Adama
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Adama
Summary
Adama is an animated film[1]. Adama draws 44 Wikipedia views per month (animated_film category, ranking #640 of 1,376).[2]
Key Facts
- Adama's instance of is recorded as animated film[3].
- Adama was directed by Simon Rouby[4].
- Simon Rouby wrote the screenplay for Adama[5].
- Julien Lilti wrote the screenplay for Adama[6].
- Adama's composer is recorded as Pablo Pico[7].
- Adama's genre is war film[8].
- Adama's genre is coming-of-age film[9].
- Adama's genre is drama film[10].
- Adama was produced by Séverine Lathuillière[11].
- Adama was produced by Daniel Goudineau[12].
- Adama was produced by Azmina Goulamaly[13].
- Adama was produced by Alain Séraphine[14].
- Adama was produced by Lucien Chemla[15].
- Adama was produced by Philippe Aigle[16].
- The original language of Adama was French[17].
- Adama's color is recorded as color[18].
- Adama's country of origin is recorded as France[19].
- Adama was released on October 21, 2015[20].
- Adama's distributed by is recorded as Ocean Films[21].
- Adama's narrative location is recorded as West Africa[22].
- Adama's narrative location is recorded as Paris[23].
- Adama's narrative location is recorded as Verdun[24].
- Adama's main subject is Army of Africa (France)[25].
- Adama's main subject is World War I[26].
- Adama's main subject is sibling relationship[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Producers include Séverine Lathuillière[11], Daniel Goudineau[12], Azmina Goulamaly[13], Alain Séraphine[14], Lucien Chemla[15], and Philippe Aigle[16]. Adama was directed by Simon Rouby[4]. Screenwriters include Simon Rouby[5] and Julien Lilti[6].
Publication
Adama was published on October 21, 2015[20]. The original language of Adama was French[17]. Genres include war film[8], coming-of-age film[9], and drama film[10].
Subject and Themes
Main subjects include Army of Africa (France)[25], World War I[26], sibling relationship[27], and Battle of Verdun[28].
Why It Matters
Adama draws 44 Wikipedia views per month (animated_film category, ranking #640 of 1,376).[2] Adama has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[29]