Stalingrad
0 sources
Stalingrad
Summary
Stalingrad is a film[1]. Stalingrad ranks in the top 3% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (391 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Stalingrad's image is recorded as Stalingrad 1993.svg[3].
- Stalingrad's instance of is recorded as film[4].
- Stalingrad's director is recorded as Joseph Vilsmaier[5].
- Stalingrad's screenwriter is recorded as Joseph Vilsmaier[6].
- Stalingrad's screenwriter is recorded as Christoph Fromm[7].
- Stalingrad's screenwriter is recorded as Jürgen Büscher[8].
- Stalingrad's screenwriter is recorded as Johannes Heide[9].
- Stalingrad's composer is recorded as Enjott Schneider[10].
- Stalingrad's genre is recorded as war film[11].
- Stalingrad's genre is recorded as drama film[12].
- Stalingrad's genre is recorded as anti-war film[13].
- Stalingrad is named after Stalingrad[14].
- Stalingrad's cast member is recorded as Thomas Kretschmann[15].
- Stalingrad's cast member is recorded as Dana Vávrová[16].
- Stalingrad's cast member is recorded as Sylvester Groth[17].
- Stalingrad's cast member is recorded as Dominique Horwitz[18].
- Stalingrad's cast member is recorded as Martin Benrath[19].
- Stalingrad's cast member is recorded as Sebastian Rudolph[20].
- Stalingrad's cast member is recorded as Thomas Lange[21].
- Stalingrad's cast member is recorded as Jochen Nickel[22].
- Stalingrad's cast member is recorded as Karel Heřmánek[23].
- Stalingrad's cast member is recorded as Oliver Broumis[24].
- Stalingrad's cast member is recorded as Pavel Mang[25].
- Stalingrad's cast member is recorded as Heinz Emigholz[26].
- Stalingrad's cast member is recorded as Dieter Okras[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Producers include Hanno Huth[28] and Günter Rohrbach[29]. Stalingrad's director is recorded as Joseph Vilsmaier[5]. Screenwriters include Joseph Vilsmaier[6], Christoph Fromm[7], Jürgen Büscher[8], and Johannes Heide[9]. Cast members include Thomas Kretschmann[15], Dana Vávrová[16], Sylvester Groth[17], Dominique Horwitz[18], Martin Benrath[19], and Sebastian Rudolph[20].
Publication
Publication dates include +1993-01-21T00:00:00Z[30] and +1993-00-00T00:00:00Z[31]. Original languages include German[32] and Russian[33]. Genres include war film[11], drama film[12], and anti-war film[13].
Subject and Themes
Stalingrad's main subject is recorded as World War II[34].
Why It Matters
Stalingrad ranks in the top 3% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (391 views/month).[2] Stalingrad has Wikipedia articles in 22 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[35]