Sweet Mud
0 sources
Sweet Mud
Summary
Sweet Mud is a film[1]. It ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (13 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Sweet Mud received the Ophir Award for best feature film[3].
- Sweet Mud received the Sundance Film Festival World Cinema Dramatic Grand Jury Prize[4].
- Sweet Mud's instance of is recorded as film[5].
- Sweet Mud was directed by Dror Shaul[6].
- Dror Shaul wrote the screenplay for Sweet Mud[7].
- Sweet Mud's composer is recorded as Tsoof Philosof[8].
- Sweet Mud's genre is drama film[9].
- A cast member of Sweet Mud was Ronit Yudkevitz[10].
- A cast member of Sweet Mud was Shai Avivi[11].
- A cast member of Sweet Mud was Gal Zaid[12].
- A cast member of Sweet Mud was Henri Garcin[13].
- A cast member of Sweet Mud was Yosef Carmon[14].
- A cast member of Sweet Mud was Rivka Neumann[15].
- A cast member of Sweet Mud was Pini Tavger[16].
- A cast member of Sweet Mud was Idit Tzur[17].
- A cast member of Sweet Mud was Tomer Steinhof[18].
- Sweet Mud was produced by Bettina Brokemper[19].
- Sweet Mud's director of photography is recorded as Sebastian Edschmid[20].
- The original language of Sweet Mud was Hebrew[21].
- Sweet Mud's review score is recorded as 7/10[22].
- Sweet Mud's review score is recorded as 83%[23].
- Sweet Mud's color is recorded as color[24].
- Sweet Mud's country of origin is recorded as Israel[25].
- Sweet Mud's country of origin is recorded as Germany[26].
- Sweet Mud was published on January 1, 2006[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Sweet Mud was produced by Bettina Brokemper[19]. It was directed by Dror Shaul[6]. Dror Shaul wrote the screenplay for it[7]. Cast members include Ronit Yudkevitz[10], Shai Avivi[11], Gal Zaid[12], Henri Garcin[13], Yosef Carmon[14], and Rivka Neumann[15].
Publication
Publication dates include January 1, 2006[27] and August 7, 2008[28]. The original language of Sweet Mud was Hebrew[21]. Its genre is drama film[9].
Reception
Awards received include Ophir Award for best feature film[3], a class of award[29], in Israel[30], founded in 1990[31] and Sundance Film Festival World Cinema Dramatic Grand Jury Prize[4], a class of award[32], in United States[33]. Reviews include 7/10[22] and 83%[23].
Why It Matters
Sweet Mud ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (13 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[34] It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[35]
FAQs
What awards did Sweet Mud receive?
Honors received include Ophir Award for best feature film[3] and Sundance Film Festival World Cinema Dramatic Grand Jury Prize[4].