Gaskill (1927 – July 14, 2016) was an American mountaineer who is regarded as the driving force behind the creation of the Colorado Trail, a 567 mi hiking, biking, and horseback riding path between Denver and Durango, Colorado. Beginning in the 1970s, she helped plan out the route, solicited donations, and recruited teams of volunteers to work in one-week shifts developing the Trail each summer. She was named executive director of the newly formed Colorado Trail Foundation in 1987. She was inducted into the Colorado Women's Hall of Fame in 2002.",
"score": "1.3999238"
},
{
"id": "27059010",
"title": "Ouachita National Recreation Trail",
"text": " The Title of \"Father of the Ouachita Trail\" is given to Mr. Arthur P. Cowley, a former Public Information Officer of the Ouachita National Forest. Mr. Cowley graduated from the University of Missouri with a BS degree in Forestry and began working for the US Forest Service in 1954. Also he received a Master's Degree in Education from the University of Arkansas in 1978. In the early 1970s Mr. Cowley was instrumental in developing the Forest Service's plan for the Ouachita Trail. As a Recreation Staff Specialist with the US Forest Service in Hot Springs, he assisted in the first phases of construction of the Ouachita Trail. He handled trail ",
"score": "1.3851019"
},
{
"id": "14177261",
"title": "Arthur Perkins (judge)",
"text": " Arthur Perkins (1864–1932) was an American lawyer and judge from Hartford, Connecticut who, during his retirement, spearheaded the effort to make Benton MacKaye's vision of the Appalachian Trail—a proposed 2,000-mile contiguous footpath to run through fourteen states—a reality. Perkins appointed himself acting chairman of the Appalachian Trail Conference (ATC, now known as the Appalachian Trail Conservancy) in the 1920s, and along with Myron Avery, rallied interest and involvement. The New York segment of the trail had been built in 1923, but work stalled until 1929, when Perkins found a willing worker in his home state. He tapped Ned Anderson to map Connecticut's 50-mile leg. It was quickly accomplished between 1929 and ",
"score": "1.3835056"
},
{
"id": "30077027",
"title": "Joseph L. Erb",
"text": "\"Trail of Tears\" (2009) producer ; Hero (2007) ; Day and Night (2005) director ; Messenger (2004) director ; How the Rabbit Lost His Tail (2003) producer ; How the Redbird Got His Color (2003) producer ; Mapohiceto/Not Listening (2003) producer ; The Beginning They Told (2003) producer, director ",
"score": "1.3777959"
},
{
"id": "26129146",
"title": "YellowBrickRoad",
"text": " of the town's history. In the present day, the trail's coordinates have been declassified, and a film crew has arrived to travel the trail to learn about the disappearances and deaths, as well as what lies at the end of the trail. Crew leader Teddy found the trail's coordinates via Friar's cinema. The crew (including Teddy's wife Melissa, their collaborator Walter, sibling cartographers Daryl and Erin Luger, forestry expert Cy, and intern Jill) soon befriends Liv, a townsperson who works at the cinema and agrees to accompany them on their trip. The journey goes well initially, but soon the crew is terrorized by loud and jarring music that ",
"score": "1.3739233"
},
{
"id": "4529235",
"title": "Great Western Trail",
"text": " Lyle Gomm, a former Intermountain Region Trail Coordinator, is the \"father\" of the GWT. His idea to create a long distance trail open to a variety of users began in Utah during the 1970s, and in 1985 he organized an inter-agency team including the Forest Service, Utah Department of Natural Resources, Bureau of Land Management, and the National Park Service to create the Bonneville Rim Trail to connect the Grand Canyon and Yellowstone National Parks. In 1986, Dale Sheewalter, a volunteer promoter of the Arizona Trail (Grand Canyon National Park to Nogales, Mexico), suggested the Arizona and Bonneville Rim Trails be renamed the \"Great Western Trail.\" In 1988, Simon Cordial, 26, from England, and James Mayberger, 29, from New ",
"score": "1.3733351"
},
{
"id": "8792110",
"title": "Fran P. Mainella",
"text": " Frances P. Mainella (born 1947) was the 16th Director of the National Park Service of the United States and first woman to hold that position. She was appointed by President George W. Bush and confirmed by the U.S. Senate in 2001. She announced her retirement in July 2006 and resigned effective October 15, 2006. Mary A. Bomar, was sworn-in as the 17th Director on October 17, 2006. Mainella was in charge of the NPS when it allowed Redskin's Owner Dan Snyder to illegally remove 130 trees from his property, and while the park ranger who blew the whistle on this activity, Ranger Robert M. Danno, was persecuted at length. She subsequently gave contradictory accounts of this to federal investigators. ",
"score": "1.3670707"
},
{
"id": "3997734",
"title": "Ron Strickland",
"text": " Ron Strickland (born March 19, 1943) is an American conservationist, long distance trail developer, and author. He is the founder of the 1,200-mile (1,900 km) Pacific Northwest National Scenic Trail (PNT) and of the proposed transcontinental Sea-to-Sea Route. He is the author of nine books including his 2011 memoir Pathfinder: Blazing a New Wilderness Trail in Modern America.",
"score": "1.3567674"
},
{
"id": "13450382",
"title": "Pacific Northwest Trail",
"text": " The route was first conceived by Ron Strickland in 1970. Between 1970 and 1976, extensive fieldwork was performed by Strickland and others, including early supporters along the PNT corridor who lent extensive knowledge of local trail systems to the effort. In that time, the Pacific Northwest Trail was cobbled together using preexisting trails and Forest Service roads. In 1977, Strickland founded the Pacific Northwest Trail Association (PNTA), an organization responsible for education and information, maintenance, and advocacy for the PNT. That same year, the first five successful thru-hikes of the Pacific Northwest Trail were completed. Two of those hikers would later appear on the cover of Backpacker Magazine, ",
"score": "1.3499122"
},
{
"id": "3522087",
"title": "The Santa Fe Trail (1930 film)",
"text": " In addition to Brower and Knopf as directors, Sam Mintz and Edward E. Paramore Jr. were writers. David Abel was director of photography, Verna Willis was film editor, and Earl Hayman was recording engineer.",
"score": "1.349443"
},
{
"id": "6811350",
"title": "Bay Area Ridge Trail",
"text": " William Penn Mott Jr., the twelfth director of the National Park Service, is credited with sparking the idea for the Ridge Trail in a speech he gave in March 1987 at a state parks and recreation conference. While working for the East Bay Regional Park District in the 1960s, Mott's office was on a ridgeline in the East Bay, and the views from the office inspired his vision of a hill-and-ridge trail encircling the Bay and linking its communities. The plan would later attract bipartisan support, with George Miller joining Mott. In May 1987, the Greenbelt Alliance held a meeting to strategize how to approach the San Francisco Water Department and convince them to open their ",
"score": "1.3484287"
},
{
"id": "3997735",
"title": "Ron Strickland",
"text": " Born Ronald Gibson Strickland in Providence, Rhode Island, Strickland attended Tower Hill School in Wilmington, Delaware, and graduated with three degrees from Georgetown University. Strickland wrote his dissertation about the politics of the National Wilderness Preservation System. He developed an early passion for backpacking that led, in 1970, to his desire to develop an east-west hiking trail from the Continental Divide to the Pacific Ocean. He incorporated the Pacific Northwest Trail Association in 1977, and was its executive director for twenty years. In 1984 and 2001 he published the first and second editions of the Pacific Northwest Trail Guide. In March 2009, Congress added the Pacific Northwest National Scenic Trail into the National Trails System where it is now a permanent part of America’s national heritage. Strickland’s ",
"score": "1.345722"
},
{
"id": "4418190",
"title": "Gary Everhardt",
"text": " Gary E. Everhardt (July 8, 1934 - December 27, 2020), was the ninth Director of the US National Park Service (NPS). He began his NPS career as an engineer in 1957 and rose to the superintendency of Grand Teton National Park in 1972. Favorable notice there propelled him to the directorship in January 1975. As director he oversaw a great increase in park development and interpretive programming for the Bicentennial of the American Revolution. The return of an NPS careerist to the job was much applauded by park employees and supporters, but Everhardt's leadership fell short of expectations, and the new Carter administration returned him to the field as Blue Ridge Parkway's superintendent in May 1977.",
"score": "1.344901"
},
{
"id": "6423019",
"title": "The Trail of '98",
"text": " The Trail of '98 is a 1928 American silent drama film featuring Harry Carey and Dolores del Río about the Klondike Gold Rush. The film was originally released by MGM in a short-lived widescreen process called “Fantom Screen“. The film is based on the 1910 novel by that title, written by Robert W. Service.",
"score": "1.344438"
},
{
"id": "26668270",
"title": "William Witney",
"text": " North of the Great Divide (1950) - director ; Trail of Robin Hood (1950) - director ; Spoilers of the Plains (1951) - director ; The Wild Blue Yonder (1951) - actor ; Heart of the Rockies (1951) - director ; In Old Amarillo (1951) - director ; South of Caliente (1951) - director ; Pals of the Golden West (1951) - director ; Colorado Sundown (1952) - director ; The Last Musketeer (1952) - director ; Border Saddlemates (1952) - director ; Old Oklahoma Plains (1952) - director ; The WAC from Walla Walla (1952) - director ; South Pacific ",
"score": "1.3433598"
},
{
"id": "5852185",
"title": "Scott R. Dunlap",
"text": " director ; The Frontier Trail (1926) director ; Desert Valley (1926) ; Winning the Futurity (1926) ; The Better Man (1926) director ; Whispering Sage (1927) director ; Midnight Life (1928) ; Object: Alimony (1928) director ; Smoke Bellew (1929) director ; The Marines Are Here (1938) ; The Mystery of Mr. Wong (1939) ; Streets of New York (1939) ; The Fatal Hour (1940) ; Doomed to Die (1940) ; The Old Swimmin' Hole (1940) ; Arizona Bound (1941) ; Road to Happiness (1942) ; Dawn on the Great Divide (1942) ; Flame of the West (1945) ; Border Bandits (1946) ; Drifting Along (1946) ; Trigger Fingers (1946) producer ; The Hunted (1948) ; Stampede (1949) producer ; Return from the Sea (1954) ",
"score": "1.3419019"
},
{
"id": "26668271",
"title": "William Witney",
"text": " (1952) - director ; Old Overland Trail (1953) - director ; Iron Mountain Trail (1953) - director ; Down Laredo Way (1953) - director ; Shadows of Tombstone (1953) - director ; The Outcast (1954) - director ; Stories of the Century (1954-55) (TV series) - director ; Santa Fe Passage (1955) - director ; The Last Command (1955) - 2nd unit director ; City of Shadows (1955) - director ; Headline Hunters (1955) - director ; The Fighting Chance (1955) - director ; The Last Command (1955) (battle scenes) ; Stranger at My Door (1956) - director ; A Strange ",
"score": "1.3411412"
},
{
"id": "28859385",
"title": "Earl Shaffer",
"text": " Earl V. Shaffer (November 8, 1918 – May 5, 2002), was an American outdoorsman and author known from 1948 as The Crazy One (and eventually as The Original Crazy One) for attempting what became the first publicized claimed hiking trip in a single season over the entire length of the Appalachian Trail (AT). He also worked as a carpenter, a soldier specializing in radar and radio installation, and an antique dealer.",
"score": "1.3393195"
},
{
"id": "26566031",
"title": "Mark Trail",
"text": " Mark Trail is a newspaper comic strip created by the American cartoonist Ed Dodd. Introduced April 15, 1946, the strip centers on environmental and ecological themes. As of 2020, King Features syndicated the strip to \"nearly 150 newspapers and digital outlets worldwide.\" When Mark Trail began, it was syndicated through the New York Post in 1946 to 45 newspapers. Dodd, working as a national parks guide, had long been interested in environmental issues. The character is loosely based on the life and career of Charles N. Elliott (November 29, 1906 – May 1, 2000). At the time a U.S. forest ranger, Elliott would go on to edit Outdoor Life magazine from 1956 to 1974. Dodd once said that the physical model for Trail was John Wayt, his former neighbor in north Atlanta.",
"score": "1.3370769"
},
{
"id": "12852693",
"title": "Nestell Kipp Anderson",
"text": " While hiking in 1929, Ned Anderson met Judge Arthur Perkins, a member of CFPA's Connecticut's Blue Blazed Trails Committee, who introduced Anderson to Myron Avery. These two men were drumming up interest in Benton MacKaye's vision of a 2,000-mile contiguous footpath from Maine to Georgia—The Appalachian Trail. Most people with whom they met were interested but few were committing to it; Anderson took an immediate interest. Taking on dual roles as Chairman of CFPA's Blue Blazed Trails' Housatonic Section (officially – 1932), and as a member of the Appalachian Trail Conference's (ATC—now Appalachian Trail Conservancy) Board of Managers (he was ",
"score": "1.336623"
}
] |
Who was the director of Det var paa Rundetaarn?
|
[
"Poul Bang"
] |
director
|
Det var paa Rundetaarn
| 3,904,602 | 50 |
[
{
"id": "28457202",
"title": "Det var paa Rundetaarn",
"text": " Det var paa Rundetaarn is a 1955 Danish comedy film directed by Poul Bang and starring Dirch Passer.",
"score": "2.0095272"
},
{
"id": "10187647",
"title": "Gaute Storaas",
"text": " Mal (director Hilde Rognskog) 1993 ; Nils Klipper seg (director Bjørn Rørvik) 1996 ; Hammerhaien (director Eva Dahr, part of the movie Pust på meg) Norsk Film 1997 ; Millers bod (director Bjørn Rørvik) 2000 ; Himmelstormeren (director Sara Johnsen) 2000 ; Hormoner og andre demoner (director Sara Johnsen) 2001 ; Hotellrommet (director Torstein Bieler Østtvedt) Filmkameratene 2002 ; Elevkonsert (director Jan Otto Ertesvåg) 2008 Composer of Program Profiles for TV ; Musikkprofil TV2 Music for all the TV2's own vignettes. 1992-2004 (the film vignettes and Document 2 are still on the air) ; Brennpunkt (Vignette musikk) magazine program, NRK 1995 ; Sentrum (Vignette ",
"score": "1.7443337"
},
{
"id": "25030135",
"title": "Kjell-Åke Andersson",
"text": "1980 - Vi hade i alla fall tur med vädret (screenwriter and cinematographer) ; 1988 - Friends ; 1992 - Night of the Orangutan ; 1996 - Juloratoriet (director and screenwriter) ; 2001 - Familjehemligheter (director and screenwriter) ; 2002 - Stackars Tom (TV) (director) ; 2003 - Mamma pappa barn (director) ; 2005 - Wallander – Innan frosten (director) ; 2008 - Vi hade i alla fall tur med vädret – igen ",
"score": "1.6436213"
},
{
"id": "466300",
"title": "Varg Veum",
"text": " får (Black Sheep) was directed by the television director Stephan Apelgren, best known for directing many of the Swedish detective Kurt Wallander crime films. Apelgren continued directing duties on the next film in the series, Dødens drabanter (Consorts of Death). The tenth film, I mørket er alle ulver grå (At Night All Wolves Are Grey), saw the return of director Alexander Eik. The eleventh film, De døde har det godt (The Dead Have It Easy), is the only one not directly based on a Varg Veum novel but rather combined elements from several short stories from the compilation of the same title. The last film, Kalde hjerter (Cold Hearts), was co-written and directed by lead actor Seim.",
"score": "1.6294754"
},
{
"id": "2398751",
"title": "Oslo Kino",
"text": " The early directors were Jens Christian Gundersen (1926-1933) and Kristoffer Aamot (1934-1940). During the German occupation of Norway the company had three Nazi collaborators as directors: Gustav Berg-Jæger (1940-1942), Einar Schibbye (1942-1944) and Birger Ilseng (1944-1945). Kristoffer Aamot then recovered his job, and sat until 1955. Theodor Rosenquist followed (1955-1958), then Arnljot Engh (1958-1975), Eivind Hjelmtveit (1975-1993), Ingeborg Moræus Hanssen (1993-2005), Cecilie Trøan (acting, 2005-2006) and Geir Bergkastet (2006-present). Pre-war chairs of the board of directors were Arthur Skjeldrup (1926-1928), Kristoffer Aamot (1929-1931), Eyvind Getz (1932-1934) and Rachel Grepp (1935-1940). The chairpersons during the German occupation of Norway are not known. After the war, Rolf Hofmo sat from 1946 to 1955, then Rolf Stranger (1956-1967), Albert Nordengen (1968-1971), Adele Lerche (1972-1975), Turid Dankertsen (1976-1979), Albert Nordengen again (1980-1983), Bjørn Bjørnseth (1984-1987), Jon Lyng (1988-1991), Christian Hambro (1992), Theo Koritzinsky (1993-1995), Jon Lyng again (1996-2003) and Heidi Larssen (2003-present). Several directors and chairs were also politicians for the Conservative Party, the party which initially opposed a municipal cinema company.",
"score": "1.6230623"
},
{
"id": "6661359",
"title": "Eva Isaksen",
"text": " Eva Isaksen (born 22 May 1956) is a Norwegian film director. She directed her first feature film Burning Flowers (Brennende blomster 1985) with Eva Dahr, and has worked as an assistant on a number of films, including Sweetwater (1988) by Lasse Glomm, Wayfarers (Landstrykere 1989) by Ola Solum, and The Dive (Dykket 1989) by Tristan de Vere Cole. In 1990 she directed Death at Oslo Central (Døden på Oslo S), about the two boys Pelle and Proffen, based on the novels for young people by Ingvar Ambjørnsen, a Norwegian author living in Hamburg. Two years later she presented her third feature film Homo Falsus (Det perfekte mord 1992).",
"score": "1.6216474"
},
{
"id": "6369388",
"title": "Det Norske Teatret",
"text": " Actor and singer Rasmus Rasmussen was the theatre's first director, from 1912 to 1915. Edvard Drabløs was one of the founders, and served as a director from 1915 to 1916, and later also from 1950 to 1951. Amund Rydland, who had been with the theatre from the start, was the director from 1916 to 1922 (shared with Anton Heiberg and Sigurd Eldegard in periods). After him Ingjald Haaland served as theatre director for eleven years, from 1922 to 1933. Hans Jacob Nilsen was theatre director from 1933 to 1934, and from 1946 to 1950. The writer Oskar Braaten had earlier worked as a consultant for the theatre, and served as its director from 1934 to 1936. The actor Knut Hergel was director from ",
"score": "1.6104279"
},
{
"id": "26470679",
"title": "Hans Jacob Nilsen",
"text": " First trained as a mechanical engineer, Nilsen started his theatrical career as an actor. He worked as a stage actor in Bergen, Trondheim and Oslo. He was appointed theatre director at Det Norske Teatret from 1933 to 1934, and was theatre director at Den Nationale Scene from 1934 to 1939. His film debut was in Syndere i sommersol from 1934, and he also played in To levende og en død from 1937. In 1935, Nilsen had directed the premier of the play of Vår ære og vår makt (\"Our Honor and Our Power\") by Marxist writer Nordahl Grieg. The performance created considerable interest and controversy due to its socially critical content. It proved to be a financial success partly because of Nilsen's advanced directing and set design. During the Occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany, Nilsson had to flee to Sweden. While in Sweden, he was a co-founder of Fri norsk scene. From 1946 to 1950 he was again appointed theatre director at Det Norske Teatret. He directed the film Dei svarte hestane from 1951, based on Tarjei Vesaas' novel with the same title. From 1952 he was theatre director of Folketeatret.",
"score": "1.6061643"
},
{
"id": "13952201",
"title": "List of Danes",
"text": "Bille August (1948–), director ; Erik Balling (1924–2005), director ; Susanne Bier (1960–), director, writer ; August Blom (1869–1947), director, producer ; Ole Bornedal, director ; Carl Theodor Dreyer (1889–1968), film director (The Passion of Joan of Arc, Ordet) ; Peter Elfelt (1866–1931), photographer, silent film director ; Per Fly ; Bodil Ipsen (1889–1964), director, actress ; Anders Thomas Jensen ; Lau Lauritzen Jr. (1910–1977), director, actor, producer ; Jørgen Leth, filmmaker and poet ; Nils Malmros, filmmaker ; Nicolas Winding Refn, director ; Mikael Salomon, director, writer ; Lone Scherfig (1959–), director ; Lars von Trier (1956–), director ; Thomas Vinterberg (1969–), director ",
"score": "1.6005168"
},
{
"id": "16475197",
"title": "Arts Council Norway",
"text": " Halvdan Skard was the director from 1983 to 1992, but was then granted an absence of leave to become chairman of the Norwegian Association of Local and Regional Authorities. On 18 December 1992 it was announced that Lidvin Osland would serve as acting director until 1 July 1996. Osland stepped down as planned, but his successor was not appointed immediately, as the council rejected all applicants and asked for other candidates. On 20 September 1996 it was announced that Halvard Kausland had been appointed as acting director from 1 November 1996 to 31 March 2000. However, Kausland withdrew three days before actually assuming the post. The deputy director briefly advanced to become acting director during this vacancy. On 20 December Ole Jacob Bull was appointed. In early 2004 Skard finally quit as director. Bull applied to become the new director, and got the position on a permanent basis in July 2004. Since October 2010, director of Arts Council Norway was Anne Aasheim, previously editor-in-chief of Dagbladet,. After her death in 2016, Kristin Danielsen was appointed as director.",
"score": "1.5935652"
},
{
"id": "15496363",
"title": "Per Inge Torkelsen",
"text": "Zapp på ein måde ; Pengane eller livet In 2006, he was the master of ceremonies for the theatre festival in Sandnes where there were 13 different theatres. From the fall of 2006 until the spring of 2008 he was a director for Teaterverkstedet Ganddal in cooperation with Rogaland amateur theatre. As a director for the theater company Teaterverkstedet Ganddal, he directed two pieces: These two performances were a huge success for both Torkelsen and Teaterverkstedet Ganddal.",
"score": "1.587389"
},
{
"id": "9667236",
"title": "Björn Runge",
"text": "Festen, co-directed Lena Koppel 1984 ; Skymningsjägare 1985 ; Steward Gustafssons julafton 1985 ; Brasiliens röda kaffebär 1986 ; Intill den nya världens kust 1987 ; Maskinen 1988 ; Mördaren 1989 ; Vinden 1989 ; Vart skall jag fly för ditt ansikte, co-director Jimmy Karlsson 1989 ; Morgonen 1990 ; Greger Olsson köper en bil 1990 ; Ögonblickets barn 1991 ; En dag på stranden 1994 ; Sverige in Memorian, co-director Lena Dahlberg 1994 ; Harry & Sonja 1996 ; Vulkanmannen 1997 ; Raymond 1999 ; Anderssons älskarinna (TV series) 2001 ; Om jag vänder mig om (Daybreak) 2003 ; Mun mot mun 2005 ; Happy End 2011 ; The Wife 2017 ",
"score": "1.5808027"
},
{
"id": "31201066",
"title": "Per Blom (director)",
"text": " Per Blom (5 May 1946 – 2013 ) was a Norwegian film director. He was born in Søndre Land. Among his films are Anton from 1973, and Mors hus from 1974, based on a novel by Knut Faldbakken. Further Kvinner from 1979, Sølvmunn from 1981, and The Ice Palace from 1987, based upon a novel by Tarjei Vesaas.",
"score": "1.5788207"
},
{
"id": "27319299",
"title": "Øystein Runde",
"text": " For Sleggja, co-director Lars-Petter Iversen and Runde created a live-action trailer. Sleggja was praised for its intense and touching story. In 2015, Øystein Runde and Ida Neverdahl published a travelogue comic, MOSCOW, in English. Also the book FUTEN, about a mythological tax collector, was finally published after 8 years of work by artist Knut André Solberg. Futen was well received. Together with co-director and producer Torstein Jacobsen and co-director Johanna Raita, Runde released a horror comedy, Last Christmas.",
"score": "1.5770252"
},
{
"id": "15844171",
"title": "Norwegian Maritime Authority",
"text": " Rune Teisland left the director post in 2008. In August the same year, Olav Akselsen, a parliament member at the time, was appointed new Director General. Akselsen did not take up the post until January 2010, and in the meantime Sigurd Gude served as acting director.",
"score": "1.5754769"
},
{
"id": "6566500",
"title": "Director-General of the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation",
"text": "Olav Midttun (1934–1940 and 1945–1947), he held the title of riksprogramsjef, \"national chief of programmes\" ; Thorstein Diesen, Jr. (1947–1948) (acting riksprogramsjef) ; Egil Sundt (1939–1940 and 1945–1946), he held the title of administerende direktør ; Knut Tvedt (acting) (1946–1948), he held the title of administerende direktør ; Kaare Fostervoll (1948–1962) ; Hans Jacob Ustvedt (1962–1972) ; Torolf Elster (1972–1981) ; Bjartmar Gjerde (1981–1989) ; Olav Ilssen (acting) (1989) ; Einar Førde (1989–2001) ; John G. Bernander (2001–2007) ; Hans Tore Bjerkaas (2007–2013) ; Thor Gjermund Eriksen (2013–) The Director-General is chief executive and editor-in-chief of the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation (NRK). The position is appointed by the NRK board, which in turn is appointed by the government. The title of the Director-General in Norwegian is (since 1948) kringkastingssjef, which literally means \"chief of broadcasting\".",
"score": "1.5753989"
},
{
"id": "26722717",
"title": "Einar Sissener",
"text": " In 1934 and 1935 he produced the two films Syndere i sommersol and Du har lovet mig en kone!. Sissener chaired the Norwegian Actors' Equity Association from 1928 to 1932. He was theatre director for Søilen Teater in 1932. From 1933 to 1937 he was theatre director for Det Nye Teater. From 1937 to 1946 he worked for the revue theatre Chat Noir, both as an actor, stage producer and songwriter. In 1947 he returned to the National Theatre. His last appearance was in Friedrich Dürrenmatt's comedy Meteor in 1967. He played a total of 127 roles at the National Theatre. Sissener was decorated Knight, First Class of the Royal Norwegian Order of St. Olav in 1960, and was a knight of the Danish Order of the Dannebrog.",
"score": "1.5751528"
},
{
"id": "30915531",
"title": "Måns Herngren",
"text": "1990: S*M*A*S*H (Director) ; 1995: One in a Million (En på miljonen) (Director) ; 1997: Adam & Eva (Director) ; 1998: Snow (Director) ; 2000: Det blir aldrig som man tänkt sig (Things Never End Up The Way You've Planned) (Director) ; 2001: En fot i graven (TV mini-series director) ; 2002: Klassfesten (The Class Reunion) (Director) ; 2006: Varannan vecka (Every Other Week) (Actor and director) ; 2008: Allt flyter (The Swimsuit Issue) (Director) ; 2016: The 101-Year-Old Man Who Skipped Out on the Bill and Disappeared (Co-director) ",
"score": "1.5716672"
},
{
"id": "9702229",
"title": "Lars Westman",
"text": "1966: Habla Fidel (director) ; 1968: Sanningen om Båstad (director) ; 1970: Kamrater, motståndaren är välorganiserad (director, cinematographer & editor) ; 1994: Maria och kärleken (cinematographer) ; 2000: Gå på vatten (director & cinematographer) ",
"score": "1.5660843"
},
{
"id": "6392863",
"title": "Det Nye Teater",
"text": " The company A/S Det Nye Teater was founded in 1918, by Johan Bojer and Peter Egge. Among the largest financial supporters were ship owner Ivar An Christensen, and also the Norwegian State bought a significant number of shares. The theatre building was designed by the architects Blakstad and Dunker. The theatre's first artistic director was Ingolf Schanche, from 1928 to 1931. The theatre opened on 26 to 28 February 1929, with Knut Hamsun's trilogy, Ved rigets port, Livets spil and Aftenrøde, followed by Peter Egge's play Kjærlighet og venskap. From 1931 to 1932 Thomas Thomassen managed the theatre, and from 1932 to 1933 Gyda Christensen. Einar Sissener was theatre director from 1933 to 1934, and Hjalmar Friis and Gyda ",
"score": "1.5635738"
}
] |
Who was the director of The Barrier?
|
[
"Lesley Selander"
] |
director
|
The Barrier (1937 film)
| 2,858,626 | 98 |
[
{
"id": "27790471",
"title": "The Barrier (1979 film)",
"text": "Innokentiy Smoktunovskiy as Antoni Manev ; Vania Tzvetkova as Doroteya ; Yevgeniya Barakova as Saprugata ; Maria Dimcheva as D-r Yurukova ; Ivan Kondov as Sledovatelyat ; Roumiania Parvanova as Mashtehata ",
"score": "1.6059306"
},
{
"id": "9489724",
"title": "Barrier to the North",
"text": " Barrier to the North (Barriera a Settentrione) is a 1950 Italian mountain film directed by and starring Luis Trenker. It also stars Amedeo Nazzari, Marianne Hold and Margarete Genske. It is sometimes known by the alternative title of Mountain Smugglers.",
"score": "1.6051395"
},
{
"id": "5567459",
"title": "Barrier (film)",
"text": "Joanna Szczerbic : Tram conductor ; Jan Nowicki : Protagonist ; Tadeusz Łomnicki : Doctor ; Maria Malicka : Businesswoman ; Zdzisław Maklakiewicz : Paper seller ; Ryszard Pietruski : Oberwaiter ; Bogdan Baer : Man at bar ; Henryk Bąk : Doctor ; Stefan Friedmann : Tram conductor asking for help ; Andrzej Herder : Manius ; Malgorzata Lorentowicz : Owner of the apartment ; Zygmunt Malanowicz : Eddy ; Janusz Gajos : Streetcar ; Marian Kociniak : Streetcar ",
"score": "1.6000345"
},
{
"id": "27191580",
"title": "The Barrier (1990 film)",
"text": " The Barrier (transliterated: Al Hajiz) is a 1990 Bahraini drama film directed and produced by Bassam Al-Thawadi, starring Ebrahim Bahar, Rashed Al-Hassan, and Mariam Ziman. The screenplay was written by Ameen Salih. The film is widely regarded as being the first feature film produced in Bahrain.",
"score": "1.5815245"
},
{
"id": "8829591",
"title": "Bassam Al-Thawadi",
"text": " Bassam Mohammed Al-Thawadi (بسام محمد الذوادي, born December 13, 1960) is a veteran Bahraini filmmaker and film director, known for producing Bahrain's first feature film, The Barrier, in 1990. Regarded as a regional pioneer in film-making, he is a founding member of the GCC Cinema Society and is also the founder and director-in-general of first Arab Cinema Festival in Bahrain. He had directed numerous short films and also commercials, educational & cultural programmes during his tenure in the Bahrain Radio and Television Corporation as well as performing in plays. Al-Thawadi was chairman of the Al Sawari Video Festival of 1994 and a member of the judging committee of the Baghdad International Television & Film Festival in 1988. He organized the New Egyptian Cinema Days Festival in Bahrain in 1993, and was the director of the fifth Arab Music Festival in 1996.",
"score": "1.5480042"
},
{
"id": "27790470",
"title": "The Barrier (1979 film)",
"text": " The Barrier (Бариерата, translit. Barierata) is a 1979 Bulgarian drama film directed by Christo Christov. It was entered into the 11th Moscow International Film Festival where it won the Silver Prize. The film was selected as the Bulgarian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 52nd Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee.",
"score": "1.5452614"
},
{
"id": "8829593",
"title": "Bassam Al-Thawadi",
"text": " and directed the feature film The Barrier, widely considered to be the first feature film produced in Bahrain, the film has been entered into several regional and international film festivals, generally winning good reviews. In 2004, he directed and co-produced (the other producer being the Bahrain Cinema Company) the film Visitor, considered to be the second feature film produced in Bahrain and first Dolby sound system in the Persian Gulf. Between those two films he directed many documentary films. In 2006 he directed A Bahraini Tale, the third feature film produced in Bahrain and first DTS sound system in the Persian Gulf region. The movie was critically acclaimed by local and international critics. He currently works as the head of the drama and documentary section at Bahrain Radio and Television Corporation, at Bahrain's Ministry of Information.",
"score": "1.5449543"
},
{
"id": "10128072",
"title": "The Barrier of Flames",
"text": " The Barrier of Flames is a 1914 American short silent drama film directed by Jack Harvey. It stars Shep the Dog, Helen Badgley, and Morgan Jones. The film is about a child saved from a fire by her devoted collie.",
"score": "1.5278097"
},
{
"id": "5567458",
"title": "Barrier (film)",
"text": "Title : Barrier ; Original title: Bariera ; Director: Jerzy Skolimowski ; Writer: Jerzy Skolimowski ; Country of origin: Poland ; Format : Black and white- Mono – 35 mm ; Genre : Drama ; Length: 77 minutes ; Release date: 1966 ",
"score": "1.5205564"
},
{
"id": "30387572",
"title": "The Flame Barrier",
"text": " The Flame Barrier is a 1958 American jungle adventure/science fiction film produced by Arthur Gardner and Jules V. Levy, directed by Paul Landres, and written by Pat Fielder and George Worthing Yates. The film stars Arthur Franz, Kathleen Crowley and Robert Brown. It was released in the U.S. on April 2, 1958 by United Artists as a double feature with The Return of Dracula (1958).",
"score": "1.5115837"
},
{
"id": "27994830",
"title": "The Barrier (1937 film)",
"text": " The Barrier is a 1937 adventure film directed by Lesley Selander. The story was previously filmed by MGM as a silent in 1926.",
"score": "1.5058446"
},
{
"id": "5567457",
"title": "Barrier (film)",
"text": " Barrier (Bariera) is a Polish drama film directed by Jerzy Skolimowski, released in 1966. The hero quits his studies, resolving to seek social advancement by any means. A new girlfriend changes his mind.",
"score": "1.5048637"
},
{
"id": "27191582",
"title": "The Barrier (1990 film)",
"text": "Ebrahim Bahar as Mustafa ; Rashed Al-Hassan as Hassan ; Mariam Ziman as Fatima ; Gahtan Al-Gahtani as Mohammed ; Latifa Mujren as the Mother ; Abdulrahman Barakat as the Father ; Soad Ali as Huda ; Anwar Ahmed as Gang man ; Norah Yousif as the Neighbor ; Amina Hussain as Street Girl ",
"score": "1.4996752"
},
{
"id": "5073350",
"title": "The Barrier (1926 film)",
"text": " The film’s “world premiere” took place at the West Coast Theatre in San Bernardino, California, on Sunday February 28, 1926, with four showings that day, seen by “thousands.” Subsequent weekday showings were presented twice each evening. A young Ginger Rogers’ vaudeville act was also featured.",
"score": "1.4960096"
},
{
"id": "5073349",
"title": "The Barrier (1926 film)",
"text": " The Barrier is a 1926 American silent adventure film produced and distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and directed by George Hill. The film stars Lionel Barrymore and Marceline Day and is based on the 1908 wilderness novel of the same name by Rex Beach. Previous versions of the novel had been filmed in 1913 and 1917 respectively. This film is the last silent version to be filmed. The Barrier is a lost film.",
"score": "1.4948988"
},
{
"id": "26646874",
"title": "The Great Barrier (film)",
"text": " The Great Barrier is a 1937 British historical drama film directed by Milton Rosmer and Geoffrey Barkas and starring Richard Arlen, Lilli Palmer and Antoinette Cellier. The film depicts the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway. It was based on the 1935 novel The Great Divide by Alan Sullivan. It was made at the Lime Grove Studios in Shepherd's Bush. The film's sets were designed by Walter Murton.",
"score": "1.4807954"
},
{
"id": "5007385",
"title": "Roger Mirams",
"text": " Roger Eastgate Holden Mirams (16 April 1918 – 26 February 2004) was a New Zealand-born film producer and director, whose career extended over 60 years. Mirams co-directed Broken Barrier, the only local dramatic feature film made in New Zealand in the 1950s, and later won a reputation for the children's television series he produced in Australia.",
"score": "1.4789932"
},
{
"id": "12564993",
"title": "May 1926",
"text": "The adventure film The Barrier, starring Lionel Barrymore, was released. ; Born: Robert Creeley, poet, in Arlington, Massachusetts (d. 2005) ",
"score": "1.4771711"
},
{
"id": "31238100",
"title": "Guy Davidi",
"text": " On 2005, after several years of working as a camera man, Davidi began directing documentaries that focused on everyday life in the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. In 2006, Davidi directed the documentary In Working Progress, which dealt with the issue of Palestinian construction workers who worked in Israeli settlements. The film was shown at a number of film festivals including screenings in France, New Zealand, and Italy. In 2008, Davidi directed the film A Gift from Heaven, which documented the lives of foreign workers in Israeli farms that fell under rocket fire from Gaza. The film was shown at the Curtocircuito International Short Film Festival (Spain) and at the Worker’s Film Festival in Haifa, Israel. In 2009, the film Women Defying Barriers was released, which documented the joint meetings of Israeli and Palestinian women in the midst of attacks on Gaza during Operation Defensive Shield. It won the award ",
"score": "1.4768324"
},
{
"id": "33019873",
"title": "McNamara Line",
"text": " for the final judgment of the JCS, Secretary McNamara ordered that the proposal be implemented. Lieutenant General Alfred Starbird, director of the Defense Communications Agency, was appointed head of Task Force 728, which was to implement the project. Two days later, the JCS reported back favorably on the already-decided plan. Starbird had to complete the barrier by September 1967. In November 1966, McNamara officially recommended the barrier system to President Johnson for implementation. The construction budget was estimated as $1.5 billion, and $740 million was allocated for the annual operating costs. The Practice Nine was adopted as the barrier project internal communication code name.",
"score": "1.4736903"
}
] |
Who was the director of Genius?
|
[
"Babar Ahmad"
] |
director
|
Genius (2003 film)
| 4,202,549 | 54 |
[
{
"id": "8268771",
"title": "Genius (2016 film)",
"text": " Genius is a 2016 British-American biographical drama film directed by Michael Grandage and written by John Logan, based on the 1978 National Book Award-winner Max Perkins: Editor of Genius by A. Scott Berg. The film stars Colin Firth, Jude Law, Nicole Kidman, Dominic West, and Guy Pearce. It was selected to compete for the Golden Bear at the 66th Berlin International Film Festival.",
"score": "1.6068885"
},
{
"id": "5075457",
"title": "Genius (2003 film)",
"text": " Genius is a 2003 direct-to-video American dramatic film, written and directed by Babar Ahmed. The film was shot in Manhattan, New York, and Ahmed's debut feature film. It was screened at several film festivals receiving multiple awards and then released to video.",
"score": "1.5780652"
},
{
"id": "25863565",
"title": "The Genius Club",
"text": " The Genius Club is an American 2006 Christian-themed dramatic thriller film written and directed by Tim Chey. It was released on 27 October 2006 via Cinemark Theatres. The film tells the story of seven geniuses who try to solve the world's problems in one night in order to prevent a nuclear bomb from exploding in Washington, D.C. The film was produced and distributed by Cloud Ten Pictures and RiverRain Productions.",
"score": "1.5516698"
},
{
"id": "9351840",
"title": "Genius (2018 Tamil film)",
"text": " In January 2018, Suseenthiran announced that he would be directing a film called Genius while also filming another project, Champion. Newcomer Roshan portrays the lead role and also produced the film. Suseenthiran revealed that he had written this script with Vijay in mind; however, since he did not agree to do the film, a debutant was chosen for the plot. The film is based on the theme of education and mental stress.",
"score": "1.5402715"
},
{
"id": "13312231",
"title": "Genius (website)",
"text": " Hip-hop journalist Rob Markman was hired by Genius as its manager of artist relations. In September 2015, Genius partnered with The Washington Post to annotate the various presidential debates being held at that time. The following month, Genius announced the hiring of Brendan Frederick, formerly of Complex, as director of content. In 2015, Rick Rubin, A-Trak, The-Dream and Eminem were among those who created verified accounts. Pulitzer Prize winning author Michael Chabon has also been verified and has contributed several annotations. Composer and Lyricist Lin-Manuel Miranda also has a verified account with which he frequently joined discussions on the lyrics from his musicals In the Heights and Hamilton. In January 2016, the White House began using Genius to provide annotations for its online postings of President Barack Obama's State of the Union addresses.",
"score": "1.531038"
},
{
"id": "5944467",
"title": "Genius (1991 film)",
"text": " At the 1992 Kinotavr film festival, screenwriter Igor Ageev received a special jury prize for his work on the film.",
"score": "1.5233338"
},
{
"id": "8564165",
"title": "Bad Genius",
"text": " Bad Genius was produced by Jira Maligool and Vanridee Pongsittisak, executives and veteran producers at GDH (previously GTH). Jira came up with the film's premise when he heard on the news that SAT scores were being cancelled in China due to a cheating scandal. The producers then invited Nattawut Poonpiriya to direct the film. Nattawut had previously directed the company's 2012 psychological thriller Countdown, and the producers believed his abilities would lend themselves to developing Bad Genius as a heist film. Nattawut was immediately intrigued, and agreed to direct the project, which was developed under the working title \"2B Come Won\" (a reference to the 2B pencils used to fill ",
"score": "1.5075072"
},
{
"id": "2203138",
"title": "The Mad Genius",
"text": " The Mad Genius (1931) is an American pre-Code drama film produced and distributed by Warner Bros. and directed by Michael Curtiz. The film stars John Barrymore, Marian Marsh, Donald Cook, Charles Butterworth, and in small roles, Boris Karloff and Frankie Darro. The film is based on the play The Idol (1929) by Martin Brown, which opened in Great Neck, Long Island but never opened on Broadway.",
"score": "1.4777321"
},
{
"id": "15827271",
"title": "Jack Brown Genius",
"text": " Jack Brown Genius is a 1996 New Zealand romantic comedy fantasy film directed by Tony Hiles, produced by Peter Jackson and written by both with Jackson's partner Fran Walsh. Actor Tim Balme, who had earlier starred in Jackson's movie Braindead, plays the title role.",
"score": "1.4720892"
},
{
"id": "29837125",
"title": "The Genius (1948 film)",
"text": " The Genius (Spanish:El supersabio) is a 1948 Mexican comedy film directed by Miguel M. Delgado and starring Cantinflas, Perla Aguiar and Carlos Martínez Baena. The film's sets were designed by the art director Gunther Gerszo.",
"score": "1.4712852"
},
{
"id": "8268776",
"title": "Genius (2016 film)",
"text": " The film was released on June 10, 2016. It had its premiere at the 66th Berlin International Film Festival on February 16, 2016.",
"score": "1.4700546"
},
{
"id": "11251881",
"title": "The Genius of Invention",
"text": " On 23 August 2013, BBC Two controller Janice Hadlow announced the commissioning of the series. The main presenters of the series were Mark Miodownik, Cassie Newland and Michael Mosley.",
"score": "1.4606917"
},
{
"id": "418338",
"title": "Genius (2012 film)",
"text": " Genius received mixed reviews as audience praised its story and music but the movie met its doom in length of the movie and the screen play the director Omkar concluded that movie bombed at box office due to his lack of strength in narrating the movie to the spectators. He also concluded that the film was more expensive than it should be and should have been including some depth in the scenes the movie failed to meet its budget and fairly disappointed the producers but it also brought in the directorial talent of Omkar who already was a famous anchor and a bunch of good and young talented people.",
"score": "1.4601027"
},
{
"id": "28839578",
"title": "Alfred R. Kelman",
"text": " Kelman's earliest success was in producing and directing The Face of Genius, a documentary about the life of Nobel Prize–winning playwright Eugene O'Neill, nominated for an Academy Award in 1966. marking the first time that a film originally produced for television was recognized by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science as a nominee for Best Documentary Feature. A first-generation American born in the Bronx, New York and raised in Boston, Massachusetts, he is the son of Lawrence and Laura Kelman, Jewish immigrants from Poland. As a teenager in the late 1950s Kelman was a child of the live television era. Hollywood, in ",
"score": "1.4577982"
},
{
"id": "26304437",
"title": "Genius (1999 film)",
"text": " In January 1997, the film was in development by DIC Entertainment L.P. (which Disney owned at the time of development and film release) with plans to broadcast it on Disney Channel, as a joint project between DIC and Disney. The film premiered on the channel on August 21, 1999.",
"score": "1.4562514"
},
{
"id": "11887823",
"title": "Genius (2018 Hindi film)",
"text": " Genius is a 2018 Indian Hindi-language action thriller film directed by Anil Sharma. It marks the debut of his son Utkarsh Sharma as a male lead, who also featured as a child actor in Sharma's 2001 film Gadar: Ek Prem Katha and Ishita Chauhan. Veteran actress Ayesha Jhulka, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Mithun Chakraborty and Malti Chahar are in supporting roles in the film.",
"score": "1.4561952"
},
{
"id": "8268775",
"title": "Genius (2016 film)",
"text": " Principal photography on the film began on October 19, 2014, in Manchester, and ended on December 12, 2014.",
"score": "1.4513675"
},
{
"id": "13312228",
"title": "Genius (website)",
"text": " Fast Company featured Rap Genius co-founder Mahbod Moghadam in its list of the Most Creative People of 2013. By early 2014, however, Moghadam had reduced his involvement in Genius to a part-time role, due to complications from his surgery for meningioma, a benign brain tumor. In May 2014, Moghadam resigned after annotating the manifesto of Isla Vista spree killer Elliot Rodger in ways labeled as inappropriate.",
"score": "1.4490516"
},
{
"id": "8268780",
"title": "Genius (2016 film)",
"text": " the film unsatisfactory, writing, \"Genius is a dress-up box full of second- and third-hand notions. Set mainly in a picturesquely brown and smoky Manhattan in the 1930s, it gives the buddy-movie treatment to that wild-man novelist Thomas Wolfe and his buttoned-up red-penciler Maxwell Perkins.\" Rolling Stone had the same impression, writing, \"You know the drill: Strong source material, in the form of A. Scott Berg's National Book Award-winning biography on Perkins, a top-notch screenwriter (John Logan) and a to-die-for A-list cast. Having all the right ingredients doesn't mean you can't royally screw up the recipe, however, and the missteps start coming fast and furious even before Law's manic-hillbilly act wears out its welcome.\"",
"score": "1.4488046"
},
{
"id": "26304436",
"title": "Genius (1999 film)",
"text": "Trevor Morgan – Charlie Boyle/Chaz Anthony ; Emmy Rossum – Claire Addison ; Charles Fleischer – Dr. Krickstein ; Yannick Bisson – Mike MacGregor ; Peter Keleghan – Dean Wallace ; Philip Granger – Coach Addison ; Jonathon Whittaker – Dad Boyle (as Jonathan Whittaker) ; Patrick Thomas – Odie ; Matthew Koller – Deion ; Chuck Campbell – Hugo Peplo ; Eli Ham – Omar Sullivan ; Darryl Pring – Bear Berczinski ",
"score": "1.4476757"
}
] |
Who was the director of Men and Women?
|
[
"William Churchill deMille",
"William Churchill de Mille",
"William C. De Mille",
"William deMille"
] |
director
|
Men and Women (1925 film)
| 5,141,436 | 87 |
[
{
"id": "31202983",
"title": "Harry Brod",
"text": " Brod was hired as interim director of the new Women’s and Gender Studies Department at Kenyon College in the early 1990s. Despite being assured during the hiring process that his gender was not an issue, the appointment of a man was very controversial. As a man of the left, I’ve been attacked from the right. Here, also, I’ve been attacked from the left, as a male. Completely isolated, no structure, no connection. Under fire. Incredible.",
"score": "1.5427135"
},
{
"id": "4305301",
"title": "The Man Who Had Power Over Women",
"text": " The original director was Silvio Narizzano who left the project prior to shooting. The screenwriters were Chris Bryant and Allan Scott, who were so upset with subsequent changes made they requested their names be taken off the film.",
"score": "1.528284"
},
{
"id": "14172787",
"title": "Original Six (directors)",
"text": " Ned Tanen (Universal), and Frank Wells (Warner Bros.) and television sitcom producer Norman Lear. Their results were also leaked to the press. Littman has reflected on how it felt to challenge men who had the power to make or break one's career. \"\"We were products of the women's movement, and the civil rights movement,\" she says. \"And we alienated enough men so that they felt they owed us nothing, but we had so little left to lose. And the men in the DGA who helped us, like Michael Franklin, loved that we were fighters. Getting out there and advocating for our rights only made us feel stronger.\"\"",
"score": "1.5151317"
},
{
"id": "14172786",
"title": "Original Six (directors)",
"text": " DGA director Michael Franklin, during whose tenure the Guild's first diversity committees were formed. The group began to formally investigate and report on the hiring practices of the major film studios. For the next year, the Original Six gathered statistics, documenting that Hollywood had a systemic problem with gender. On March 1, 1980, they reported to the Guild's National Board that during the previous 30 years, women directors had been hired for only 0.5% of the possible directing opportunities. Over the next three years, they took their results to the major studios, advocating for changes with little result. The committee met with major executives including Barry Diller ",
"score": "1.5093111"
},
{
"id": "485762",
"title": "Men and Women (play)",
"text": " Men and Women is an American play written by David Belasco and Henry Churchill de Mille. It was featured on Broadway in 1890, opening at Proctor's Twenty-Third Street Theater on October 21, 1890. The cast included Maude Adams. It proved successful with audiences, and played for over 200 performances. It was adapted to a silent film of the same name in 1914.",
"score": "1.4978806"
},
{
"id": "28868271",
"title": "The Year of Spectacular Men",
"text": " The Year of Spectacular Men is a 2017 American comedy-drama film directed by Lea Thompson in her directorial debut. It stars Thompson's daughters Madelyn Deutch (who also wrote the screenplay and composed the score) and Zoey Deutch (who also produced). Thompson's husband Howard Deutch also served as a producer. The film had its world premiere on June 16, 2017, at the LA Film Festival. It was released in theaters, on digital HD and through video-on-demand services on June 15, 2018, by MarVista Entertainment.",
"score": "1.4892038"
},
{
"id": "10353326",
"title": "Women Without Men (2009 film)",
"text": " The film's director, Shirin Neshat, won the 2009 Venice Film Festival Silver Lion for best directing. The film was a \"special presentation\" at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival.",
"score": "1.4846035"
},
{
"id": "29148608",
"title": "Men, Women & Children (film)",
"text": " By September 4, 2013, Jason Reitman had cast Adam Sandler, Rosemarie DeWitt and Jennifer Garner in the lead roles. By December 16, Emma Thompson, Judy Greer and Dean Norris were cast. The young cast includes Ansel Elgort, Kaitlyn Dever, Elena Kampouris, Travis Tope, Katherine Hughes, Olivia Crocicchia, and Timothée Chalamet. Other stars are David Denman, Jason Douglas, Dennis Haysbert, Shane Lynch, and J. K. Simmons. Will Peltz also joined the cast, on December 17. Principal photography began on December 16, 2013, in and around Austin, Texas.",
"score": "1.4753714"
},
{
"id": "10082745",
"title": "Stanley Kramer",
"text": " produced The Men (1950), which featured Marlon Brando's screen debut, in a drama about paraplegic war veterans. It was the first time Kramer and Foreman worked with director Fred Zinnemann, who had already been directing for twenty years and had won an Oscar. The film was another success for Kramer, who took on a unique subject dealing with a world few knew about. Critic Bosley Crowther noted that its \"striking and authentic documentary quality has been imported to the whole film in every detail, attitude and word.\" Zinnemann said he was impressed with Kramer's company and the efficiency of their productions: \"They struck me as being enormously ",
"score": "1.4725658"
},
{
"id": "29148602",
"title": "Men, Women & Children (film)",
"text": " Men, Women & Children is a 2014 American comedy-drama film directed by Jason Reitman and co-written with Erin Cressida Wilson, based on a novel of the same name written by Chad Kultgen that deals with online addiction. The film stars Rosemarie DeWitt, Jennifer Garner, Judy Greer, Dean Norris, Adam Sandler, Ansel Elgort, Kaitlyn Dever and Timothée Chalamet. The film premiered at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival on September 6, 2014. The film was released on October 1, 2014, by Paramount Pictures.",
"score": "1.4649348"
},
{
"id": "14172798",
"title": "Original Six (directors)",
"text": " In 2014, the 35th anniversary of the founding of the Women's Steering Committee was marked by the Director's Guild of America with speeches by Nell Cox, Joelle Dobrow, Lynne Littman, Vicki Hochberg, and Susan Nimoy and a ceremony recognizing the role of the Original Six. It almost didn't happen. When the idea was first proposed, it was claimed that the Original Six had not been an official committee, and that an official women's committee was not formed until 1991. That claim was refuted by other members of the Director's Guild, but it illustrates how women's history can be erased. The 2018 documentary This Changes Everything was ",
"score": "1.4574916"
},
{
"id": "14172791",
"title": "Original Six (directors)",
"text": " Although DGA v. WB/CPI was dismissed, the threat of legal action and the accompanying publicity still may have been a \"galvanizing event\". Filing of the suit was followed by an increase in the number of women employed as directors. When they founded the WSC, the Original Six presented statistics showing that only 0.5 percent of all directing assignments for films and TV shows were going to women. Following the court case, the percentage of women directing television episodes increased, reaching a peak of women directing 16% of television shows in 1995. The number of women film directors has also risen, albeit erratically. Since 2007 Stacy L. Smith, Founder and Director of the Annenberg Inclusion Initiative at the ",
"score": "1.4532627"
},
{
"id": "5009418",
"title": "Lewis Allen (director)",
"text": " In 1935 he began working on Broadway. His credits include directing the U.S. premieres of J.B. Priestley's Laburnum Grove (1935) (131 performances) and The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse (1937) with Cedric Hardwicke. He did the general stage direction of Victoria Regina (1935–36) (a big hit, with Helen Hayes and Vincent Price), Tovarich (1936–37) (another success, 356 performances) and French Without Tears (1937–38). He later did Priestley's I Have Been Here Before (1938) and Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur's Ladies and Gentleman with Helen Hayes (1939–40). Allen then received an offer to direct for Paramount. Allen went to London to direct a production of The Women in 1940. In May 1941 he signed a contract at Paramount Pictures.",
"score": "1.4502988"
},
{
"id": "14172784",
"title": "Original Six (directors)",
"text": " The Original Six are a group of women directors who created the Women's Steering Committee (WSC) of the Director's Guild of America (DGA). Dolores Ferraro, Joelle Dobrow, Lynne Littman, Nell Cox, Susan Bay Nimoy and Victoria Hochberg formed the Women's Steering Committee of the Director's Guild of America in 1979. They carried out landmark research showing that women held only 0.5% of directing jobs in film and television, which they reported to the Guild, the studios and the press. As a result of the Original Six's research, the Director's Guild of America filed a class-action lawsuit against Warner Brothers and Columbia Pictures in 1983 on the grounds of gender discrimination. On March 5, 1985, the case was dismissed when the judge removed the DGA as the class representative. The risk of legal action, along with pressure from the public and the DGA, was followed by a slow (but not smooth) increase in the number of women directors working in the entertainment industry. Members of the Original Six continue to make films and television shows, to protest against gender discrimination in Hollywood and to support female employment on film and television at the directing level.",
"score": "1.4454677"
},
{
"id": "11238799",
"title": "Women's cinema",
"text": " director: Sarah Polley ; 2006 Marie Antoinette, starring Kirsten Dunst; director: Sofia Coppola ; 2007 Feminine, Masculine (2007), director: Sadaf Foroughi ; 2007 Across the Universe; director: Julie Taymor ; 2007 The Savages; director: Tamara Jenkins ; 2007 Never Forever; director: Gina Kim ; 2008 Frozen River; director: Courtney Hunt ; 2008 The Headless Woman; director: Lucrecia Martel ; 2008 The Beaches of Agnes; director: Agnes Varda ; 2008 Wendy and Lucy; director: Kelly Reichardt ; 2009 The Hurt Locker; director: Kathryn Bigelow The first female to win an Oscar for direction. ; 2009 Bright Star; director: Jane Campion ; 2009 Fish Tank; director: Andrea Arnold ; 2009 White Material; director: Claire Denis ",
"score": "1.439215"
},
{
"id": "28868274",
"title": "The Year of Spectacular Men",
"text": " In September 2015, it was announced that Lea Thompson is making her feature film directorial debut in this film, starring her actress daughters Madelyn Deutch and Zoey Deutch. Filming started later that month in Los Angeles, New York City, Lake Tahoe and San Francisco. The Year of Spectacular Men is produced by Parkside Pictures and Tadross Media Group. Producers are Parkside's Damiano Tucci and Danny Roth along with Gordon Gilbertson and Howard Deutch; executive producers are Michael Tadross Jr. and Christopher Conover. Zoey also shares the production credit.",
"score": "1.4354506"
},
{
"id": "15466527",
"title": "Men, Women, and Money",
"text": " Men, Women, and Money is a lost 1919 American drama silent film directed by George Melford and written by Beulah Marie Dix and Cosmo Hamilton. The film stars Ethel Clayton, James Neill, Jane Wolfe, Lew Cody, Sylvia Ashton, Irving Cummings, and Winifred Greenwood. The film was released on June 15, 1919, by Paramount Pictures.",
"score": "1.4304013"
},
{
"id": "29414759",
"title": "Women Make Movies",
"text": " In 1983, Debra Zimmerman became the executive director of WMM.",
"score": "1.4258764"
},
{
"id": "11262195",
"title": "Men of Tomorrow",
"text": " This is the story of an Oxford University student in the years after his graduation. Allen Shepherd (Braddell) has become a successful novelist and has married Jane Anderson (Gardner). A firm proponent of traditional sex roles, Shepherd leaves Jane when she accepts a teaching post at Oxford. He later changes his views, and the couple is reunited. Robert Donat and Merle Oberon were given top billing when Men of Tomorrow was distributed in the United States in 1935.",
"score": "1.4165801"
},
{
"id": "8075495",
"title": "Melissa Kearney",
"text": " Kearney was the fifth director - and first female director - of The Hamilton Project, following a prestigious group of former directors, all of whom played significant roles in public service, including founding director Peter Orszag, who went on to become director of the Congressional Budget Office and then director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, Jason Furman, who subsequently served as chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers, and Douglas Elmendorf, who subsequently directed the Congressional Budget Office and is now Dean of the Kennedy School at Harvard University. Under Kearney's leadership, the Hamilton Project worked on a variety of policy topics, including domestic poverty, labor market challenges and the future of work, and mass incarceration. Together ",
"score": "1.4140729"
}
] |
Who was the director of Sold?
|
[
"Hugh Ford"
] |
director
|
Sold (1915 film)
| 2,925,643 | 97 |
[
{
"id": "6093620",
"title": "Sold (2014 film)",
"text": " Sold is a 2014 drama film directed by Jeffrey D. Brown based on Patricia McCormick's novel Sold. The film is executive produced by Emma Thompson and produced by Jane Charles. The script was written by Joseph Kwong and Jeffrey D. Brown.",
"score": "1.5685209"
},
{
"id": "28298424",
"title": "Sold (1915 film)",
"text": " Sold was a 1915 American silent drama film produced by Famous Players-Lasky and distributed by Paramount Pictures. Based on George Erastov's play of the same name (which was an adaptation of the Henri Bernstein French play Le Secret), the film starred stage actress Pauline Frederick and was directed by Hugh Ford and Edwin S. Porter. The film was re-released in 1919 by Paramount. It is now considered lost.",
"score": "1.5496235"
},
{
"id": "32630636",
"title": "Dan Sales",
"text": " Daniel Sales (1958–2005), usually credited as Dan Sales, was an American film producer. He was the associate, executive or supervising producer for movies such as Skinner (1993), Brand New World (1998), Stranded (2001), Alone in the Dark (2005) and BloodRayne (2005).",
"score": "1.5321268"
},
{
"id": "2327432",
"title": "Sold (TV series)",
"text": " Filming began in the week beginning 25 June 2007 in and around London. It is directed by Cilla Ware and distributed internationally by RDF Media. Prior to the announcement of the series, it was referred to by RDF as \"Homeboys\". The set for the estate Agents was The Pub Studio in Battersea London.",
"score": "1.5308893"
},
{
"id": "2327430",
"title": "Sold (TV series)",
"text": " Sold is a British comedy drama television series produced by Touchpaper Television for ITV. The series stars Kris Marshall and Bryan Dick as Matt and Danny, employees of Colubrines Estate Agents. It is written by Steve Coombes and was broadcast between 15 November and 20 December 2007.",
"score": "1.5227587"
},
{
"id": "13063608",
"title": "Bill Sellars",
"text": " Sellars began his career in the theatre in 1947, working as an assistant floor manager. This was followed by a long period spent in repertory theatre, where he also began directing. In 1958 he joined the BBC as a floor manager and soon became a production assistant. He became a director at the BBC following an exodus of staff to the corporation's rival, ITV. From 1962-1967, Sellars' work for BBC television drama as a director included being assigned to the soap opera Compact and the early Doctor Who, for which he directed The Celestial Toymaker (1966). He also directed episodes of United! and 199 Park Lane during this period. Most of Sellars's early work was wiped in common with much television of the time. After his period as a contract director, Sellars became a producer. His first work in this role was as Verity Lambert's successor on The Newcomers. ",
"score": "1.4759085"
},
{
"id": "7128509",
"title": "Richard Sale (director)",
"text": " Richard Sale, (December 17, 1911 in New York – March 4, 1993 in Los Angeles) was an American screenwriter, pulp writer, and film director.",
"score": "1.4736753"
},
{
"id": "16215797",
"title": "Sells Ltd",
"text": " Sells Ltd, an advertising agency, was opened in 1869 in London. By 1900, it was the largest agency in the world with offices in London, Paris, Edinburgh and Montreal. In the 1950s, it made advertising history when it appointed the first woman to be a managing director in the business. Olive Hirst had joined Sells in 1931 as a typist and then worked across a number of departments. In January 1950, she was the first women to be appointed to the Board and in 1954 she took over the managing directors role. The agency won the Layton Trophy in 1959. The agency was merged with another in the 1960s.",
"score": "1.4667385"
},
{
"id": "25457345",
"title": "Debbie Sell",
"text": " Sell qualified in 1976 with a diploma in speech Pathology and Therapeutics from the College of Education in Leicester. Her first appointment as a speech therapist was at Whipps Cross Hospital where she worked from 1976 to 1978. Between 1978 and 1981, she worked at St. Georges Hospital, Tooting, London. In 1981 she moved to Great Ormond Street Hospital in London and was appointed head of the department of speech and language therapy in 1996. She gained her Phd in 1992 from De Montfort University for an investigation of speech outcome in Sri Lankan cleft palate subjects with delayed surgery. She was a key member of the Sri Lankan Cleft Lip and Palate Project, and was Assistant Director of the Eurocleft Speech Group. In the late 1990s, she directed the ",
"score": "1.4607954"
},
{
"id": "31098231",
"title": "For Sale (1998 film)",
"text": "Sandrine Kiberlain - France Robert ; Sergio Castellitto - Luigi Primo ; Jean-François Stévenin - Pierre Lindien ; Aurore Clément - Alice ; Chiara Mastroianni - Mireille ; Mireille Perrier - Primo's Ex-Wife ; Samuel Le Bihan - Eric Pacard ; Caroline Baehr - Marie-Pierre Chénu ; Roschdy Zem - The Banker ; Frédéric Pierrot ; Didier Flamand ; Louis-Do de Lencquesaing ",
"score": "1.4507437"
},
{
"id": "12368464",
"title": "Tom Selleck",
"text": " He has been a member of the board of directors of the National Rifle Association and served as a spokesman for the organization. He resigned from the board on September 18, 2018. After his close friend Charlton Heston stepped down from his role as an NRA spokesman in 2003, Selleck succeeded him. In 2002, Selleck donated the rifle he used in Quigley Down Under (a custom 13-pound [6 kg], single-shot, 1874 Sharps Rifle, with a 34-inch [86-cm] barrel), along with six other firearms from his other films, to the NRA. The firearms are part of the NRA's exhibit \"Real Guns of Reel Heroes\" at the National Firearms Museum in Fairfax, Virginia. To promote his film The Love Letter, Selleck was invited to be on The Rosie O'Donnell Show on May 19, 1999. During the appearance, O'Donnell questioned Selleck about his support of gun ownership and an ad ",
"score": "1.4422364"
},
{
"id": "25303564",
"title": "Jeffrey Seller",
"text": " Jeffrey Seller is an American theatrical producer best known for his work on Rent (1996), Avenue Q (2003), In the Heights (2008), and Hamilton (2015), as well as inventing Broadway's first rush ticket and lottery ticket policies.",
"score": "1.4395921"
},
{
"id": "12304967",
"title": "WildAid",
"text": " meetings with human traffickers and trafficked women. Video footage and information from the investigation was used to create a GSN written report, \"Crime & Servitude\", and a 1997 video documentary, Bought & Sold. Upon its release, Bought & Sold received widespread media coverage in the US and internationally, and was featured in specials on ABC Primetime Live, CNN, and BBC. The documentary contributed to the development of new legislative reforms and financial initiatives to combat human trafficking. The materials that were collected during the two year exposé are housed at the Human Rights Documentation Initiative (HRDI), The University of Texas at Austin.",
"score": "1.4395847"
},
{
"id": "6397068",
"title": "Clay Sell",
"text": " Jeffrey Clay Sell (born April 28, 1967) is a former United States Deputy Secretary of Energy who served in the George W. Bush administration from March 21, 2005, until he resigned, effective February 29, 2008. Sell was born in Texas to Judy and George Sell. He is one of four children, Julie Swindle, Rob Sell, and Tom Sell. He married Alisa Malechek and they have three children, John, Robert, and Mary Margaret Sell. After resigning from office, he moved to Dallas to work at Hunt Energy Horizons. From 2003 to 2005 Sell worked in the White House as a Special Assistant to President George W. Bush, serving on the staff of the National Economic Council and in the Office of Legislative Affairs, where he coordinated the development and implementation of the administration's energy policy. From 2005 through 2008, he served as chief operating officer of the ",
"score": "1.423536"
},
{
"id": "2327431",
"title": "Sold (TV series)",
"text": "Danny, played by Bryan Dick — An estate agent \"with a heart ... who makes [buyers' and sellers'] dreams come true.\" ; Matt, played by Kris Marshall — Danny's colleague, who seeks to exploit people for their money. ; Mr. Colubrine, played by Anthony Head — The owner of the company. Head bases his performance on Alan Sugar. ; Mel, played by Christina Cole ; Phoebe, played by Ella Smith ; Jonty, played by Dan Johnston ",
"score": "1.4218738"
},
{
"id": "27931151",
"title": "The Sale (film)",
"text": " The Sale is a 2014 Iranian social drama film produced & directed by Hossein Shahabi This Film the first time screened in 21st film festival of vesoul France.",
"score": "1.4192293"
},
{
"id": "7128510",
"title": "Richard Sale (director)",
"text": " Born in New York City, Sale was educated at Washington and Lee University. Sale started his career writing as a freelance writer for pulps in the Thirties, appearing regularly in Detective Fiction Weekly (with the Daffy Dill series ), Argosy, Double Detective, and a number of other magazines. In the Forties, he graduated to slick publications like The Country Gentleman and The Saturday Evening Post. In the 1930s, Sale was one of the highest-paid pulp writers. In the mid-Forties to mid-Fifties, he made a career change from writing magazine fiction to screenplays. He became a writer for Paramount pictures, a writer-director for Republic Pictures, 20th Century-Fox, British Lion, United Artists, and Columbia pictures. He even became a television writer, director, producer for Columbia Broadcasting System. Sale's 1936 novel Not Too Narrow, ",
"score": "1.418935"
},
{
"id": "29269805",
"title": "Franco Soldati",
"text": " Franco Soldati (born 30 September 1959 in Udine) is an Italian Commercial director who has been serving as Executive President of Italian football club Udinese Calcio since 1999.",
"score": "1.4161355"
},
{
"id": "29943547",
"title": "Charles Sellier",
"text": " Charles Edward Sellier Jr. (November 9, 1943 – January 31, 2011) was an American television producer, screenwriter, novelist and director, best known for creating the American book and television series The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams. He was also known for directing the notorious Christmas themed slasher film Silent Night, Deadly Night He also wrote and produced more than thirty films and 230 television shows during his career, which spanned four decades.",
"score": "1.4161204"
},
{
"id": "646283",
"title": "Charles Harvey Sells",
"text": " Charles Harvey Sells (September 29, 1889 – January 26, 1978) was the New York State Superintendent of Public Works from May 20, 1943 to September 30, 1948.",
"score": "1.4142017"
}
] |
Who was the director of The Saint?
|
[
"Abdur Rashid Kardar",
"A. R. Kardar"
] |
director
|
The Saint (1941 film)
| 5,953,033 | 70 |
[
{
"id": "10175147",
"title": "David Saint",
"text": " David Saint (born June 1958 in Boston, Massachusetts, US ) is an American artistic director at the George Street Playhouse in New Brunswick, New Jersey, US.",
"score": "1.4916636"
},
{
"id": "10175152",
"title": "David Saint",
"text": " and Fathers, with Holly Hunter; and the West Coast premiere of Lend Me A Tenor, as well as world premieres by such authors as Jonathan Larson, Peter Parnell, Jonathan Marc Sherman, Aaron Sorkin, and others. Saint was recently a panelist for the Philadelphia Theatre Initiative for the Pew Charitable Trust, has taught at Bennington College, and directed the short film Celebrity. He is the recipient of the Alan Schneider Award, Helen Hayes Award, Los Angeles Drama Critics Award, and several Drama-Logue Awards. He is currently president of the Laurents/Hatcher Foundation and literary executor of Arthur Laurents' estate. George Street Playhouse",
"score": "1.4547926"
},
{
"id": "28435639",
"title": "Cyril Gell",
"text": " Gell was chorus director on a number of BBC television movies including The Saint of Bleecker Street in 1956, a production of Il trovatore in 1957, a production of Madam Butterfly in 1957, and a production of the opera Rigoletto in 1958.",
"score": "1.4462112"
},
{
"id": "13826493",
"title": "The Saint (1997 film)",
"text": " Paramount Pictures announced that they would reboot the film with Lorenzo di Bonaventura producing, Dexter Fletcher will direct and Regé-Jean Page will be portraying Templar and will also executive producing the film while Kwame Kwei-Armah will write.",
"score": "1.4425759"
},
{
"id": "3451043",
"title": "The Saint (film series)",
"text": "The Saint in New York (1938) – with Louis Hayward as The Saint ; The Saint Strikes Back (1939) – with George Sanders as The Saint ; The Saint in London (1939) – with George Sanders as The Saint ; The Saint's Double Trouble (1940) – with George Sanders as The Saint ; The Saint Takes Over (1940) – with George Sanders as The Saint ; The Saint in Palm Springs (1941) –with George Sanders as The Saint ; The Saint's Vacation (1941) – with Hugh Sinclair as The Saint ; The Saint Meets the Tiger (produced in 1941 but not released until 1943) – with Hugh Sinclair as The Saint The Saint (film series) refers ",
"score": "1.4282972"
},
{
"id": "13826481",
"title": "The Saint (1997 film)",
"text": " hadn't seen before. Robert Evans left the project—although, contractually, his name remains on the final film's credits—and David Brown (Jaws, Driving Miss Daisy) took over. A new story was commissioned from Jonathan Hensleigh (Die Hard with a Vengeance), which cast Simon Templar as a mercenary hired by a billionaire Russian oil and gas tycoon to steal the secret of cold fusion from an eccentric but beautiful American scientist. The story would take place in Washington, D.C., Upstate New York, St. Petersburg, and Moscow. Setpieces included Dr. Russell skydiving while strapped into a wheelchair and a plane landing in Red Square. ",
"score": "1.4256552"
},
{
"id": "13728707",
"title": "Jeremy Summers",
"text": " Jeremy Summers (18 August 1931 – 14 December 2016) was a British television director and film director, known for his directorship of ITC such as The Saint.",
"score": "1.4145685"
},
{
"id": "14880393",
"title": "Paul Salamunovich",
"text": " Paul Salamunovich KCSG (June 7, 1927 – April 3, 2014) was a Grammy-nominated, American conductor and educator. He was the Music Director of the Los Angeles Master Chorale from 1991 to 2001 and its Music Director Emeritus from 2001 until his death in 2014. He served as Director of Music at St. Charles Borromeo Church in North Hollywood, California, for 60 years between 1949 and 2009. In addition, he held academic positions at a number of Southern California universities. He was also a master clinician, having been invited to conduct just under 1000 festivals and workshops around the world including an unprecedented four consecutive ACDA national conventions—all with different groups. He was acknowledged as an expert in Gregorian chant and has long been recognized for his contributions in the field of sacred music, most notably receiving a Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice, the highest laity award from the papacy in 2013 and was appointed knight of the Order of St Gregory the Great from Pope Paul VI in 1969.",
"score": "1.4139593"
},
{
"id": "13826470",
"title": "The Saint (1997 film)",
"text": " The Saint is a 1997 American espionage thriller film directed by Phillip Noyce, written by Jonathan Hensleigh and Wesley Strick, and starring Val Kilmer in the title role, with Elisabeth Shue and Rade Šerbedžija. The plot of the films revolves around the title character who is a high tech thief and master of disguise who becomes the anti-hero while using the moniker of various saints. He paradoxically lives in the underworld of international industrial theft and espionage. The film was a financial success with a worldwide box office of $169.4 million, rentals of $28.2 million, and continuous DVD sales. It is loosely based on the character of Simon Templar created by Leslie Charteris in 1928 for a series of books published as \"The Saint\", which ran until 1983. The Saint character has also featured in a series of Hollywood films made between 1938 and 1954, a 1940s radio series starring Vincent Price (and others) as Templar, a popular British television series of the 1960s starring Roger Moore, and a 1970s series starring Ian Ogilvy.",
"score": "1.4097805"
},
{
"id": "3451044",
"title": "The Saint (film series)",
"text": " eight B movies made by RKO Pictures between 1938 and 1941, based on some of the books in British author Leslie Charteris' long-running series about the fictional character Simon Templar, better known as The Saint. A few years after creating the character in 1928, Charteris was successful in getting RKO Radio Pictures interested in a film based on one of his books. The first, The Saint in New York, came in 1938 and was based on the 1935 novel of the same name. It starred Louis Hayward as Simon Templar and Jonathan Hale as Inspector Henry Farnack, the American counterpart to the British character, Chief inspector Claud Eustace Teal. The film was a success and seven ",
"score": "1.4084535"
},
{
"id": "13826482",
"title": "The Saint (1997 film)",
"text": " Mayflower described it as one of the top unproduced screenplays. Phillip Noyce was hired to direct. Providing a link to both the 1960s The Saint TV series and the later Return of the Saint revival of the 1970s, Robert S. Baker, the producer of both series, was brought in an executive producer of the film. In a 1997 interview with Des O'Connor for his ITV show, Hugh Grant says he passed on the role after a meeting with Noyce because he didn't like the director's approach to the character. Hugh Grant, Kenneth Branagh, Mel Gibson, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Christian Slater, George ",
"score": "1.4078528"
},
{
"id": "32205443",
"title": "The Saint in New York (film)",
"text": " The Saint in New York is an American 1938 crime film, directed by Ben Holmes and adapted from Leslie Charteris's 1935 novel of the same name by Charles Kaufman and Mortimer Offner. After a police lieutenant is killed, the New York Police Department enlists gentleman criminal Simon Templar to fight criminal elements in the city. Released by RKO Pictures, The Saint in New York marks the first screen appearance of Templar, also known as \"The Saint\". Louis Hayward stars as the title character, with Kay Sutton as his love interest. Alfred Hitchcock was initially discussed as a possible director for the film. This was the first of eight films in RKO's film series about The Saint. After being replaced in the series by George Sanders, Hayward would not play The Saint again until 1953 in Hammer Films production of The Saint's Return. There had not been a Saint film made in twelve years.",
"score": "1.3981922"
},
{
"id": "26674550",
"title": "Jack Hively",
"text": " Sothern; The Man Who Found Himself (1937), which marked the starring debut for Joan Fontaine; Garson Kanin's 1938 comedy, Next Time I Marry, starring Lucille Ball, James Ellison, and Lee Bowman; and the second installment of The Saint franchise, 1939's The Saint Strikes Back, which marked the first time George Sanders appeared in the role. After his work on The Saint, Hively would be given the opportunity to direct his own films, beginning with 1939's They Made Her a Spy. By 1940, he was considered by some to be one of the best directors in Hollywood. Between 1939 and the outbreak of World War II, Hively directed 14 features. Having edited the second film in ",
"score": "1.3974788"
},
{
"id": "5057747",
"title": "The Saint in Manhattan",
"text": " The Saint returns to New York City, feeling restless and bored. But the tedium is about to escalate to full-blown excitement when he is contacted by an old flame, Margo, a ballerina who is set to star in a high profile performance. She has received death threats in the guise of a mutilated doll being left in her dressing room, and as part of the ballet, she will don a million dollar tiara on opening night. The performance goes without mishap, however, upon leaving the stage the tiara has somehow been swapped with a fake, and The Saint's calling card has been left in its empty box. Someone has framed Simon, and his old adversary Inspector Fernack is quick to point the finger.",
"score": "1.3954229"
},
{
"id": "13826480",
"title": "The Saint (1997 film)",
"text": " Saint film series, which would have been faithful to the original writings of Leslie Charteris and feature characters from the original books. This project also failed. A few years later, Paramount Pictures' attempt to make a film of The Saint started with the powerhouse above-the-line team of Robert Evans as producer, Steven Zaillian as writer and Sydney Pollack as director. Ralph Fiennes - hot from Schindler's List and Quiz Show - was offered $1 million for the lead, but eventually passed. In a 1994 interview for Premiere magazine, Fiennes said the screenplay—racing fast cars, breaking into Swiss banks was nothing ",
"score": "1.3910732"
},
{
"id": "25478893",
"title": "The Saint in London",
"text": " The Saint in London is a 1939 British crime film, the third of eight films in RKO's film series featuring the adventures of Simon Templar, alias \"The Saint\". It stars George Sanders as Templar and was produced by William Sistrom. John Paddy Carstairs directed. Lynn Root and Frank Fenton wrote the screenplay based on Leslie Charteris' short story \"The Million Pound Day\", which was published in the 1932 collection The Holy Terror, published in the US as The Saint vs. Scotland Yard.",
"score": "1.3829476"
},
{
"id": "13758549",
"title": "The Saint (2017 film)",
"text": " The Saint is a 2017 American action film directed by Ernie Barbarash and starring Adam Rayner in the title role of Simon Templar, created by Leslie Charteris. This was Sir Roger Moore's final film appearance and the film was dedicated to his memory; Moore portrayed Templar in a 1960s TV series of the same title. Filmed in 2013 as a television pilot for a proposed TV series, the film was not originally intended for release when the series was not picked up. It eventually saw release direct-to-video in 2017 when it was released in tribute to Moore following his death. Ian Ogilvy, who portrayed Templar in a 1970s TV series titled Return of the Saint, also appears.",
"score": "1.3820186"
},
{
"id": "29690116",
"title": "David V. Picker",
"text": " Picker produced The Saint of Fort Washington for Warner Bros. in 1993 and The Crucible for Twentieth Century Fox in 1996. In 1997, Picker became president of Hallmark Entertainment Productions Worldwide to oversee the company's objective of expanding into feature films. From 2004 to 2008, Picker served as chairman of The Producers Guild of America for the East. Picker's memoir about his career in the film industry, Musts, Maybes and Nevers, was released in 2013.",
"score": "1.381099"
},
{
"id": "13826488",
"title": "The Saint (1997 film)",
"text": " A novelization based upon the film script was written by Burl Barer.",
"score": "1.3745155"
},
{
"id": "13758558",
"title": "The Saint (2017 film)",
"text": " A new television adaptation of The Saint was announced in December 2012; Roger Moore was appointed to produce a new series to star Adam Rayner as Simon Templar and Eliza Dushku as his assistant Patricia Holm. In a later promotion, it was also shown that Moore would star in the new series, as would his successor in Return of the Saint, Ian Ogilvy. Production of a pilot episode was completed by early 2013. As of summer 2014, it was awaiting a broadcast time in the U.S. However, the piece underwent reshoots for the ending and add an extra prologue in November 2015, and the pilot episode was retooled as a TV film, The Saint, getting an online ",
"score": "1.3738363"
}
] |
Who was the director of The Pioneers?
|
[
"Franklyn Barrett",
"Walter Franklyn Barrett"
] |
director
|
The Pioneers (1916 film)
| 5,948,000 | 83 |
[
{
"id": "13168935",
"title": "The Pioneers (1926 film)",
"text": "Virginia Beresford ; William Thornton as David Cameron ; Robert Purdie as Donald Cameron ; Connie Martyn as Mary Cameron ; Augustus Neville ; George Chalmers ; W. Dummitt ; 'Big' Bill Wilson ; Sydney Hackett ; Phyllis Culbert ",
"score": "1.5987779"
},
{
"id": "13168933",
"title": "The Pioneers (1926 film)",
"text": " The Pioneers is a 1926 Australian silent film directed by Raymond Longford. The script had been written by Lottie Lyell but she had died by the time filming started. It was considered a lost film but some surviving footage from it has recently emerged.",
"score": "1.5615518"
},
{
"id": "7550436",
"title": "Pioneer Theatre Company",
"text": " with speeches from University of Utah President A. Ray Olpin, Governor Clyde, Dr. C. Lowell Lees and President David O. McKay. Dr. Lees is named the very first Artistic Director for PMT. Dr. C. Lowell Lees left the University in 1964 and Keith M. Engar is appointed to succeed him. During his time at Pioneer Theatre, Keith M. Engar creates the University Resident Theatre Association (URTA) contract with Actors’ Equity Association. It is the first formalized contract between Actors’ Equity and a university theatre. In 1984 Charles Morey is hired as Artistic Director of PTC, with specific direction to fully professionalize the ",
"score": "1.5605953"
},
{
"id": "5090870",
"title": "Jacob Weinberg",
"text": "The Pioneers (1924) ",
"score": "1.5434203"
},
{
"id": "16332642",
"title": "The Pioneers (1916 film)",
"text": " The Pioneers is a 1916 Australian silent film directed by Franklyn Barrett. The film is based on the debut novel by Katharine Susannah Prichard which won £250 in a 1915 literary competition. It is considered a lost film. It was later filmed by Raymond Longford as The Pioneers (1926).",
"score": "1.5330168"
},
{
"id": "28865520",
"title": "The Pioneers (1903 film)",
"text": " The Pioneers is an American silent film and one of the earliest Westerns, having been released by the American Mutoscope and Biograph Company in October 1903. It incorporates part of the footage from Kit Carson, another Western short also released by Biograph in October 1903. Both films were shot on location in the Adirondack Mountains of New York.",
"score": "1.5272925"
},
{
"id": "13168936",
"title": "The Pioneers (1926 film)",
"text": " Katharine Susannah Prichard's novel had won a £1,000 prize in 1915 and had previously been filmed by Franklyn Barrett in 1916. It was directed by Raymond Longford who in September 1925 had accepted a position of director of productions at Australasian Films. He worked on several films for them but the association ended badly. The director complained that the cast of The Pioneers was forced upon him. Filming took place on location near Gosford and at Australasian's studios in Bondi Junction in early 1926. During the shooting of one sequence, William Thornton was thrown from his horse and was seriously injured. Because they were so far from a town, first aid was performed by Longford himself, who had had medical training. Longford sewed four stitches into Thornton's head.",
"score": "1.519385"
},
{
"id": "31694552",
"title": "Pioneer High School for the Performing Arts",
"text": " Pioneer High School for the Performing Arts was founded by a group of performing artists living in the region: Caleb Chapman, a saxophonist and youth band director, who became music director; Mindy Smoot Robbins, owner of a Broadway theatre academy; Kymberly Mellon, an actress and director; Sam Payne, another musician; and Derryl Yeager, director of Odyssey Dance Theatre, who became vice chairman of the governing board. Their objectives in founding the school were to reduce the stress of artistic students trying to combine their arts training with a conventional school day and to train performing artists more thoroughly. It opened ",
"score": "1.5107417"
},
{
"id": "7356598",
"title": "Young Pioneers (film)",
"text": " Young Pioneers is a 1976 American Western television film which aired in March 1976 on ABC. Elements of novels Let the Hurricane Roar and Free Land by Rose Wilder Lane (daughter of Laura Ingalls Wilder) were used as the basis for the movie, with Roger Kern and Linda Purl starring as the focal characters David and Molly Beaton. Although produced as a TV series pilot by ABC Circle Films and ranked #7 in the Nielsen ratings for the week it aired, the movie was not picked up by ABC as a series. A second pilot attempt was made in December 1976 with Young Pioneers' Christmas, but ranked lower at #37 in the Nielsen ratings and was not picked up by the studio for a series.",
"score": "1.5094725"
},
{
"id": "7550438",
"title": "Pioneer Theatre Company",
"text": " sources. Karen Azenberg was appointed Artistic Director of PTC in 2012, replacing Charles Morey who stepped down as the longest sitting artistic director of a major American regional theatre. Managing Director Chris Lino retired in 2019 after 28 years and was replaced by Christopher Massimine. In June 2021, Massimine went on leave after investigations by Fox 13, The Salt Lake Tribune and the New York Times that he falsified information on his resume and his accolades. Development Director Diane L. Parisi was named Acting Managing Director in June 2021. Massimine officially resigned, via a statement to the media, in August 2021.",
"score": "1.497792"
},
{
"id": "8983799",
"title": "Pioneer Productions",
"text": " Founded in 1988, by Nigel Henbest, Heather Couper and Stuart Carter, Pioneer targeted science broadcasting in a period of global tele-media expansion, and sought relationships with US factual television broadcasters. In the 1990s it produced series entitled Raging Planet, and Extreme Machines. Later CGI films included Journey to the Edge of the Universe, The Unsinkable Titanic, Hindenburg: The Last Flight, Extraordinary Animals, In the Womb, and Catastrophe. In 2009 it helped produce the six-part series Christianity: A History for Channel 4.",
"score": "1.4919798"
},
{
"id": "16332644",
"title": "The Pioneers (1916 film)",
"text": "Winter Hall as Dan Farrel ; Alma Rock Phillips as Deidre ; Lily Rochefort as Mary Cameron ; Charles Knight as Donald Cameron ; Fred St Clair as Davey Cameron ; Irve Hayman as Thad McNab ; Martyn Keith as Steve ; Fred Neilson as Fighting Conal ; Nell Rose as Jessie ; George Willougbhy ; Charles Villiers ",
"score": "1.4862683"
},
{
"id": "2481955",
"title": "Pioneers of Enver",
"text": " Debatik, a 1961 movie, is a fictional production, dedicated to the creation of the organization in 1942. Guximtarët, a 1970 movie, describes pioneer summer camps and pioneer mountaineering. Shoku ynë Tili, a 1981 production, described how the organization would affect children's lives academically and socially.",
"score": "1.485358"
},
{
"id": "2282142",
"title": "Again Pioneers",
"text": " Again Pioneers was developed at the request of the Home Missions Council of North America. The film was intended to \"provide inspiration for home missions work by the churches\". The original screenplay by Oviatt McConnell included additional sequences by Alan Shilin.",
"score": "1.4847052"
},
{
"id": "2282134",
"title": "Again Pioneers",
"text": " Again Pioneers (sometimes referred to as Again... Pioneers! ) is a 1950 American black-and-white short drama film produced by Paul F. Heard for the Protestant Film Commission. Directed by William Beaudine, it stars Colleen Townsend, Tom Powers, Sarah Padden, and Regis Toomey. The story is set in the fictional town of Fairview and depicts the friction between the middle-class residents and the impoverished migrants who live on the outskirts in a shantytown called \"The Patch\". The film explores the meaning of the American Dream for both types of residents, and the responsibility of the church to reinstill Christian values of human dignity and freedom into American life. The film was produced at the request of the Home Missions Council of North America. It was not released commercially, but was distributed to 30,000 Protestant denominational churches in the United States.",
"score": "1.4826188"
},
{
"id": "7356600",
"title": "Young Pioneers (film)",
"text": " The project was developed and produced by Ed Friendly for ABC Circle Films with the script written by Blanche Hanalis and directed by Michael O'Herlihy. Ed Friendly and Blanche Hanalis had previously produced and scripted the television series pilot for Little House on the Prairie based on the novels by Laura Ingalls Wilder, the mother Rose Wilder Lane. 400 actors and actresses were interviewed before Linda Purl and Roger Kern were offered the lead roles of Molly and David Beaton. Principal photography began November 28, 1975, in Southern Arizona with additional filming at the Old Tucson Studios in Tucson, Arizona. A scene with 180,000 grasshoppers was done on location in Nogales, Mexico. Sound stages at 20th-Century Fox in Los Angeles, California were used for the blizzard scenes.",
"score": "1.4776175"
},
{
"id": "13168934",
"title": "The Pioneers (1926 film)",
"text": " The story of a Scottish settler and his wife, Donald and Mary Cameron, who live in the Gippsland bush, with their son David. They adopt the daughter of an ex-convict and raise him as their own. The daughter and David Cameron fall in love, but she marries another man.",
"score": "1.4753182"
},
{
"id": "12394341",
"title": "J. Philippe Rushton",
"text": " 2002 From 2002 until his death, he served as the head of the Pioneer Fund, an organization that was founded in 1937 to promote eugenics and that in its early years supported Nazi ideology, for example, by funding the distribution in US churches and schools of a Nazi propaganda film about eugenics. The Pioneer Fund has been described as a white supremacist organization and designated as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center. From Student Resistance to Embracing the Sociological Imagination: Unmasking Privilege, Social Conventions, and Racism, Haddad, Angela T.; Lieberman, Leonard, Teaching Sociology, v30 n3 p328 41 Jul 2002 ",
"score": "1.4612412"
},
{
"id": "12394340",
"title": "J. Philippe Rushton",
"text": " 41 Jul 2002 From 2002 until his death, he served as the head of the Pioneer Fund, an organization that was founded in 1937 to promote eugenics and that in its early years supported Nazi ideology, for example, by funding the distribution in US churches and schools of a Nazi propaganda film about eugenics. The Pioneer Fund has been described as a white supremacist organization and designated as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center. From Student Resistance to Embracing the Sociological Imagination: Unmasking Privilege, Social Conventions, and Racism, Haddad, Angela T.; Lieberman, Leonard, Teaching Sociology, v30 n3 p328 41 ",
"score": "1.46122"
},
{
"id": "12394342",
"title": "J. Philippe Rushton",
"text": " 2002 until his death, he served as the head of the Pioneer Fund, an organization that was founded in 1937 to promote eugenics and that in its early years supported Nazi ideology, for example, by funding the distribution in US churches and schools of a Nazi propaganda film about eugenics. The Pioneer Fund has been described as a white supremacist organization and designated as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center. John Philippe Rushton (December 3, 1943 – October 2, 2012) was a Canadian psychologist and author. He taught at the University of Western Ontario and became known to the ",
"score": "1.4592329"
}
] |
Who was the director of Broadway Jones?
|
[
"Joseph Kaufman"
] |
director
|
Broadway Jones (film)
| 1,381,547 | 90 |
[
{
"id": "31744660",
"title": "David Jones (director)",
"text": " and made his debut as a feature film director with Betrayal (1983), based on Harold Pinter's screenplay adaptation of his 1978 play Betrayal. From 1973 to 1978, Jones was Artistic Director of the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC), at the Aldwych Theatre, where he directed plays by William Shakespeare, Bertolt Brecht, Anton Chekhov, Seán O'Casey, Maxim Gorky, Harley Granville-Barker, Graham Greene, and others, and became an honorary associate director of the RSC in 1991. From 1979 to 1981, he was Artistic Director of the BAM Theater Company (1979–1981). He also directed three productions at the Williamstown Theatre Festival, in Williamstown, Massachusetts: On the Razzle (1981), by Tom Stoppard (2005); Sweet Bird of Youth (1959), by Tennessee Williams (2006), and The Autumn Garden (1951), by Lillian Hellman (2007).",
"score": "1.612947"
},
{
"id": "4326622",
"title": "Robert Edmond Jones",
"text": " His innovative designs for Vladimir Rosing's American Opera Company in 1927 and 1928 were praised by critics. Jones also brought his expressionistic style to many productions put on by the Theatre Guild, with innovative designs for The Philadelphia Story (1937), Othello (1943), and The Iceman Cometh (1946). Jones’s biggest commercial success was with The Green Pastures (1930), which, if we include its revival in 1951, played for a total of 1,642 performances. This revival was Jones’s last production. Other Broadway credits include Holiday (1928), Mourning Becomes Electra (1931), Ah, Wilderness! (1933), Juno and the Paycock (1940), and Lute Song (1946). Jones was also the production designer for some early three-color Technicolor films, such as La ",
"score": "1.590419"
},
{
"id": "5882526",
"title": "Chris Jones (drama critic)",
"text": " Christopher Nigel Jones (born September 10, 1963) is a British-American journalist and academic. He is the chief theater critic and Sunday culture columnist of the Chicago Tribune. Since 2014, he has also served as director of the Eugene O’Neill Theater Center’s National Critics Institute. Jones appears live on the news broadcast of CBS-2 Chicago as a weekly theater critic. In 2018, he was additionally named Broadway theater critic for the Tribune related publication, the New York Daily News. In 2001, Jones was featured in an article in American Theatre magazine about the 12 most influential theater critics in America. In 2016, the New York Times cited Jones as an important reason that Broadway shows try-out in Chicago, noting the role his reviews have played in helping producers improve productions for New York runs.",
"score": "1.5883727"
},
{
"id": "29868530",
"title": "Christine Jones (scenic designer)",
"text": " Christine Jones is an American scenic designer on Broadway. Her best-known designs include Spring Awakening, American Idiot, and Harry Potter and the Cursed Child. In 2010, she created an experimental, two-week project called Theatre for One in which one actor performs for one audience member. It was repeated in 2015. She is a professor at New York University and a lecturer at Princeton University.",
"score": "1.5837551"
},
{
"id": "31403517",
"title": "Sabra Jones",
"text": " With over 170 producing credits and a Tony nomination, Jones’ producing experience spans from Broadway to London with much in between. Her show Alice in Wonderland, directed by Eva Le Gallienne, opened on Broadway in 1982 garnering a Tony nomination. She produced the WNET13 Masterpiece Theatre Production for television. With The Mirror Repertory Company, Jones produced three full repertory seasons, and she continues to work for The Mirror Theater Ltd and the Greensboro Arts Alliance and Residency today. Her latest production, Sinners (written by Joshua Sobol, dir. Brian Cox), debuted in Vermont in summer 2016 and will be performed in Boston in March. In a review on Sinners, Boston's Arts ",
"score": "1.5798573"
},
{
"id": "4326623",
"title": "Robert Edmond Jones",
"text": " (1934) and Becky Sharp (1935), for which he also designed the costumes. One of the early members of the Provincetown Players, Jones worked closely with his friend Eugene O'Neill on many of his productions including Anna Christie, The Great God Brown, and Desire Under the Elms. Jones published many articles on theatre design in the course of his career. His books include Drawings for the Theatre (1925), and The Dramatic Imagination (1941); he also illustrated Kenneth Macgowan's Continental Stagecraft (1922). His book The Dramatic Imagination is considered the definitive work on modern stage design in the first half of the 20th century. He died in the house he was born in on Thanksgiving Day, 1954.",
"score": "1.5784857"
},
{
"id": "5882533",
"title": "Chris Jones (drama critic)",
"text": " Telling the story of Chicago’s theatrical history, his book, Bigger, Brighter, Louder: 150 Years of Chicago Theater (published in 2013 by the University of Chicago Press, ISBN: 9780226059266) showcases the plays, writers and productions that went on to shape the country’s theatrical landscape. A tryout of A Raisin in the Sun with then unknown Sidney Poitier, a “lost” interview with Tennessee Williams, the first performance of the musical Grease, and the biting wit of Claudia Cassidy and Peregrine Pickle are collected among dozens of reviews, each featuring commentary by Jones that puts the excerpt into cultural and historical context. In 2015, Jones wrote the introduction to How to Write About Theater, a book published by Methuen. (ISBN: 9781472520548) Jones authored, ''Rise Up! Broadway and American Society from 'Angels in America’ to ‘Hamilton’'', a book published by Bloomsbury in 2018. (ISBN: 9781350071933)",
"score": "1.5766383"
},
{
"id": "29618071",
"title": "Roadside (musical)",
"text": " Jones directed the play Roadside for his master's thesis in directing at the University of Texas. After Jones arrived in New York, Schmidt and he wrote a few songs for the musical and made a demo (but gave up since they could not acquire the rights).",
"score": "1.5762331"
},
{
"id": "31744659",
"title": "David Jones (director)",
"text": " the Aldwych Theatre in London. He also took over responsibility for running the Aldwych from 1969 to 1972, and again in 1975–77. During this period he championed the plays of David Mercer and Maxim Gorky. For BBC television he directed Ice Age, The Beaux Stratagem and Langrishe, Go Down (1978). He also produced Play of the Month (1977–79). He left the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1979, taking up an appointment as an artistic director at the Brooklyn Academy of Music and to found a resident theatre company modelled on the RSC (Beauman 344). After teaching at the Yale School of Drama in 1981, he returned to England, where for the BBC Television Shakespeare series he directed The Merry Wives of Windsor (1982), and Pericles, Prince of Tyre ",
"score": "1.5676382"
},
{
"id": "29868533",
"title": "Christine Jones (scenic designer)",
"text": " Jones made her Broadway scenic design debut in 2000 with her design for The Green Bird, directed by Julie Taymor. Jones designed the set for the 2007 Tony Award-winning musical Spring Awakening. She was nominated for the Tony Award for Best Scenic Design but lost to Bob Crowley for Mary Poppins. Jones designed the set for the 2010 musical American Idiot, for which she earned her first Tony Award. Jones has said, \"It's just great to be recognized for doing something that you love, with people you love.\" Jones also designed the set for the 2011 musical revival of \"On a Clear Day You Can See Forever\" starring Harry Connick Jr. and the 2016 production of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child in London's West-End.",
"score": "1.563433"
},
{
"id": "4326620",
"title": "Robert Edmond Jones",
"text": " Robert Edmond \"Bobby\" Jones (December 12, 1887 – November 26, 1954) was an American scenic, lighting, and costume designer. He is credited with incorporating the new stagecraft into the American drama. His designs sought to integrate the scenic elements into the storytelling instead of having them stand separate and indifferent from the play’s action. His visual style, often referred to as simplified realism, combined bold vivid use of color and simple, yet dramatic, lighting.",
"score": "1.5599303"
},
{
"id": "694020",
"title": "John Bush Jones",
"text": " John Bush Jones (August 3, 1940 – December 31, 2019) was an American author, theatre director and critic, educator and scholar. He taught theatre for more than two decades at Brandeis University and wrote widely about musical theatre, publishing several books.",
"score": "1.5578895"
},
{
"id": "13022029",
"title": "Lindsay Jones (composer)",
"text": " Lindsay Jones began his career in sound design and composition for theatre in 1994 when he was asked to design a production of \"Suburbia\" for Roadworks Productions in Chicago. Jones made his Broadway debut on October 20, 2013 with the production of \"A Time To Kill\" at the Golden Theatre, providing both original music and sound design. His second show on Broadway was \"Bronx Bombers\" at Circle in the Square Theatre, with its first performance on January 10, 2014. Jones has designed and composed for nearly 60 plays off-Broadway. He has designed and composed for over 500 plays at regional theaters across the United States. Internationally, his work has been heard at The Royal Shakespeare Company (Stratford-Upon-Avon, England), Stratford Shakespeare Festival (Stratford, ",
"score": "1.5576165"
},
{
"id": "8807850",
"title": "Bill T. Jones",
"text": " that explores the tumult of teenage sexuality. Spring Awakening was widely acclaimed at its premiere and later won eight 2007 Tony Awards, in addition to a range of other recognitions. Jones was recipient of the 2007 Tony Award for Best Choreography. Jones is co-creator, director and choreographer of the musical Fela!, which ran off-Broadway in 2008 and opened on Broadway in 2009. Jones's collaborators on the project were Jim Lewis and Stephen Hendel. The play is based on events in the life of Nigerian musician and activist Fela Kuti and is inspired by Fela: This Bitch of a Life, a 1982 authorized biography of Kuti by Carlos Moore. The Broadway presentation won three ",
"score": "1.5540242"
},
{
"id": "5882530",
"title": "Chris Jones (drama critic)",
"text": " the chief theater critic in 2005 and has remained so ever since, now presiding over the Tribune’s dedicated performing-arts website, known as The Theatre Loop with Chris Jones. He is among the most prolific critics in the nation, reviewing about 200 Chicago shows a year and covering all the major Broadway openings. In 2018, he also became Broadway theater critic for the Tribune Publishing owned New York Daily News. Jones has twice served on the jury of the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. For some two decades, he has chaired the American Theatre Critics Association committee that annually recommends a theater for the Tony Award to an outstanding regional theatre.",
"score": "1.5502042"
},
{
"id": "8807832",
"title": "Bill T. Jones",
"text": " William Tass Jones, known as Bill T. Jones, (born February 15, 1952) is an American choreographer, director, author and dancer. He is the co-founder of the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company. Jones is Artistic Director of New York Live Arts, the company's home in Manhattan, whose activities encompass an annual presenting season together with allied education programming and services for artists. Independently of New York Live Arts and his dance company, Jones has choreographed for major performing arts ensembles, contributed to Broadway and other theatrical productions, and collaborated on projects with a range of fellow artists. Jones has been called \"one of the most notable, recognized modern-dance choreographers and directors of our time.\"",
"score": "1.5482175"
},
{
"id": "28738946",
"title": "David Myerscough-Jones",
"text": " Virtuoso, The Master Builder, Metamorphosis, Bomber Harris, and Circles of Deceit. He left the BBC in 1990 and continued his career as a freelance designer. He teamed up with Opera Director Designer John Pascoe to design a production of La Bohème starring Renée Fleming. This was followed by productions of La Traviata, the Turn of the Screw, Don Giovanni, and Rigoletto for Bath and Wessex Opera, and Il Trovatore and the Barber of Seville in America (Walnut Creak). Also at this time he collaborated with lifelong friend Theatre Director Michael Friend for various theatre touring productions including Fado Farces and Stagelands starring Trevor Bannister. Aside from his specialization on musical productions, Myerscough-Jones was also known for his designs for Doctor Who – The Web of Fear.",
"score": "1.5438821"
},
{
"id": "1591111",
"title": "Christopher Gattelli",
"text": " he is the choreographer for The Baker's Wife (Paper Mill Playhouse, Millburn, New Jersey, 2005), Tom Jones (2004), tick, tick...BOOM! (2004, also London Fringe, 2005), Me and My Girl, and O. Henry's Lovers (Goodspeed Opera House, 2003). He directed Jim Henson's Emmet Otter's Jug-Band Christmas at The Goodspeed Opera House, Connecticut in 2008, and choreographed Julie Andrews' The Great American Mousical there in 2012. His production of The Jungle Book played the Goodman Theatre and Huntington Theatre Company in 2013. He is the director of the musical spoof SILENCE! The Musical, which ran in 2005 at NYCFringe and is scheduled to open in London in January 2010. Other West End and London credits include South Pacific and Sunday In the Park With George. He is in charge of musical staging for ",
"score": "1.5376991"
},
{
"id": "5882529",
"title": "Chris Jones (drama critic)",
"text": " Jones started his career as a critic in the 1980s by contributing film reviews, interviews, and reports for WCBE-FM in Columbus, Ohio, and also served as the long-time film critic for the Columbus Alive alternative weekly newspaper. Beginning in the mid-1980s, he began writing for Variety and Daily Variety, developing a particular specialty in reviewing out-of-town tryouts of Broadway musicals, for which he became nationally known. During this time, his arts criticism was also often published in the Los Angeles Times, the New York Times, the Washington Post, American Theatre magazine as well as other newspapers and magazines.<ref name=\"articles.chicagotribune.In 2002, Jones joined the cultural staff of the Chicago Tribune. He ",
"score": "1.5291101"
},
{
"id": "14550486",
"title": "Larry Carpenter",
"text": " At Stratford, and subsequently at the McCarter Theatre in Princeton, NJ, he became the Associate Artistic Director to Michael Kahn. He also met and married his wife Julia MacKenzie. From Stratford, Carpenter moved to New York to become Managing Director of Garland Wright's Lion Theatre Company; and then General Manager of the Harold Clurman Theatre. He also continued to direct. At the Lion he directed Charles Nolte's A Night at the Black Pig and J.M. Barry's Mary Rose – while also sharing directing duties with Wright for the subsequent iterations of Jack Heifner's Vanities. For Playwrights’ Horizons he directed Martin Sherman's Cracks, The Mousetrap, and Anything Goes! He also served as Gower Champion’s Associate Director for his Broadway productions of Rockabye Hamlet, A Broadway Musical, The Act with Liza Minnelli, and 42nd Street. For the next eight years, while continuing to work as a ",
"score": "1.5275972"
}
] |
Who was the director of The Last Word?
|
[
"Binka Zhelyazkova"
] |
director
|
The Last Word (1973 film)
| 5,937,083 | 86 |
[
{
"id": "5951660",
"title": "The Last Word (1979 film)",
"text": " The Last Word is a 1979 film starring Richard Harris. It was the last movie directed by Roy Boulting. It was also known as The Number.",
"score": "1.6182597"
},
{
"id": "27797493",
"title": "The Last Word (2008 film)",
"text": " The Last Word is an offbeat romantic comedy-drama film written and directed by Geoffrey Haley. It stars Winona Ryder and Wes Bentley. It had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival in January, and had a wider release in 2008.",
"score": "1.6083343"
},
{
"id": "3468066",
"title": "Last Words (2020 film)",
"text": " Last Words is a 2020 internationally co-produced drama film directed by Jonathan Nossiter. It was selected to be shown at the 2020 Cannes Film Festival. It premiered at the Deauville American Film Festival on 6 September 2020.",
"score": "1.5768034"
},
{
"id": "5951662",
"title": "The Last Word (1979 film)",
"text": "Richard Harris as Danny Travis ; Karen Black as Paula Herbert ; Martin Landau as Capt. Gerrity ; Dennis Christopher as Ben ; Christopher Guest as Roger ; Penelope Milford as Denise ",
"score": "1.5416028"
},
{
"id": "6950285",
"title": "Simon Rumley",
"text": " independent horror names such as Nacho Vigalondo, Ti West, Adam Wingard, Srdjan Spasojevic and Xavier Gens, the film premiered at Toronto's International Film Festival's Midnight Madness section in 2012. In 2013 Rumley was hired to direct his first 'Hollywood' feature by Boss Media and producer Frank Mancuso, Jr (Species, Ronin, Internal Affairs). The film was co-produced by Ai7le Films, run by actor Peter Facinelli (Twilight). The Last Word is a horror/curse movie based on the true story of Johnny Frank Garrett, executed in Texas in 1992 for the rape and murder of a 76-year-old nun. Garrett maintained his innocence until the end and left behind a curse ",
"score": "1.538047"
},
{
"id": "7958289",
"title": "The Last Word (Australian TV program)",
"text": " The Last Word is an Australian television news and commentary program, broadcast on Sky News Live. The program is hosted and moderated by David Speers, and features regular panellists Paul Murray, Janine Perrett and Laura Jayes. The program sees the Sky News presenters discuss and debate news of the day, focusing primarily on political topics. Speers typically presents the program from the Parliament House studio in Canberra, while the remaining panellists are usually in the Sky News centre in Sydney. The format originated as the 20 minute final segment of PM Agenda, which Speers hosts. In 2016 The Last Word broke out to become its own program, replacing the final 30 minutes of PM Agenda, airing four-times weekly at 5:30pm AEST. James Bracey was a previous panelist before he left Sky News at the end of 2016.",
"score": "1.5221379"
},
{
"id": "15081932",
"title": "The Final Programme (film)",
"text": " The Final Programme is a 1973 British fantasy science fiction-thriller film directed by Robert Fuest, and starring Jon Finch and Jenny Runacre. It was based on the 1968 Jerry Cornelius novel of the same name by Michael Moorcock. It was distributed in the United States and elsewhere as The Last Days of Man on Earth. It is the only Moorcock novel to have reached the screen.",
"score": "1.4985316"
},
{
"id": "7493750",
"title": "Brett Sullivan",
"text": " The Last Word Musical - Sullivan wrote the book, music and lyrics for The Last Word, musical staged at the 2016 New York Musical Festival. The musical was directed by Michael Bello and Choreographed by Nick Kenkel. Additional lyrics by Ryan Cunningham. Nominated for Best Choreography, and Best Supporting Actress in the festival awards. Sullivan played in Australian indie bands Broken Words, Mockingbird and Easy Brother.",
"score": "1.4969865"
},
{
"id": "27702830",
"title": "The Last Word (1973 film)",
"text": " The Last Word (Последната дума, translit. Poslednata duma) is a 1973 Bulgarian drama film directed by Binka Zhelyazkova. It was entered into the 1974 Cannes Film Festival.",
"score": "1.4965317"
},
{
"id": "8795163",
"title": "Last Words (1968 film)",
"text": " Last Words (Letzte Worte) is a 1968 short film by Werner Herzog shot in Crete and on the island of Spinalonga. The film was shot in two days during the filming of Herzog's feature Signs of Life, and edited in one day. The film tells a story of the last man to leave the abandoned island of Spinalonga, which had been used as a leper colony. The man refused to leave, and so was forcibly removed. He now lives in Crete, where he plays the Cretan lyra at nights in a bar, and refuses to speak. The film's narrative style is very unconventional, with most characters speaking their lines several times repeatedly in long takes. The man from the island has the most spoken lines of any character, as he repeatedly explains that he refuses to speak, even a single word.",
"score": "1.4914773"
},
{
"id": "301249",
"title": "The Last Word (radio show)",
"text": " The Last Word is an Irish radio news review show hosted by Matt Cooper on Today FM on weekday evenings between 4:30pm and 7pm. It is produced by Patrick Haughey and includes regular contributions from American conservative commentator Cal Thomas. An hour-long weekend edition, called The Very Last Word and featuring highlights from the weekday programmes, is broadcast each Saturday morning at 7am. Eamon Dunphy originally hosted the show but stepped down in November 2002. The then Sunday Tribune editor Matt Cooper replaced him. Kevin Myers was a regular stand-in presenter in the early years of the show. David Norris gave his first full interview to the programme after announcing his withdrawal from the 2011 Irish presidential election. The show also had a debate with the candidates, including Norris when he re-entered the race.",
"score": "1.4901044"
},
{
"id": "27797494",
"title": "The Last Word (2008 film)",
"text": " An odd-but-gifted poet, Evan Merck (Wes Bentley) makes his living writing suicide notes for the soon-to-be departed. So when he meets Charlotte (Winona Ryder), the free-spirited sister of his latest client, Evan has no choice but to lie about his relationship to her late, lamented brother. Curiously attracted by his evasive charms, a smitten Charlotte begins her pursuit, forcing Evan to juggle an amorous new girlfriend, a sarcastic new client (Ray Romano) and an ever-increasing mountain of lies.",
"score": "1.4809213"
},
{
"id": "1490072",
"title": "The Last Word (game show)",
"text": " The Last Word is a game show seen in syndication in the United States and on the Global Television Network in Canada that was produced by Merrill Heatter Productions and ran for 65 episodes from September 18 to December 15, 1989, with reruns continuing until January 5, 1990. The host was Wink Martindale, and the co-host/announcer was Jennifer Lyall. It was taped in Vancouver, British Columbia. In the Los Angeles-produced pilot, Burton Richardson was the announcer, and Jana White operated the computer and acted as co-host. The show was distributed by Turner Program Services.",
"score": "1.4774168"
},
{
"id": "27797495",
"title": "The Last Word (2008 film)",
"text": "Winona Ryder as Charlotte Morris ; Wes Bentley as Evan ; Ray Romano as Abel ; Gina Hecht as Hilde Morris ; A. J. Trauth as Greg ; John Billingsley as Brady ; Kurt Caceres as Sammy ; Michael Cornacchia as Client ",
"score": "1.4692395"
},
{
"id": "8337592",
"title": "Jerry Cornelius",
"text": "The Final Programme was a 1973 movie adaptation of The Final Programme, directed by Robert Fuest. ",
"score": "1.4681001"
},
{
"id": "29204123",
"title": "Perfect Sense",
"text": " Originally titled The Last Word, Kim Fupz Aakeson's script was originally set in Copenhagen, Denmark, the capital of his homeland, but was transferred to Glasgow, Scotland, after director David Mackenzie's homeland. Scenes were shot in various locations around Glasgow, Mexico City and Kenya. The film premiered at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival.",
"score": "1.4645016"
},
{
"id": "12396084",
"title": "Boulting brothers",
"text": " In the US, Roy directed The Last Word (1979), a comedy starring Richard Harris that was barely seen. When John died of cancer in 1985, Roy stopped making films. His last credit was directing an episode of the Miss Marple series for TV, The Moving Finger (1985). He was working on an adaptation of Terence Rattigan's play Deja Vu when he died. When the National Film Theatre mounted its biggest retrospective to date of British cinema in the late 1980s, Roy who launched it, introduced Desert Victory. The Boulting Brother's films have been described as being \"a sensitive barometer of the changing times\".",
"score": "1.4544144"
},
{
"id": "7950357",
"title": "Tony Spiridakis",
"text": " Tony Spiridakis (born 1959 in Queens, New York) is an American film director, writer, actor, producer and playwright best known for such films as Queens Logic, Tinseltown, The Last Word, If Lucy Fell and Ash Tuesday.",
"score": "1.4495449"
},
{
"id": "29013322",
"title": "The Last Word (Greene short story)",
"text": " \"The Last Word\" is a dystopian short story by author Graham Greene, written in 1988 (see 1988 in literature). It first appeared in The Independent but can also be found in collections of his short fiction, notably the Penguin edition of The Last Word and Other Stories, for which it is the lead story. The story, written toward the end of Greene's life, reflects his frustration at the declining influence of religion, particularly Catholicism, in the modern world. The Last Word is Greene's final short story, before his death from leukemia in 1991.",
"score": "1.4307181"
},
{
"id": "27398062",
"title": "Last House on Dead End Street",
"text": " all obviously false.\" However, a review published in 1989 by critic Chas Balun, had in fact identified the film's director as \"a young New York film student named Roger Watkins.\" In December 2000, a contributor posting as \"pnest\" on the Internet messageboards of FAB Press (a publishing house devoted to cult movies), claimed to be the director, writer, producer, and editor of the film, \"Victor Janos.\" The poster later revealed his identity as Roger Watkins. After the release of Last House on Dead End Street, Watkins had had a career as a pornographic film director, under the pseudonym Richard Mahler.",
"score": "1.4266801"
}
] |
Who was the director of Escape?
|
[
"Wyllis Cooper",
"Willis Cooper"
] |
director
|
Escape (1950 TV series)
| 1,385,900 | 92 |
[
{
"id": "13806891",
"title": "Walter Wood (producer)",
"text": " at the Cannes Film Festival. Wood reunited with Don Murray for Escape from East Berlin, a 1962 film directed by Robert Siodmak. The film is based on a news story of twenty-eight people who tunneled to freedom under the Berlin Wall earlier that same year. He served as executive producer on the 1971 film, The Todd Killings. The film, directed by Barry Shear, is based on murders committed by Charles Schmid in Tucson in the 1960s. In 1974, the Mayor of New York, Abraham Beame set up the Mayor Advisory Council on Motion Pictures and Television and Wood was appointed its first director. Wood’s job ",
"score": "1.5756495"
},
{
"id": "7950277",
"title": "Richard Tuggle",
"text": " Richard Tuggle is an American film director and writer best known as the writer of Escape from Alcatraz, the writer and director of Tightrope, and the director of Out of Bounds.",
"score": "1.5727577"
},
{
"id": "15083943",
"title": "Alfred Hitchcock's unrealized projects",
"text": " Hitchcock desperately wanted to direct Norma Shearer, Robert Taylor, and Conrad Veidt in one of the first World War II dramas, Escape. Hitchcock, a long-time admirer of Shearer's acting, had sought for years to find a suitable project for her. However, Hitchcock was shut out of the project when the novel Escape by Ethel Vance (pen name of Grace Zaring Stone) was purchased by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Hitchcock knew he could never work for the notorious MGM studio head Louis B. Mayer, who selected Mervyn LeRoy to produce and direct the film, which indeed starred Shearer and was released in late 1940. Years later, Hitchcock made the statement about the lack of true Hollywood leading ladies with the quote, \"Where are the Norma Shearers?\"",
"score": "1.5688646"
},
{
"id": "16311743",
"title": "Escapes (film)",
"text": " Escapes is a 2017 documentary film about the life of flamenco dancer, actor, and Blade Runner screenwriter Hampton Fancher directed by Michael Almereyda.",
"score": "1.5657055"
},
{
"id": "8656381",
"title": "Escape (1988 film)",
"text": "Atef El-Tayeb as A film director. ; Written by: Mustafa Muharram (Story) Bashir Al Deek (Screenplay and Dialogue) ; Mohsen Nasr as Director of Photography ; Nadia Shoukry (montage) ; Production Department: Tamidou Production and Distribution (Medhat El Sherif) ; Ibrahim Al-Mashnab as Executive Producer ; Magdy Kamel (II) (Audio Engineer) ; Tamido Productions and Distribution as Distribution Company ; The soundtrack, which is one of the immortal works of Modi Al-Imam, was sung on the stage of the program with the voice of many young talents and led by the orchestra of musician Nader Abbasi ",
"score": "1.5586149"
},
{
"id": "5383643",
"title": "The Escape (2016 film)",
"text": " The Escape is a 2016 American short action film produced by BMW to promote the car manufacturer's 2017 5 Series. It was directed and co-written by Neill Blomkamp, and stars Clive Owen, Jon Bernthal, Dakota Fanning, and Vera Farmiga. The film, which continues the plot of BMW's series of adverts titled The Hire, was posted on BMW USA's YouTube channel on October 23, 2016. The short was filmed over the course of one-and-a-half months during summer of 2016 in Toronto, Ontario. Visual effects were completed in September 2016, ready for release the following month.",
"score": "1.5170654"
},
{
"id": "5526848",
"title": "The Last Escape (1970 film)",
"text": " The Last Escape, also known as O.S.S., is a 1970 American-West German international co-production war film directed by Walter Grauman and starring Stuart Whitman, John Collin and Martin Jarvis. It was filmed by Oakmont Productions for Mirisch Productions near Munich in 1968 but not released until 1970. Interiors were shot at the Bavaria Studios in Munich. The film's sets were designed by the art director Rolf Zehetbauer.",
"score": "1.512481"
},
{
"id": "14162868",
"title": "The Escape (1914 film)",
"text": " The Escape was a 1914 American silent drama film written and directed by D. W. Griffith and starred Donald Crisp. The film is based on the play of the same name by Paul Armstrong who also wrote the screenplay. It is now considered lost. The master negative of the production was destroyed in the disastrous 1914 Lubin vault fire in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.",
"score": "1.5112038"
},
{
"id": "14129974",
"title": "Escapement (film)",
"text": " Producer Richard Gordon later said there were major problems with the film's special effects. He also said that he had a dispute with Anglo-Amalgamated, who did not want the movie to get an X certificate in England, whereas Gordon wanted more horror for the US.",
"score": "1.5110991"
},
{
"id": "7228435",
"title": "The Escape (1939 film)",
"text": " The Escape is a 1939 American action film directed by Ricardo Cortez and written by Robert Ellis and Helen Logan. The film stars Kane Richmond, Amanda Duff, June Gale, Edward Norris, Henry Armetta and Frank Reicher. The film was released on October 6, 1939, by 20th Century Fox.",
"score": "1.5094299"
},
{
"id": "12961253",
"title": "The Escape (1928 film)",
"text": " The Escape is a 1928 American drama film directed by Richard Rosson and written by Garrett Graham and Paul Schofield. It is based on the 1913 play The Escape by Paul Armstrong. The film stars William Russell, Virginia Valli, Nancy Drexel, George Meeker, William Demarest and James Gordon. The film was released on April 29, 1928, by Fox Film Corporation.",
"score": "1.5067847"
},
{
"id": "10397293",
"title": "No Escape (2015 film)",
"text": " No Escape is a 2015 American action thriller film directed by John Erick Dowdle, who co-wrote the screenplay with his brother, Drew Dowdle. The film stars Owen Wilson, Lake Bell, and Pierce Brosnan, and tells the story of an expat engineer trapped with his family in an unidentified country in Southeast Asia during a violent uprising. The film was released on August 26, 2015, by The Weinstein Company. It had special sneak previews in the Philippines on August 16 and 17, 2015, as well as multiple pre-screenings throughout the United States before its official release.",
"score": "1.5005522"
},
{
"id": "492944",
"title": "The Escape (1998 film)",
"text": " The Escape is a 1998 Canadian action TV movie directed by Stuart Gillard starring Patrick Dempsey.",
"score": "1.5002565"
},
{
"id": "13376916",
"title": "Robert Rodriguez's unrealized projects",
"text": " In March 2017, it was announced that Rodriguez will direct the remake of the 1981 dystopian sci-fi action film Escape from New York, with the original's director Carpenter producing. In February 2019, new development surfaced when Leigh Whannell and Luther creator Neil Cross were hired by 20th Century Fox to write a new script.",
"score": "1.499795"
},
{
"id": "29429086",
"title": "Escape from Tomorrow",
"text": " Escape from Tomorrow is a 2013 American independent thriller film written and directed by Randy Moore in his directorial debut. It tells the story of an unemployed father having increasingly bizarre experiences and disturbing visions on the last day of a family vacation at the Walt Disney World Resort. It premiered in January at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival and was later a personal selection of Roger Ebert, shown at his 15th annual film festival in Champaign, Illinois. The film was a 2012 official selection of the PollyGrind Film Festival, but at the time filmmakers were still working on some legal issues and asked that it not be screened. The film drew attention because Moore had ",
"score": "1.4960716"
},
{
"id": "14212777",
"title": "Mark Osborne (filmmaker)",
"text": "Escape from Hat (director) ",
"score": "1.4877036"
},
{
"id": "14162872",
"title": "The Escape (1914 film)",
"text": " The Escape was based on a play by Paul Armstrong, a prolific playwright best known for his properties Alias Jimmy Valentine (1910) and Salomy Jane (1907). Griffith's film version was begun first, finished second, but released third among the cycle of five films he made at Reliance-Majestic Studios between his ouster at Biograph Company and the advent of The Birth of a Nation (1915). Filming of The Escape began in New York City, but was completed in Los Angeles partly due to an illness in the cast. There was a long delay in getting it out; although Mutual Film finally released it on June 1, 1914, response to The Escape was of a mixed character and the film was dumped on the States' Rights market by the end of the year. Lillian Gish recalled The Escape as one of the finest films Griffith ever made, whereas Griffith himself regarded its failure as a momentary distraction during the planning stages of The Birth of a Nation.",
"score": "1.4842365"
},
{
"id": "27568985",
"title": "Escape (1950 TV series)",
"text": " Escape was a 30-minute live American dramatic anthology television series produced and directed for CBS by Wyllis Cooper. Narrated by William Conrad, the series was the television counterpart to a successful CBS Radio series of the same name (1947–1954). Thirteen episodes airing on CBS from January 5, 1950, to March 30, 1950. The show's stories \"depicted people attempting to deal with danger, the supernatural, or some fantasized situation.\" Among its guest stars were Kim Stanley, Lee Marvin, Tommy Rettig, and Brian Keith. The announcers were Jack McCoy and Elliott Lewis.",
"score": "1.4751048"
},
{
"id": "334102",
"title": "Escape at Dannemora",
"text": " Escape at Dannemora is an American television limited series that premiered on Showtime on November 18, 2018. It is based on the 2015 Clinton Correctional Facility escape. The seven-episode series was created and written by Brett Johnson and Michael Tolkin and directed by Ben Stiller. It stars Benicio del Toro, Patricia Arquette, Paul Dano, Bonnie Hunt, Eric Lange, and David Morse.",
"score": "1.4738259"
},
{
"id": "5383646",
"title": "The Escape (2016 film)",
"text": "Clive Owen as Driver ; Jon Bernthal as Holt ; Dakota Fanning as Lily ; Vera Farmiga as Dr. Nora Phillips ",
"score": "1.4651408"
}
] |
Who was the director of These Children?
|
[
"Mario Mattoli"
] |
director
|
These Children
| 2,912,083 | 94 |
[
{
"id": "12867980",
"title": "Are These Our Children",
"text": " Are These Our Children? is a 1931 American pre-Code drama film directed by Wesley Ruggles and written by Howard Estabrook. The film stars Eric Linden, Ben Alexander, Beryl Mercer, Mary Kornman, Arline Judge, and Rochelle Hudson. The film was released on November 14, 1931 by RKO Pictures",
"score": "1.5302706"
},
{
"id": "13253983",
"title": "The Children (2008 film)",
"text": " Director Tom Shankland won the Special Mention Award at the Fantasia International Film Festival in 2009 for his professional approach to the children actors in the film.",
"score": "1.4891579"
},
{
"id": "6321475",
"title": "These Three",
"text": " These Three is a 1936 American drama film directed by William Wyler and starring Miriam Hopkins, Merle Oberon, Joel McCrea, and Bonita Granville. The screenplay by Lillian Hellman is based on her 1934 play The Children's Hour. A 1961 remake of the film, also directed by Wyler, was released as The Children's Hour in the US and The Loudest Whisper in the UK.",
"score": "1.4789429"
},
{
"id": "13159962",
"title": "Children of Jerusalem",
"text": " Children of Jerusalem is a series of 7 documentary films directed by Beverly Shaffer, a Canadian filmmaker, between 1991 and 1996. The series show the life in Jerusalem from the distinct points of view of the municipality's children of various cultural, economic, social and religious backgrounds.",
"score": "1.4740293"
},
{
"id": "3004685",
"title": "Richard Kotuk",
"text": " The 51st State. He also worked as a producer for CBS Reports for five years. His documentary films won numerous awards and honors. Children of Darkness (1983), which explored the lack of proper mental health care for seriously emotionally disturbed children in America, received four Emmys and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Feature Length Documentary. Kotuk and Ara Chekmayan, the film's co-producer and co-writer, faced some challenges in trying to gain permission to shoot at certain locations. The New York State Office of Mental Health denied them access to film at South Beach Psychiatric Center on Staten Island. To get around that, Kotuk and Chekmayan hid the identities of individuals who were willing to speak with them and they also shot with a hidden camera.",
"score": "1.4507531"
},
{
"id": "693293",
"title": "List of directors of BBC Children's",
"text": " The Director of BBC Children's is the Editorial Head of BBC Children's and Education though the post has had a variety of titles since the department's inception in 1950. The position is line managed by Charlotte Moore.",
"score": "1.4469311"
},
{
"id": "12592975",
"title": "Youth Runs Wild",
"text": " Edward Dmytryk, who had recently directed the sensationalistic films Hitler's Children and Behind the Rising Sun (both in 1943), was initially set to direct Youth Runs Wild – which at various time had the working titles \"The Dangerous Age\", \"Look to Your Children\" and \"Are These Our Children?\" – but he left to direct Tender Comrade. The film went into production under director Mark Robson, a regular in the Val Lewton unit, from November 3 to December 21, 1943. For the shoot, the cinematographer, John J. Mescall, experimented with a new \"swivel lens\" that would allow a nearly infinite depth of focus. The film was inspired by a photo essay that appeared in Look magazine on ",
"score": "1.4461807"
},
{
"id": "10095572",
"title": "David Berg",
"text": "Children of God, Documentary, Directed by John Smithson, 1994 ; Cult Killer, documentary on Ricky Rodriguez and child abuse within The Family International ; A&E's Cults and Extreme Belief, episode 3 (2018) is about David Berg, the Children of God, its victims, and the survivors. ",
"score": "1.4421144"
},
{
"id": "25562642",
"title": "A Child Is Waiting",
"text": " Producer Stanley Kramer modeled the film's school on the Vineland Training School in New Jersey. He wanted to bring the plight of mentally and emotionally disturbed children to the movie-going public and try \"to throw a spotlight on a dark-ages type of social thinking which has tried to relegate the subject of retardation to a place under the rocks.\" He wanted to cast Burt Lancaster because the actor had a troubled child of his own (his son Bill had polio that made one of his legs shorter than the other). Ingrid Bergman, Katharine Hepburn, and Elizabeth Taylor were considered for the role of Jean Hansen, which went to Judy Garland, who previously had worked ",
"score": "1.4391286"
},
{
"id": "25562643",
"title": "A Child Is Waiting",
"text": " Lancaster and Kramer on the 1961 film Judgment at Nuremberg. She was experiencing personal problems at the time and the director felt a supportive work environment would help her get through them. When original director Jack Clayton was forced to withdraw due to a scheduling problem, he was replaced by John Cassavetes, who was still under contract to Paramount Pictures, on the recommendation of screenwriter Abby Mann. Cassavetes was fond of improvisation and his approach to filmmaking clashed with those of Kramer and the leading players. Most of the students in the film were portrayed by actual mentally-challenged children from Pacific State Hospital in Pomona, California. After the film's release, Kramer recalled, \"They surprised ",
"score": "1.43799"
},
{
"id": "25562640",
"title": "A Child Is Waiting",
"text": " A Child Is Waiting is a 1963 American drama film written by Abby Mann based on his 1957 Westinghouse Studio One teleplay of the same name. The film was produced by Stanley Kramer and directed by John Cassavetes. Burt Lancaster portrays the director of a state institution for mentally handicapped and emotionally disturbed children, and Judy Garland is a new teacher who challenges his methods.",
"score": "1.4376208"
},
{
"id": "25885163",
"title": "Stephen Tompkinson",
"text": " In 2006, Tompkinson made his directing debut in the Midlands, at the helm of the BBC1 afternoon drama The Lightning Kid. He was shadowed by a film crew making the documentary Director's Debut: Stephen Tompkinson's Story that aired immediately prior to the drama, with the intent of revealing the challenges faced by a new director.",
"score": "1.4362123"
},
{
"id": "5980689",
"title": "Children of the Night (1985 film)",
"text": " Children of the Night is a 1985 American made-for-television drama film directed by Robert Markowitz. The film is a fictionalized biopic of Dr. Lois Lee, following her work among young prostitutes in Hollywood and the organization Children of the Night that she founded as a result.",
"score": "1.432756"
},
{
"id": "30000081",
"title": "A War of Children",
"text": " A War of Children is a 1972 television film directed by George Schaefer, written by James Costigan, and starring Vivien Merchant, Jenny Agutter, and John Ronane.",
"score": "1.4269955"
},
{
"id": "13253970",
"title": "The Children (2008 film)",
"text": " The Children is a 2008 British horror thriller film set around the New Year holiday directed by Tom Shankland, based on a story by Paul Andrew Williams and starring Eva Birthistle and Hannah Tointon. The film premiered on 5 December 2008.",
"score": "1.4219489"
},
{
"id": "14609523",
"title": "Norman Felton",
"text": " Felton started out directing community theatre before becoming a producer-director of radio programs, such as Curtain Time for NBC in Chicago. In 1949, he directed the three-week run of These Are My Children for NBC, which is considered the first daily daytime soap opera. In 1950, he moved to New York to direct live television shows. In 1952 he won an Emmy award for Robert Montgomery Presents.",
"score": "1.4217908"
},
{
"id": "30988525",
"title": "Clarence Avant",
"text": " In September 1973, Paramount Pictures released Save the Children, with Avant serving as executive producer. Filmed at the Operation PUSH Black Expo in Chicago, the production mixed performances of top black entertainers with footage depicting blacks, especially children, in various conditions, including war-ravaged and malnourished refugees. The film premiered at the Apollo Theater in Harlem.",
"score": "1.4216657"
},
{
"id": "32533034",
"title": "Shirley Chisholm",
"text": " From 1953 to 1954 she was director of the Friend in Need Nursery, located in Brownsville, Brooklyn, and then from 1954 to 1959 she was director of the Hamilton-Madison Child Care Center, located in Lower Manhattan. At the latter there were 130 children, ages three to seven, and 24 employees reporting to her. From 1959 to 1964, she was an educational consultant for the Division of Day Care in New York City's Bureau of Child Welfare. There she was in charge of supervising ten day-care centers as well as starting up new ones. She became known as an authority on issues involving early education and child welfare. Chisholm entered the world of politics in 1953 when she joined Wesley \"Mac\" Holder's effort ",
"score": "1.4197438"
},
{
"id": "5436636",
"title": "Robert N. Zagone",
"text": " was compared to footage from the feature film with Jack Nicholson receiving electroshock therapy. Rainbow's End (1978) Director Zagone directed two programs in this Emmy Award-winning national PBS children's series for DEAF Media, starring members of the National Theatre of the Deaf. These programs were the first television productions designed especially for deaf children and their families. ''Where You There? Nguzo Saba Films Series for PBS'' (1977–78) Director These seven half-hour programs aimed to create informative and entertaining documentaries about African-American cultural history. They were all produced by Carol Munday Lawrence. The programs included: Dancin' Wheels (1979) Director This program was one of largest ",
"score": "1.4179087"
},
{
"id": "30157442",
"title": "The Children (1980 film)",
"text": " The Children (a.k.a. The Children of Ravensback) is a 1980 low-budget horror film, written and produced by Carlton J. Albright. The movie is about five children in a small town who, thanks to a yellow toxic cloud, are transformed into bloodless zombies with black fingernails who microwave every living thing they put their hands on. The surviving adults of the town must attempt to put a stop to them. The film is distributed by Troma Entertainment.",
"score": "1.4163135"
}
] |
Who was the director of Emergency Landing?
|
[
"Arne Skouen"
] |
director
|
Emergency Landing (1952 film)
| 1,269,483 | 88 |
[
{
"id": "14139863",
"title": "Emergency Landing (1952 film)",
"text": "Henki Kolstad - Hans ; Jack Kennedy - Eddie, captain ; Randi Kolstad - Kristin ; Bjarne Andersen - Stråmannen ; Jens Bolling - Knut ; Einar Vaage - Edvartsen, churchwarden ; Samuel Matlowsky - Leo, sergeant ; Lee Payant - Fiorello, 2nd lt. ; John Robbins - Don, sergeant ; Lee Zimmer - Steve, sergeant ; Chris Bugge - Mart, 1st lt. ; Joachim Holst-Jensen - Willie, the vicar (as J. Holst Jensen) ",
"score": "1.533505"
},
{
"id": "12330898",
"title": "Școala Superioară de Aviație Civilă Flight 111",
"text": " As a direct result of the crash of flight RFT111 and the response to it, the head of the national emergency response department, IGSU, resigned. One day later, also as a result, the Interior Minister Radu Stroe resigned. A passenger on board had died of hypothermia after surviving the crash because of the long emergency response. This has led to an overhaul of the country's emergency response methods. In response to an open letter, Gary Machado, Executive Director of European Emergency Number Association assigned blame for the situation on Neelie Kroes, who at the time of the incident had not enacted European-level regulation requiring provision of GPS co-ordinates in emergencies. The lack of provision of this critical information from the mobile company of the 112 caller to the emergency services was recognised as a major factor in the lethal delay in the rescue.",
"score": "1.525379"
},
{
"id": "27614086",
"title": "Emergency Landing (1941 film)",
"text": " Emergency Landing (a.k.a. Robot Pilot) is a 1941 American aviation spy-fi romantic screwball comedy film directed by William Beaudine. The film stars Forrest Tucker in his second film and in his first leading role with co-stars Carol Hughes and Evelyn Brent. Emergency Landing features much mismatched stock footage of various types of aircraft.",
"score": "1.4988652"
},
{
"id": "27614093",
"title": "Emergency Landing (1941 film)",
"text": " Shortly after release, Emergency Landing was re-titled Robot Pilot. Merely a B film, Variety felt the film's major asset was \"sex appeal\".",
"score": "1.495574"
},
{
"id": "14139861",
"title": "Emergency Landing (1952 film)",
"text": " Emergency Landing (Nødlanding) is a 1952 Norwegian war film directed by Arne Skouen. It was entered into the 1952 Cannes Film Festival. The film depicts the Norwegian resistance attempting to hide shot-down American aviators from the German occupation forces.",
"score": "1.4882209"
},
{
"id": "13264989",
"title": "Jeffrey Skiles",
"text": " (though he had less experience in the Airbus A320). Both of Skiles' parents were pilots during his childhood, and he became a pilot himself when he was just sixteen years old. He first worked flying cargo airplanes, and then worked for Midstate Airlines from 1983 to 1986. At the time of the emergency landing he had been with US Airways for 23 years. Atul Gawande, author of The Checklist Manifesto, asserted that the successful emergency landing relied on the cooperation of Sullenberger and Skiles. Gawande's central premise is that even really experienced people in any field encounter rare events, and that successfully coping ",
"score": "1.4816668"
},
{
"id": "27919361",
"title": "Adriel N. Williams",
"text": " copilot on the aircraft that dropped the first Army paratrooper at Fort Benning, Georgia. He graduated from the National War College in Washington, D.C., in 1959. Following graduation he was assigned to the Directorate of Plans, Deputy Chief of Staff, Plans and Programs, Headquarters U.S. Air Force, as assistant deputy director for policy. In August 1960, he became the deputy director for policy and on April 22, 1961, he was promoted to brigadier general He served in the Pentagon until he was assigned as the commander, Air Rescue Service in August 1963. He served as vice commander, Eastern Transport Air Force (Military Air Transport Service) ",
"score": "1.4804939"
},
{
"id": "11115858",
"title": "ČSA Flight 001",
"text": " A surviving passenger later claimed in an interview that flight captain requested emergency landing in Brno but it was rejected because of the Vietnamese delegation visiting the city and an emergency landing would harm the image of the country. He also claimed that Vienna airport offered an emergency landing permission but communist authorities rejected it. It is unclear how a surviving passenger would be aware of the captain's actions during the flight, or how searching for an alternate emergency landing site relates to an unstabilized approach with inadvertent thrust reversal deployment at Bratislava.",
"score": "1.4732366"
},
{
"id": "27614091",
"title": "Emergency Landing (1941 film)",
"text": "Forrest Tucker as Jerry Barton ; Carol Hughes as Betty Lambert ; Evelyn Brent as Maude Marshall ; Emmett Vogan as \"Doc\" Williams ; William Halligan as George B. Lambert ; George Sherwood as Jones ; Joaquin Edwards as Pedro ; I. Stanford Jolley as Karl ; Stanley Price as Otto ; Jack Lescoulie as Captain North ; Paul Scott as Colonel Lemon ; Billy Curtis as Judge Gildersleeve ",
"score": "1.4602883"
},
{
"id": "27614087",
"title": "Emergency Landing (1941 film)",
"text": " Arizona inventor \"Doc\" Williams (Emmett Vogan) has invented a wireless remote control that can pilot an aircraft. Despite his efforts and those of his friend, pilot Jerry Barton (Forrest Tucker), they can not interest anyone in the invention. Barton has found a job as a test pilot for a millionaire named George Lambert (William Halligan) with his own aircraft company. When Doc brings a model of his invention, the two send their model aircraft to buzz Lambert on the golf course. Lambert is fascinated and arranges a test, but his daughter Betty is not, especially when the model lands in a puddle and drenches ",
"score": "1.4449124"
},
{
"id": "10105130",
"title": "Jay Greene",
"text": " flight operations director George Abbey, he began the process of training to become a flight director. He worked STS-3 and STS-4 as a backup flight director, learning the job by being paired with the experienced flight director Tommy Holloway and observing him at work. Greene's first mission as flight director in his own right was STS-6, which launched on April 6, 1983. As a flight director, Greene specialized in the ascent shift, considered to be one of the most demanding and dangerous phases of a mission. He worked on ten flights between 1983 and 1986, including STS-61-C, which was notable for having included Rep. Bill Nelson (D-FL) as a member of the crew. In his book about the mission, Nelson characterized Greene as a \"no-nonsense type of man,\" \"underpaid and overworked,\" yet dedicated to his job. His tenth and final mission as lead Flight Director was on STS-51-L.",
"score": "1.4448205"
},
{
"id": "8923343",
"title": "Miracle Landing",
"text": " life jackets. Gail Kornberg becomes hysterical when she cannot get a life jacket for David, but soon is calmed by Michelle. Roy Wesler (Glenn Cannon) panics when he sees hydraulic fluid leaking from the wings. The tower alerts Kahului Fire and Rescue personnel and they arrive before the crippled jet lands. Finally after several tense minutes, Mimi and Bob are able to figure out a plan for the emergency. After some time, the airliner lands but with difficulties in the brakes and hydraulics. The pilots were worried that the landing might result in a broken aircraft and fire, but miraculously their landing resulted in no deaths and the emergency notification allowed crews to treat and evacuate passengers immediately.",
"score": "1.4413934"
},
{
"id": "27614092",
"title": "Emergency Landing (1941 film)",
"text": " Principal photography for Emergency Landing took place from late March to early April 1941. After a stint in Great Britain, director William \"One Shot\" Beaudine returned to America in 1937 but had trouble re-establishing himself at the major studios. After working at Warner Brothers, Beaudine found work on Poverty Row, working for studios specializing in low-budget films, such as Monogram Pictures and Producers Releasing Corporation. Beaudine became a specialist in comedies, thrillers and melodramas making dozens for these studios. By the 1940s, Beaudine had a reputation for being a resourceful, no-nonsense director who could make feature films in a matter of days, sometimes as few as five.",
"score": "1.4409819"
},
{
"id": "25670011",
"title": "2016 Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations Il-76 crash",
"text": " Flags were flown at half-mast and television programmes were cancelled as respect for those who were killed. The Russian Minister of Emergency Situations Vladimir Puchkov told the families of the deceased crew that he \"expresses his condolences\". He stated that \"All our Emergencies Ministry team is mourning. These were professional pilots and rescuers. We will never forget them.\" The pilots were said to be experienced, and had been in the job for decades. The Chairman of the Interstate Aviation Committee Sergei Yakimenko also commented on the incident, citing that human, equipment, and environmental factors may have all contributed to the crash.",
"score": "1.4369891"
},
{
"id": "3414540",
"title": "R. David Paulison",
"text": " after Hurricane Andrew in 1992 and after the crash of ValuJet Flight 592 over the Everglades in 1996. On September 20, 2001, President George W. Bush announced that he would appoint Paulison (a Democrat) as the head of the United States Fire Administration, now a division of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Directorate of Preparedness. The nomination was sent to the U.S. Senate on October 16, 2001. Paulison was confirmed unanimously on November 30, 2001. It was not in this role, rather he had also been made Director of FEMA's Preparedness Division, that Paulison released an advisory on February 10, 2003 recommending households keep several common items on ",
"score": "1.4355713"
},
{
"id": "9331023",
"title": "John Hodge (engineer)",
"text": " in the Mercury program, MA-9, was scheduled to last long enough that a second flight director was needed in Mission Control. Thus, in 1963, Hodge became a flight director, choosing blue as his team color. The missions that he worked on included Gemini 8, where he was the first person other than Kraft to be lead flight director for a mission. Hodge was on shift when a stuck Gemini thruster brought a rapid end to the mission. He was also on duty during the launch test that resulted in the Apollo 1 fire which killed Virgil Grissom, Edward White and Roger Chaffee. ",
"score": "1.4344401"
},
{
"id": "24927718",
"title": "David Leestma",
"text": " as the Director, Flight Crew Operations Directorate, in November 1992. As Director, FCOD, he had overall responsibility for the Astronaut Office and for Johnson Space Center (JSC) Aircraft Operations. During his tenure as Director, 41 Shuttle flights and 7 Mir missions were successfully flown. He was responsible for the selection of Astronaut Groups 15, 16 and 17. While director, he oversaw the requirements, development modifications of the T-38A transition to the T-38N avionics upgrades. In September 1998, Leestma was reassigned as the Deputy Director, Engineering, in charge of the management of Johnson Space Center Government Furnished Equipment (GFE) Projects. In August 2001 he was assigned as ",
"score": "1.4311696"
},
{
"id": "28796219",
"title": "Crisis in Mid-Air",
"text": " as the head of the Civil Aviation Authority in Los Angeles had sent for the psychologist. Brad Mullins (Dana Elcar), as the head of the controllers, wants to closely watch the controllers as some of them are reported to have problems and there is fear for consequences in air safety. The presence of Dr. Denvers increases the stress as everyone knows that if detected to be mentally unstable, the controller will lose his job. Nick explains all the tricks of the trade to the psychologist including why even rules have to bend to allow traffic to keep on going instead of queuing for long ",
"score": "1.4263375"
},
{
"id": "4436654",
"title": "Space Shuttle Challenger disaster",
"text": " NASA also created a new Office of Safety, Reliability and Quality Assurance, headed as the commission had specified by a NASA associate administrator who reported directly to the NASA administrator. Former Challenger flight director Greene became chief of the Safety Division of the directorate. After the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster in 2003, the Columbia Accident Investigation Board (CAIB) concluded that NASA had not effectively set up an independent office for safety oversight. The CAIB concluded that the ineffective safety culture that had resulted in the Challenger accident was also responsible for the subsequent disaster.",
"score": "1.4245074"
},
{
"id": "9329155",
"title": "Cessna 188 Pacific rescue",
"text": " McDonnell Douglas awarded the crew a certificate of commendation for \"the highest standards of compassion, judgment and airmanship.\" Gordon Brooks was the flight engineer on Air New Zealand Flight 901 and was killed when the DC-10 crashed into Mount Erebus, Antarctica, on 28 November 1979. Vette published a book about the Flight 901 disaster, called Impact Erebus. The incident was dramatised in the American 1993 made-for-TV movie Mercy Mission - the Rescue of Flight 771. It starred Scott Bakula as Jay Prochnow (which was changed to Perkins in the movie) and Robert Loggia as Gordon Vette.",
"score": "1.4242305"
}
] |
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