Sunflower
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Sunflower
Summary
Sunflower is a film[1]. Sunflower ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,284 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Sunflower's instance of is recorded as film[3].
- Sunflower was directed by Vittorio De Sica[4].
- Tonino Guerra wrote the screenplay for Sunflower[5].
- Cesare Zavattini wrote the screenplay for Sunflower[6].
- Georgi Mdivani wrote the screenplay for Sunflower[7].
- Sunflower's composer is recorded as Henry Mancini[8].
- Sunflower's genre is drama film[9].
- Sunflower's genre is melodrama[10].
- A cast member of Sunflower was Sophia Loren[11].
- A cast member of Sunflower was Marcello Mastroianni[12].
- A cast member of Sunflower was Ludmila Savelyeva[13].
- A cast member of Sunflower was Anna Carena[14].
- A cast member of Sunflower was Germano Longo[15].
- A cast member of Sunflower was Glauco Onorato[16].
- A cast member of Sunflower was Silvano Tranquilli[17].
- A cast member of Sunflower was Marisa Traversi[18].
- A cast member of Sunflower was Pippo Starnazza[19].
- A cast member of Sunflower was Dino Peretti[20].
- A cast member of Sunflower was Alla Budnitskaya[21].
- A cast member of Sunflower was Valentina Ananina[22].
- Sunflower was produced by Carlo Ponti[23].
- Sunflower was produced by Arthur Cohn[24].
- Sunflower was produced by Joseph E. Levine[25].
- Sunflower was performed by Henry Mancini[26].
- Sunflower's production company is recorded as Mosfilm[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Among the performers on Sunflower was Henry Mancini[26]. Producers include Carlo Ponti[23], Arthur Cohn[24], and Joseph E. Levine[25]. Sunflower was directed by Vittorio De Sica[4]. Screenwriters include Tonino Guerra[5], Cesare Zavattini[6], and Georgi Mdivani[7]. Cast members include Sophia Loren[11], Marcello Mastroianni[12], Ludmila Savelyeva[13], Anna Carena[14], Germano Longo[15], and Glauco Onorato[16].
Publication
Sunflower was published on January 1, 1970[28]. Original languages include Italian[29] and Russian[30]. Genres include drama film[9] and melodrama[10]. Sunflower was distributed by video on demand[31].
Why It Matters
Sunflower ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,284 views/month).[2] Sunflower has Wikipedia articles in 19 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[32] Sunflower is known by 15 alternative names across languages and contexts.[33]