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The Yearling is a 1994 American made-for-television coming-of-age drama film based on the 1938 novel The Yearling by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings. It was produced by RHI Entertainment, sponsored by Kraft General Foods and broadcast on CBS on April 24, 1994. It is also a remake of the 1946 theatrical film The Yearling starring Gregory Peck and Jane ...
The Yearling (子鹿物語 THE YEARLING, Kojika Monogatari, trans. Fawn Story), also known in English as Fortunate Fawn, is a Japanese anime series from 1983, broadcast on NHK G in Japan. The Yearling (1994) was a made-for-television remake of The Yearling, broadcast on CBS in the United States.
The remake is a television film. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931) Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1941) Dr. Mabuse the Gambler (1922) Dr. M (1990) Dumbo (1941) Dumbo (2019) The latter film was a live-action remake of the animated original. Dune (1984) Dune (2021) Dune (2021) covers half the material of the original and is continued in Dune: Part Two (2024)
The remake retains the essence of that plot, but the blind soldier (Al Pacino) is retired and accompanied by a student from a poor family (Chris O’Donnell). The remake was nominated for four ...
Rather than a direct remake of the 2004 classic, 2024's "Mean Girls" is actually a film version of the adapted Broadway musical, complete with songs like "Meet The Plastics," led by Renée Rapp as ...
The average original film, the kind of movie that is not built off of a preexisting intellectual property, has made 2.8 times its budget back at the global box office since 1980.
The Yearling is a novel by American writer Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, published in March 1938. [1] It was the main selection of the Book of the Month Club in April 1938. It won the 1939 Pulitzer Prize for the Novel. It was the best-selling novel in the United States in 1938, when it sold more than 250,000 copies.
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