Fire
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Fire
Summary
Fire is a film[1]. Fire has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Fire's instance of is recorded as film[3].
- Fire was directed by Aleksey Nuzhny[4].
- Nikolay Kulikov wrote the screenplay for Fire[5].
- Aleksey Nuzhny wrote the screenplay for Fire[6].
- Fire's genre is adventure film[7].
- Fire's genre is drama film[8].
- Fire's genre is disaster film[9].
- Fire's genre is action film[10].
- A cast member of Fire was Konstantin Khabensky[11].
- A cast member of Fire was Ivan Yankovsky[12].
- A cast member of Fire was Stasya Miloslavskaya[13].
- A cast member of Fire was Tikhon Zhiznevsky[14].
- A cast member of Fire was Andrey Smolyakov[15].
- A cast member of Fire was Viktor Dobronravov[16].
- A cast member of Fire was Roman Kurtsyn[17].
- A cast member of Fire was Anton Bogdanov[18].
- Fire was produced by Leonid Vereshchagin[19].
- Fire was produced by Aleksey Nuzhny[20].
- Fire was produced by Nikolay Kulikov[21].
- Fire was produced by Anton Zlatopolsky[22].
- Fire was produced by Nikita Mikhalkov[23].
- Fire's production company is recorded as TriTe[24].
- Fire's production company is recorded as Russia-1[25].
- Fire's production company is recorded as Central Partnership[26].
- Fire's director of photography is recorded as Mikhail Milashin[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Producers include Leonid Vereshchagin[19], Aleksey Nuzhny[20], Nikolay Kulikov[21], Anton Zlatopolsky[22], and Nikita Mikhalkov[23]. Fire was directed by Aleksey Nuzhny[4]. Screenwriters include Nikolay Kulikov[5] and Aleksey Nuzhny[6]. Cast members include Konstantin Khabensky[11], Ivan Yankovsky[12], Stasya Miloslavskaya[13], Tikhon Zhiznevsky[14], Andrey Smolyakov[15], and Viktor Dobronravov[16].
Publication
Fire was released on December 24, 2020[28]. The original language of Fire was Russian[29]. Genres include adventure film[7], drama film[8], disaster film[9], and action film[10].
Why It Matters
Fire has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]