Les Dalton
0 sources
Les Dalton
Summary
Les Dalton is a film[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Les Dalton's instance of is recorded as film[3].
- Les Dalton was directed by Philippe Haïm[4].
- Éric Judor wrote the screenplay for Les Dalton[5].
- Michel Hazanavicius wrote the screenplay for Les Dalton[6].
- Les Dalton's composer is recorded as Alexandre Azaria[7].
- Les Dalton's genre is comedy film[8].
- Les Dalton's genre is Western film[9].
- A cast member of Les Dalton was Éric Judor[10].
- A cast member of Les Dalton was Ramzy Bedia[11].
- A cast member of Les Dalton was Clovis Cornillac[12].
- A cast member of Les Dalton was Darry Cowl[13].
- A cast member of Les Dalton was Élie Semoun[14].
- A cast member of Les Dalton was François Hadji-Lazaro[15].
- A cast member of Les Dalton was Ginette Garcin[16].
- A cast member of Les Dalton was Javivi[17].
- A cast member of Les Dalton was Q1685364[18].
- A cast member of Les Dalton was Jean Dujardin[19].
- A cast member of Les Dalton was Kad Merad[20].
- A cast member of Les Dalton was Marie-Pierre Casey[21].
- A cast member of Les Dalton was Marthe Villalonga[22].
- A cast member of Les Dalton was Michel Muller[23].
- A cast member of Les Dalton was Sylvie Joly[24].
- A cast member of Les Dalton was Til Schweiger[25].
- A cast member of Les Dalton was Arsène Mosca[26].
- A cast member of Les Dalton was Prodromos Antoniadis[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Les Dalton was produced by Saïd Ben Saïd[28]. It was directed by Philippe Haïm[4]. Screenwriters include Éric Judor[5] and Michel Hazanavicius[6]. Cast members include Éric Judor[10], Ramzy Bedia[11], Clovis Cornillac[12], Darry Cowl[13], Élie Semoun[14], and François Hadji-Lazaro[15].
Publication
Publication dates include January 1, 2004[29] and August 25, 2005[30]. The original language of Les Dalton was French[31]. Genres include comedy film[8] and Western film[9].
Why It Matters
Les Dalton has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2] It is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[32]