Carmen
0 sources
Carmen
Summary
Carmen is a silent film[1]. Carmen ranks in the top 9% of silent_film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (29 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Carmen's instance of is recorded as silent film[3].
- Carmen was directed by Ernst Lubitsch[4].
- Grete Diercks wrote the screenplay for Carmen[5].
- Hanns Kräly wrote the screenplay for Carmen[6].
- Norbert Falk wrote the screenplay for Carmen[7].
- Carmen's composer is recorded as Artur Vieregg[8].
- Carmen's genre is silent film[9].
- Carmen's genre is drama film[10].
- Carmen's based on is recorded as Carmen[11].
- A cast member of Carmen was Pola Negri[12].
- A cast member of Carmen was Harry Liedtke[13].
- A cast member of Carmen was Grete Diercks[14].
- A cast member of Carmen was Wilhelm Diegelmann[15].
- A cast member of Carmen was Leopold von Ledebur[16].
- A cast member of Carmen was Paul Biensfeldt[17].
- A cast member of Carmen was Margarete Kupfer[18].
- A cast member of Carmen was Sophie Pagay[19].
- A cast member of Carmen was Magnus Stifter[20].
- A cast member of Carmen was Heinrich Peer[21].
- A cast member of Carmen was Max Kronert[22].
- A cast member of Carmen was Victor Janson[23].
- Carmen was produced by Paul Davidson[24].
- Carmen's production company is recorded as UFA[25].
- Carmen's production company is recorded as PAGU[26].
- Carmen's director of photography is recorded as Alfred Hansen[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Carmen was produced by Paul Davidson[24]. Carmen was directed by Ernst Lubitsch[4]. Screenwriters include Grete Diercks[5], Hanns Kräly[6], and Norbert Falk[7]. Cast members include Pola Negri[12], Harry Liedtke[13], Grete Diercks[14], Wilhelm Diegelmann[15], Leopold von Ledebur[16], and Paul Biensfeldt[17].
Publication
Carmen was published on December 17, 1918[28]. The original language of Carmen was German[29]. Genres include silent film[9] and drama film[10]. Carmen was distributed by video on demand[30].
Adaptations and Inspiration
Carmen's after a work by is recorded as Prosper Mérimée[31].
Why It Matters
Carmen ranks in the top 9% of silent_film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (29 views/month).[2] Carmen has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[32]