Boccaccio
0 sources
Boccaccio
Summary
Boccaccio is a film[1]. Boccaccio ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (14 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Boccaccio's image is recorded as Boccaccio (1972) - Enrico Montesano, Isabella Biagini (1).jpg[3].
- Boccaccio's instance of is recorded as film[4].
- Boccaccio's director is recorded as Bruno Corbucci[5].
- Boccaccio's screenwriter is recorded as Mario Amendola[6].
- Boccaccio's screenwriter is recorded as Bruno Corbucci[7].
- Boccaccio's composer is recorded as Carlo Rustichelli[8].
- Boccaccio's genre is recorded as comedy film[9].
- Boccaccio's cast member is recorded as Alighiero Noschese[10].
- Boccaccio's cast member is recorded as Enrico Montesano[11].
- Boccaccio's cast member is recorded as Pippo Franco[12].
- Boccaccio's cast member is recorded as Sylva Koscina[13].
- Boccaccio's cast member is recorded as Isabella Biagini[14].
- Boccaccio's cast member is recorded as Mario Carotenuto[15].
- Boccaccio's cast member is recorded as Bernard Blier[16].
- Boccaccio's cast member is recorded as Pia Giancaro[17].
- Boccaccio's cast member is recorded as Paola Tedesco[18].
- Boccaccio's cast member is recorded as Lino Banfi[19].
- Boccaccio's cast member is recorded as Pascale Petit[20].
- Boccaccio's cast member is recorded as Rosita Pisano[21].
- Boccaccio's cast member is recorded as María Baxa[22].
- Boccaccio's cast member is recorded as Toni Ucci[23].
- Boccaccio's cast member is recorded as Franca Dominici[24].
- Boccaccio's cast member is recorded as Guido Celano[25].
- Boccaccio's cast member is recorded as Andrea Aureli[26].
- Boccaccio's cast member is recorded as Hélène Chanel[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Boccaccio's producer is recorded as Dino De Laurentiis[28]. Boccaccio's director is recorded as Bruno Corbucci[5]. Screenwriters include Mario Amendola[6] and Bruno Corbucci[7]. Cast members include Alighiero Noschese[10], Enrico Montesano[11], Pippo Franco[12], Sylva Koscina[13], Isabella Biagini[14], and Mario Carotenuto[15].
Publication
Publication dates include +1972-03-29T00:00:00Z[29], +1973-02-16T00:00:00Z[30], +1973-12-18T00:00:00Z[31], and +1974-02-21T00:00:00Z[32]. Boccaccio's original language of film or TV show is recorded as Italian[33]. Boccaccio's genre is recorded as comedy film[9].
Why It Matters
Boccaccio ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (14 views/month).[2] Boccaccio has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[34]