A Woman in Berlin
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A Woman in Berlin
Summary
A Woman in Berlin is a film[1]. It ranks in the top 3% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (769 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- A Woman in Berlin's instance of is recorded as film[3].
- A Woman in Berlin was directed by Max Färberböck[4].
- Max Färberböck wrote the screenplay for A Woman in Berlin[5].
- A Woman in Berlin's composer is recorded as Zbigniew Preisner[6].
- A Woman in Berlin's genre is drama film[7].
- A Woman in Berlin's genre is war film[8].
- A cast member of A Woman in Berlin was Nina Hoss[9].
- A cast member of A Woman in Berlin was Evgeny Sidikhin[10].
- A cast member of A Woman in Berlin was August Diehl[11].
- A cast member of A Woman in Berlin was Irm Hermann[12].
- A cast member of A Woman in Berlin was Juliane Köhler[13].
- A cast member of A Woman in Berlin was Jördis Triebel[14].
- A cast member of A Woman in Berlin was Rolf Kanies[15].
- A cast member of A Woman in Berlin was Rosalie Thomass[16].
- A cast member of A Woman in Berlin was Rüdiger Vogler[17].
- A cast member of A Woman in Berlin was Sandra Hüller[18].
- A cast member of A Woman in Berlin was Sebastian Urzendowsky[19].
- A cast member of A Woman in Berlin was Ulrike Krumbiegel[20].
- A cast member of A Woman in Berlin was Eva Löbau[21].
- A cast member of A Woman in Berlin was Aleksandra Kulikova[22].
- A cast member of A Woman in Berlin was Anne Kanis[23].
- A cast member of A Woman in Berlin was Erni Mangold[24].
- A cast member of A Woman in Berlin was Maria Hartmann[25].
- A cast member of A Woman in Berlin was Ralf Schermuly[26].
- A cast member of A Woman in Berlin was Aleksandr Samoylenko[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
A Woman in Berlin was produced by Günter Rohrbach[28]. It was directed by Max Färberböck[4]. Max Färberböck wrote the screenplay for it[5]. Cast members include Nina Hoss[9], Evgeny Sidikhin[10], August Diehl[11], Irm Hermann[12], Juliane Köhler[13], and Jördis Triebel[14].
Publication
Publication dates include September 10, 2008[29] and October 23, 2008[30]. Original languages include German[31] and Russian[32]. Genres include drama film[7] and war film[8]. A Woman in Berlin was distributed by video on demand[33].
Subject and Themes
A Woman in Berlin's main subject is World War II[34].
Reception
Reviews include 82%[35], 7/10[36], and 74/100[37].
Why It Matters
A Woman in Berlin ranks in the top 3% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (769 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 16 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[38] It is known by 11 alternative names across languages and contexts.[39]