Eve
0 sources
Eve
Summary
Eve is a television series episode[1]. Eve ranks in the top 4% of television_series_episode entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (203 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Eve's instance of is recorded as television series episode[3].
- Eve's instance of is recorded as Monster of the Week[4].
- Eve's director is recorded as Fred Gerber[5].
- Eve's screenwriter is recorded as Kenneth Biller[6].
- Eve's screenwriter is recorded as Chris Brancato[7].
- Eve's follows is recorded as Fallen Angel[8].
- Eve's followed by is recorded as Fire[9].
- Eve's part of the series is recorded as The X-Files[10].
- Eve's IMDb ID is recorded as tt0751116[11].
- Eve's original language of film or TV show is recorded as English[12].
- Eve's publication date is recorded as +1993-12-10T00:00:00Z[13].
- Eve's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0frgsx[14].
- Eve's main subject is recorded as cloning[15].
- Eve's Rotten Tomatoes ID is recorded as tv/the_x_files/s01/e11[16].
- Eve's title is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'Eve'}[17].
- Eve's AllMovie title ID is recorded as v210568[18].
- Eve's production code is recorded as 1X10[19].
- Eve's ČSFD film ID is recorded as 464128[20].
- Eve's BabelNet ID is recorded as 03447560n[21].
- Eve's TV.com ID is recorded as shows/the-xfiles/eve-501[22].
- Eve's BFI National Archive work ID is recorded as 150422542[23].
- Eve's EIDR content ID is recorded as 10.5240/BC76-4107-E100-4739-9AD8-7[24].
- Eve's ISAN is recorded as 0000-0000-EBC2-0072-J-0000-0000-H[25].
- Eve's OMDb film ID is recorded as 14191[26].
- Eve's CineMagia title ID is recorded as 507219[27].
Why It Matters
Eve ranks in the top 4% of television_series_episode entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (203 views/month).[2] Eve has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]