Puck! Puck!!
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Puck! Puck!!
Summary
Puck! Puck!! is an animated film[1]. Puck! Puck!! has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Puck! Puck!!'s instance of is recorded as animated film[3].
- Puck! Puck!! was directed by Boris Dyozhkin[4].
- Aleksandr Kumma wrote the screenplay for Puck! Puck!![5].
- Sakko Runge wrote the screenplay for Puck! Puck!![6].
- Puck! Puck!!'s composer is recorded as Alexander Varlamov[7].
- Puck! Puck!! followed Q4425549[8].
- Puck! Puck!! was followed by Q15632955[9].
- Puck! Puck!!'s production company is recorded as Soyuzmultfilm[10].
- Puck! Puck!!'s director of photography is recorded as Elena Petrova[11].
- The original language of Puck! Puck!! was no linguistic content[12].
- The original language of Puck! Puck!! was Russian[13].
- Puck! Puck!!'s country of origin is recorded as Soviet Union[14].
- Puck! Puck!! was published on January 1, 1964[15].
- Puck! Puck!!'s sport is recorded as ice hockey[16].
- Puck! Puck!!'s title is recorded as {'lang': 'ru', 'text': 'Шайбу! Шайбу!!'}[17].
- Puck! Puck!!'s fabrication method is recorded as traditional animation[18].
- Puck! Puck!!'s production designer is recorded as Boris Dyozhkin[19].
- Puck! Puck!!'s production designer is recorded as Svetozar Rusakov[20].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Puck! Puck!! was directed by Boris Dyozhkin[4]. Screenwriters include Aleksandr Kumma[5] and Sakko Runge[6].
Publication
Puck! Puck!! was released on January 1, 1964[15]. Original languages include no linguistic content[12] and Russian[13].
Adaptations and Inspiration
Puck! Puck!! followed Q4425549[8]. Puck! Puck!! was followed by Q15632955[9].
Why It Matters
Puck! Puck!! has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]