Norwegian Film Institute
0 sources
Norwegian Film Institute
Summary
Norwegian Film Institute is a cinematheque[1]. It draws 30 Wikipedia views per month (cinematheque category, ranking #10 of 30).[2]
Key Facts
- Norwegian Film Institute was a member of European Film Promotion[3].
- Norwegian Film Institute was a member of European Film Agency Directors[4].
- Norwegian Film Institute was a member of Association of European Film Archives and Cinematheques[5].
- Norwegian Film Institute is located in Oslo[6].
- Norwegian Film Institute is in the country of Norway[7].
- Norwegian Film Institute's instance of is recorded as cinematheque[8].
- Norwegian Film Institute's instance of is recorded as directorate in Norway[9].
- Norwegian Film Institute's headquarters location is recorded as Oslo[10].
- 1956 marks the founding of Norwegian Film Institute[11].
- Norwegian Film Institute's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 59.90944444, 'lon': 10.74583333}[12].
- Norwegian Film Institute's parent organization or unit is recorded as Ministry of Culture of Norway[13].
- Norwegian Film Institute's official website is recorded as https://www.nfi.no/[14].
- Norwegian Film Institute's email address is recorded as mailto:[email protected][15].
- Norwegian Film Institute's director / manager is recorded as Kjersti Mo[16].
- Norwegian Film Institute's phone number is recorded as +47-22-47-45-00[17].
- Norwegian Film Institute's replaces is recorded as Q19383895[18].
- Norwegian Film Institute's replaces is recorded as Norsk filmfond[19].
- Norwegian Film Institute's replaces is recorded as Statens filmsentral[20].
- Norwegian Film Institute's topic has template is recorded as Template:NFI[21].
- Norwegian Film Institute's legal form is recorded as Q55190098[22].
- Norwegian Film Institute's Classification of the Functions of Government is recorded as 08 - Recreation, culture, and religion[23].
Why It Matters
Norwegian Film Institute draws 30 Wikipedia views per month (cinematheque category, ranking #10 of 30).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[24] It is known by 11 alternative names across languages and contexts.[25]