God Loves Caviar
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God Loves Caviar
Summary
God Loves Caviar is a film[1]. It ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (20 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- God Loves Caviar's instance of is recorded as film[3].
- God Loves Caviar was directed by Yannis Smaragdis[4].
- Yannis Smaragdis wrote the screenplay for God Loves Caviar[5].
- God Loves Caviar's genre is drama film[6].
- God Loves Caviar's genre is pirate film[7].
- A cast member of God Loves Caviar was Sebastian Koch[8].
- A cast member of God Loves Caviar was Catherine Deneuve[9].
- A cast member of God Loves Caviar was John Cleese[10].
- A cast member of God Loves Caviar was Juan Diego Botto[11].
- A cast member of God Loves Caviar was Lakis Lazopoulos[12].
- A cast member of God Loves Caviar was Christoforos Papakaliatis[13].
- A cast member of God Loves Caviar was Eirini Balta[14].
- A cast member of God Loves Caviar was Fotini Baxevani[15].
- A cast member of God Loves Caviar was Pavlos Kontogiannidis[16].
- A cast member of God Loves Caviar was Alexandros Mylonas[17].
- A cast member of God Loves Caviar was Yiannis Vouros[18].
- A cast member of God Loves Caviar was Akis Sakellariou[19].
- The original language of God Loves Caviar was Greek[20].
- God Loves Caviar was distributed by video on demand[21].
- God Loves Caviar's country of origin is recorded as Greece[22].
- God Loves Caviar was published on January 1, 2012[23].
- God Loves Caviar's narrative location is recorded as Greece[24].
- God Loves Caviar's filming location is recorded as Greece[25].
- God Loves Caviar's duration is recorded as {'unit': 'Q7727', 'amount': '+101'}[26].
Body
Authorship and Creation
God Loves Caviar was directed by Yannis Smaragdis[4]. Yannis Smaragdis wrote the screenplay for it[5]. Cast members include Sebastian Koch[8], Catherine Deneuve[9], John Cleese[10], Juan Diego Botto[11], Lakis Lazopoulos[12], and Christoforos Papakaliatis[13].
Publication
God Loves Caviar was released on January 1, 2012[23]. The original language of it was Greek[20]. Genres include drama film[6] and pirate film[7]. It was distributed by video on demand[21].
Why It Matters
God Loves Caviar ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (20 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[27]