Distant Lights
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Distant Lights
Summary
Distant Lights is a film[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Distant Lights's instance of is recorded as film[3].
- Distant Lights was directed by Hans-Christian Schmid[4].
- Hans-Christian Schmid wrote the screenplay for Distant Lights[5].
- Distant Lights's composer is recorded as The Notwist[6].
- Distant Lights's genre is drama film[7].
- Distant Lights's genre is comedy film[8].
- A cast member of Distant Lights was Devid Striesow[9].
- A cast member of Distant Lights was August Diehl[10].
- A cast member of Distant Lights was Julia Krynke[11].
- A cast member of Distant Lights was Alice Dwyer[12].
- A cast member of Distant Lights was Zbigniew Zamachowski[13].
- A cast member of Distant Lights was Maria Simon[14].
- A cast member of Distant Lights was Herbert Knaup[15].
- A cast member of Distant Lights was Henry Hübchen[16].
- A cast member of Distant Lights was Anna Fischer[17].
- A cast member of Distant Lights was Aleksandra Justa[18].
- A cast member of Distant Lights was Ivan Shvedoff[19].
- A cast member of Distant Lights was Sergey Frolov[20].
- A cast member of Distant Lights was Anna Yanovskaya[21].
- A cast member of Distant Lights was Sebastian Urzendowsky[22].
- A cast member of Distant Lights was Martin Kiefer[23].
- A cast member of Distant Lights was Tom Jahn[24].
- Distant Lights was produced by Jakob Claussen[25].
- Distant Lights was produced by Thomas Wöbke[26].
- Distant Lights's production company is recorded as Claussen & Wöbke Filmproduktion[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Producers include Jakob Claussen[25] and Thomas Wöbke[26]. Distant Lights was directed by Hans-Christian Schmid[4]. Hans-Christian Schmid wrote the screenplay for it[5]. Cast members include Devid Striesow[9], August Diehl[10], Julia Krynke[11], Alice Dwyer[12], Zbigniew Zamachowski[13], and Maria Simon[14].
Publication
Publication dates include February 11, 2003[28], July 31, 2003[29], and 2003[30]. Original languages include German[31] and Russian[32]. Genres include drama film[7] and comedy film[8].
Subject and Themes
Main subjects include East-West dichotomy[33], Oder–Neisse line[34], political border[35], human migration[36], and interpersonal relationship[37].
Why It Matters
Distant Lights has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]