Visions of Eight
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Visions of Eight
Summary
Visions of Eight is a film[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Visions of Eight's instance of is recorded as film[3].
- Visions of Eight was directed by Claude Lelouch[4].
- Visions of Eight was directed by Miloš Forman[5].
- Visions of Eight was directed by Kon Ichikawa[6].
- Visions of Eight was directed by Yuri Ozerov[7].
- Visions of Eight was directed by Mai Zetterling[8].
- Visions of Eight was directed by John Schlesinger[9].
- Visions of Eight was directed by Arthur Penn[10].
- Visions of Eight was directed by Michael Pfleghar[11].
- David Hughes wrote the screenplay for Visions of Eight[12].
- Visions of Eight's composer is recorded as Henry Mancini[13].
- Visions of Eight's genre is documentary film[14].
- Visions of Eight was produced by David L. Wolper[15].
- Visions of Eight's director of photography is recorded as Alan Hume[16].
- The original language of Visions of Eight was English[17].
- Visions of Eight's review score is recorded as 6/10[18].
- Visions of Eight's review score is recorded as 54%[19].
- Visions of Eight's color is recorded as color[20].
- Visions of Eight's country of origin is recorded as Germany[21].
- Visions of Eight's country of origin is recorded as United States[22].
- Visions of Eight was released on May 1, 1973[23].
- Visions of Eight was published on August 10, 1973[24].
- Visions of Eight was published on August 20, 1973[25].
- Visions of Eight was released on August 31, 1973[26].
- Visions of Eight was published on September 7, 1973[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Visions of Eight was produced by David L. Wolper[15]. Directors include Claude Lelouch[4], Miloš Forman[5], Kon Ichikawa[6], Yuri Ozerov[7], Mai Zetterling[8], and John Schlesinger[9]. David Hughes wrote the screenplay for it[12].
Publication
Publication dates include May 1, 1973[23], August 10, 1973[24], August 20, 1973[25], August 31, 1973[26], September 7, 1973[27], and September 13, 1973[28]. The original language of Visions of Eight was English[17]. Its genre is documentary film[14].
Subject and Themes
Visions of Eight's main subject is Olympic Games[29].
Reception
Reviews include 6/10[18] and 54%[19].
Why It Matters
Visions of Eight has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2] It is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[30]