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The Lightning Tree takes place in the frame setting of The Kingkiller Chronicle, and includes characters from the trilogy, centered around the character of Bast. The Slow Regard of Silent Things (2014, ISBN 978-0756410438 ), a novella focusing on a secondary character that appears in The Kingkiller Chronicle ' s main plot.
The production logo of the company shows a tree without leaves, on which leaves appear when struck by lightning. As the camera pans out, the name "Jerry Bruckheimer Films" appears. The tree was modeled after an oak on a Kentucky property owned by Bruckheimer.
The series, which was filmed on the Harewood family estate, was set at a home of rest for horses. Despite an apparent appeal limited to young girls with an equine interest, Follyfoot was actually aimed squarely at the teenage market and often had challenging things to say about the treatment of horses and animals generally in British society.
The Learning Tree is a 1969 American coming-of-age film written, produced and directed by Gordon Parks, who also scored the film. It depicts the life of Newt Winger, a teenager growing up in Cherokee Flats, Kansas, in the 1920s and chronicles his journey into manhood marked with tragic events.
Patrick James Rothfuss (born June 6, 1973) is an American author. He is best known for his highly acclaimed series The Kingkiller Chronicle, beginning with Rothfuss' debut novel, The Name of the Wind (2007), which won several awards, and continuing in the sequel, The Wise Man's Fear (2011), which topped The New York Times Best Seller list.
Lightning Tree (York, 1972), which, in addition to the title hit, included extracts, spoken by Cindy Kent, from Martin Luther King Jr.’s 1963 speech "I Have a Dream". Lightning Tree was re-released by Decca in 1974 as The World of the Settlers .
The Singing Ringing Tree (German: Das singende, klingende Bäumchen) is a 1957 children's fantasy film from East German studio DEFA.Directed by Francesco Stefani, the screenplay by Anne Geelhaar is based on a variation of "The Dwarf, the Fox and the Princess (Hurleburlebutz)" story published in Grimms' Fairy Tales (1843) by the Brothers Grimm.
The tree was a major tourist attraction for fans of the film, although located on private property at Malabar Farm. [1] [4] It formed part of "The Shawshank Trail" which features many of the film's iconic locations and attracts up to 35,000 visitors annually. [5] The farm where the tree was located is sometimes used as a venue for weddings. [4] [7]