Dresden
0 sources
Dresden
Summary
Dresden is a television film[1]. Dresden draws 149 Wikipedia views per month (television_film category, ranking #432 of 3,555).[2]
Key Facts
- Dresden's instance of is recorded as television film[3].
- Dresden was directed by Roland Suso Richter[4].
- Stefan Kolditz wrote the screenplay for Dresden[5].
- Dresden's composer is recorded as Harald Kloser[6].
- Dresden's genre is drama film[7].
- A cast member of Dresden was Felicitas Woll[8].
- A cast member of Dresden was Benjamin Sadler[9].
- A cast member of Dresden was John Light[10].
- A cast member of Dresden was Heiner Lauterbach[11].
- A cast member of Dresden was Marie Bäumer[12].
- A cast member of Dresden was Kai Wiesinger[13].
- A cast member of Dresden was Wolfgang Stumph[14].
- A cast member of Dresden was Jürgen Heinrich[15].
- A cast member of Dresden was Susanne Bormann[16].
- A cast member of Dresden was Maria Ehrich[17].
- A cast member of Dresden was Andreas Guenther[18].
- A cast member of Dresden was Karl Alexander Seidel[19].
- A cast member of Dresden was Gabriela Maria Schmeide[20].
- A cast member of Dresden was Michael Brandner[21].
- A cast member of Dresden was Jeff Burrell[22].
- A cast member of Dresden was Bert Böhlitz[23].
- A cast member of Dresden was Katharina Meinecke[24].
- A cast member of Dresden was Sandra Nedeleff[25].
- A cast member of Dresden was John Keogh[26].
- Dresden was produced by Nico Hofmann[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Dresden was produced by Nico Hofmann[27]. Dresden was directed by Roland Suso Richter[4]. Stefan Kolditz wrote the screenplay for Dresden[5]. Cast members include Felicitas Woll[8], Benjamin Sadler[9], John Light[10], Heiner Lauterbach[11], Marie Bäumer[12], and Kai Wiesinger[13].
Publication
Publication dates include January 1, 2006[28] and March 5, 2006[29]. Original languages include German[30] and English[31]. Dresden's genre is drama film[7]. Dresden was distributed by video on demand[32].
Subject and Themes
Main subjects include World War II[33] and aviation[34].
Why It Matters
Dresden draws 149 Wikipedia views per month (television_film category, ranking #432 of 3,555).[2] Dresden has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[35] Dresden is known by 5 alternative names across languages and contexts.[36]