Hiroshima
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Hiroshima
Summary
Hiroshima is a television film[1]. Hiroshima draws 71 Wikipedia views per month (television_film category, ranking #401 of 3,555).[2]
Key Facts
- Hiroshima's instance of is recorded as television film[3].
- Hiroshima's director is recorded as Koreyoshi Kurahara[4].
- Hiroshima's director is recorded as Q506352[5].
- Hiroshima's screenwriter is recorded as John Hopkins[6].
- Hiroshima's screenwriter is recorded as Toshirō Ishidō[7].
- Hiroshima's genre is recorded as docudrama[8].
- Hiroshima's cast member is recorded as Kenneth Welsh[9].
- Hiroshima's cast member is recorded as Ken Jenkins[10].
- Hiroshima's cast member is recorded as Wesley Addy[11].
- Hiroshima's cast member is recorded as Colin Fox[12].
- Hiroshima's cast member is recorded as Leon Pownall[13].
- Hiroshima's cast member is recorded as Richard Masur[14].
- Hiroshima's cast member is recorded as Cedric Smith[15].
- Hiroshima's cast member is recorded as Q7939027[16].
- Hiroshima's cast member is recorded as Jeffrey DeMunn[17].
- Hiroshima's cast member is recorded as Saul Rubinek[18].
- Hiroshima's cast member is recorded as Timothy West[19].
- Hiroshima's cast member is recorded as Hisashi Igawa[20].
- Hiroshima's cast member is recorded as Allen Altman[21].
- Hiroshima's cast member is recorded as Bernard Behrens[22].
- Hiroshima's cast member is recorded as James Bradford[23].
- Hiroshima's cast member is recorded as Q6766968[24].
- Hiroshima's cast member is recorded as J. Winston Carroll[25].
- Hiroshima's cast member is recorded as Serge Christiaenssens[26].
- Hiroshima's cast member is recorded as Dan Corby[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Producers include Michael Campus[28] and Robin Spry[29]. Directors include Koreyoshi Kurahara[4] and Q506352[5]. Screenwriters include John Hopkins[6] and Toshirō Ishidō[7]. Cast members include Kenneth Welsh[9], Ken Jenkins[10], Wesley Addy[11], Colin Fox[12], Leon Pownall[13], and Richard Masur[14].
Publication
Hiroshima's publication date is recorded as +1995-08-06T00:00:00Z[30]. Original languages include English[31] and Japanese[32]. Hiroshima's genre is recorded as docudrama[8].
Subject and Themes
Main subjects include aviation[33] and atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki[34].
Why It Matters
Hiroshima draws 71 Wikipedia views per month (television_film category, ranking #401 of 3,555).[2] Hiroshima has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[35]