Caucasia
0 sources
Caucasia
Summary
Caucasia is a film[1]. Caucasia ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Caucasia's instance of is recorded as film[3].
- Caucasia's director is recorded as Farid Gumbatov[4].
- Caucasia's composer is recorded as Rauf Aliyev[5].
- Caucasia's genre is recorded as drama film[6].
- Caucasia's genre is recorded as war film[7].
- Caucasia's cast member is recorded as Lyubov Tolkalina[8].
- Caucasia's cast member is recorded as Ada Rohovtseva[9].
- Caucasia's cast member is recorded as Andrey Chernyshov[10].
- Caucasia's cast member is recorded as Hamida Omarova[11].
- Caucasia's cast member is recorded as Ənvər Vəliyev[12].
- Caucasia's production company is recorded as Q12834915[13].
- Caucasia's production company is recorded as Azerbaijanfilm[14].
- Caucasia's director of photography is recorded as Yuri Varnovski[15].
- Caucasia's IMDb ID is recorded as tt1167643[16].
- Caucasia's original language of film or TV show is recorded as Russian[17].
- Caucasia's original language of film or TV show is recorded as Azerbaijani[18].
- Caucasia's country of origin is recorded as Russia[19].
- Caucasia's country of origin is recorded as Azerbaijan[20].
- Caucasia's publication date is recorded as +2007-01-01T00:00:00Z[21].
- Caucasia's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/04jkp6l[22].
- Caucasia's nominated for is recorded as International Submission to the Academy Awards[23].
- Caucasia's Kinopoisk film ID is recorded as 402763[24].
- Caucasia's TCM Movie Database film ID is recorded as 736800[25].
- Caucasia's Russiancinema.ru film ID is recorded as 19952[26].
- Caucasia's EIDR content ID is recorded as 10.5240/A538-9522-0202-498C-95DE-E[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Caucasia's director is recorded as Farid Gumbatov[4]. Cast members include Lyubov Tolkalina[8], Ada Rohovtseva[9], Andrey Chernyshov[10], Hamida Omarova[11], and Ənvər Vəliyev[12].
Publication
Caucasia's publication date is recorded as +2007-01-01T00:00:00Z[21]. Original languages include Russian[17] and Azerbaijani[18]. Genres include drama film[6] and war film[7].
Why It Matters
Caucasia ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2 views/month).[2]