21 Hours at Munich
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21 Hours at Munich
Summary
21 Hours at Munich is a film[1]. It ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (169 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- 21 Hours at Munich's instance of is recorded as film[3].
- 21 Hours at Munich was directed by William A. Graham[4].
- Howard Fast wrote the screenplay for 21 Hours at Munich[5].
- Edward Hume wrote the screenplay for 21 Hours at Munich[6].
- 21 Hours at Munich's composer is recorded as Laurence Rosenthal[7].
- 21 Hours at Munich's genre is historical film[8].
- A cast member of 21 Hours at Munich was William Holden[9].
- A cast member of 21 Hours at Munich was Shirley Knight[10].
- A cast member of 21 Hours at Munich was Franco Nero[11].
- A cast member of 21 Hours at Munich was Richard Basehart[12].
- A cast member of 21 Hours at Munich was Michael Degen[13].
- A cast member of 21 Hours at Munich was Günther Maria Halmer[14].
- A cast member of 21 Hours at Munich was Herbert Fux[15].
- A cast member of 21 Hours at Munich was Jan Niklas[16].
- A cast member of 21 Hours at Munich was Paul L. Smith[17].
- A cast member of 21 Hours at Munich was Anthony Quayle[18].
- A cast member of 21 Hours at Munich was Georg Marischka[19].
- A cast member of 21 Hours at Munich was David Hess[20].
- A cast member of 21 Hours at Munich was Dan van Husen[21].
- A cast member of 21 Hours at Munich was Noel Willman[22].
- A cast member of 21 Hours at Munich was Ullrich Haupt, Jr.[23].
- A cast member of 21 Hours at Munich was Else Quecke[24].
- A cast member of 21 Hours at Munich was Walter Kohut[25].
- 21 Hours at Munich was produced by Robert Greenwald[26].
- 21 Hours at Munich's production company is recorded as Filmways[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
21 Hours at Munich was produced by Robert Greenwald[26]. It was directed by William A. Graham[4]. Screenwriters include Howard Fast[5] and Edward Hume[6]. Cast members include William Holden[9], Shirley Knight[10], Franco Nero[11], Richard Basehart[12], Michael Degen[13], and Günther Maria Halmer[14].
Publication
Publication dates include November 7, 1976[28], December 25, 1976[29], March 25, 1977[30], April 27, 1977[31], May 20, 1977[32], and October 28, 1977[33]. The original language of 21 Hours at Munich was English[34]. Its genre is historical film[8]. It was distributed by video on demand[35].
Subject and Themes
21 Hours at Munich's main subject is terrorism[36].
Why It Matters
21 Hours at Munich ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (169 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[37] It is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[38]