The Diamond Arm
0 sources
The Diamond Arm
Summary
The Diamond Arm is a film[1]. It ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (796 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- The Diamond Arm's instance of is recorded as film[3].
- The Diamond Arm was directed by Leonid Gaidai[4].
- Leonid Gaidai wrote the screenplay for The Diamond Arm[5].
- Yakov Kostyukovsky wrote the screenplay for The Diamond Arm[6].
- Moris Slobodskoy wrote the screenplay for The Diamond Arm[7].
- The Diamond Arm's composer is recorded as Aleksandr Zatsepin[8].
- The Diamond Arm's genre is slapstick[9].
- The Diamond Arm's genre is crime comedy film[10].
- The Diamond Arm's genre is parody film[11].
- The Diamond Arm's genre is adventure film[12].
- A cast member of The Diamond Arm was Yuri Nikulin[13].
- A cast member of The Diamond Arm was Anatoli Papanov[14].
- A cast member of The Diamond Arm was Andrei Mironov[15].
- A cast member of The Diamond Arm was Nina Grebeshkova[16].
- A cast member of The Diamond Arm was Nonna Mordyukova[17].
- A cast member of The Diamond Arm was Leonid Kanevsky[18].
- A cast member of The Diamond Arm was Svetlana Svetlichnaya[19].
- A cast member of The Diamond Arm was Nikolai Romanov[20].
- A cast member of The Diamond Arm was Stanislav Chekan[21].
- A cast member of The Diamond Arm was Vladimir Guliayev[22].
- A cast member of The Diamond Arm was Yevgeniya Melnikova[23].
- A cast member of The Diamond Arm was Andrei Fajt[24].
- A cast member of The Diamond Arm was Leonid Gaidai[25].
- A cast member of The Diamond Arm was Alexandr Chvylja[26].
- The Diamond Arm's production company is recorded as Mosfilm[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
The Diamond Arm was directed by Leonid Gaidai[4]. Screenwriters include Leonid Gaidai[5], Yakov Kostyukovsky[6], and Moris Slobodskoy[7]. Cast members include Yuri Nikulin[13], Anatoli Papanov[14], Andrei Mironov[15], Nina Grebeshkova[16], Nonna Mordyukova[17], and Leonid Kanevsky[18].
Publication
The Diamond Arm was published on April 28, 1969[28]. The original language of it was Russian[29]. Genres include slapstick[9], crime comedy film[10], parody film[11], and adventure film[12]. It was distributed by video on demand[30].
Why It Matters
The Diamond Arm ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (796 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 20 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[31] It is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[32]