Solomon
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Solomon
Summary
Solomon is a television film broadcast in two parts[1]. Solomon draws 73 Wikipedia views per month (television_film_broadcast_in_two_parts category, ranking #13 of 25).[2]
Key Facts
- Solomon's instance of is recorded as television film broadcast in two parts[3].
- Solomon's instance of is recorded as miniseries[4].
- Solomon was directed by Roger Young[5].
- Solomon's composer is recorded as Patrick Williams[6].
- Solomon's composer is recorded as Ennio Morricone[7].
- Solomon's genre is drama film[8].
- A cast member of Solomon was Ben Cross[9].
- A cast member of Solomon was Anouk Aimée[10].
- A cast member of Solomon was Vivica A. Fox[11].
- A cast member of Solomon was Max von Sydow[12].
- A cast member of Solomon was Maria Grazia Cucinotta[13].
- A cast member of Solomon was Umberto Orsini[14].
- A cast member of Solomon was Stefania Rocca[15].
- A cast member of Solomon was Richard Dillane[16].
- A cast member of Solomon was Ivan Kaye[17].
- A cast member of Solomon was Dexter Fletcher[18].
- A cast member of Solomon was Roger Hammond[19].
- A cast member of Solomon was Michael Culkin[20].
- A cast member of Solomon was David Suchet[21].
- A cast member of Solomon was Marta Zoffoli[22].
- A cast member of Solomon was Stefan Gubser[23].
- A cast member of Solomon was Mohamed Majd[24].
- A cast member of Solomon was Thom Hoffman[25].
- A cast member of Solomon was Rachid El Ouali[26].
- A cast member of Solomon was Vadim Glowna[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Solomon was directed by Roger Young[5]. Cast members include Ben Cross[9], Anouk Aimée[10], Vivica A. Fox[11], Max von Sydow[12], Maria Grazia Cucinotta[13], and Umberto Orsini[14].
Publication
Publication dates include +1997-01-01T00:00:00Z[28] and +2000-04-20T00:00:00Z[29]. Original languages include English[30] and Italian[31]. Solomon's genre is drama film[8]. Solomon was distributed by direct-to-video[32].
Why It Matters
Solomon draws 73 Wikipedia views per month (television_film_broadcast_in_two_parts category, ranking #13 of 25).[2] Solomon has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[33]