Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Amsterdam grossed $14.9 million in the United States and Canada, and $16.3 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $31.2 million, against a production budget of $80 million. [3] [4] Deadline Hollywood calculated the film lost the studio $108.4 million, when factoring together all expenses and revenues. [15]
Amsterdam has been a setting in Dutch and foreign films. The following is a list of films set in Amsterdam. The list includes a number of films which only have a tenuous connection to the city. The lists are sorted by the year the film was released. [1] [2] [3] [4]
In The New York Times, critic Michiko Kakutani called Amsterdam "a dark tour de force, a morality fable, disguised as a psychological thriller." [ 9 ] In The Guardian , Nicholas Lezard wrote, "Slice him where you like, Ian McEwan is a damned good writer" and discussed "the compulsive nature of McEwan's prose: you just don't want to stop reading ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
David Owen Russell was raised in Larchmont, New York, [1] [2] in an upper middle-class household. [3] [4] His parents worked for Simon & Schuster; his father, Bernard, was the vice president of sales for the company, [1] [5] and his mother, Maria, was a secretary there. [6]
At the American Film Market in 1988, the movie would go on to become the third highest selling motion picture that year. Vestron Pictures released the film dubbed in English on home video. The dubbed version featured the voices of lead actors Huub Stapel, Monique van de Ven, and Serge-Henri Valcke in English, as they spoke English well.
Amsterdam Affair is a 1968 British crime film directed by Gerry O'Hara and starring Wolfgang Kieling, William Marlowe, Catherine Schell and Pamela Ann Davy. The plot is about Dutch policeman Van Der Valk, who investigates a novelist who is accused of murdering his mistress. [1] It was based on the novel Love in Amsterdam by Nicolas Freeling.
Lolita is a 1955 novel written by Russian-American novelist Vladimir Nabokov that addresses the controversial subject of hebephilia.The protagonist is a French literature professor who moves to New England and writes under the pseudonym Humbert Humbert.