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King of Hearts (original French title: Le Roi de cœur) is a 1966 French/Italian international co-production comedy-drama film directed by Philippe de Broca and starring Alan Bates and Geneviève Bujold. The film is set in a small town in France near the end of World War I. As the Imperial German Army retreats, they booby trap the whole town to ...
King of Hearts is a 1936 British romance film directed by Oswald Mitchell and Walter Tennyson and starring Will Fyffe, Richard Dolman and Googie Withers. It was produced by Butcher's Film Service, and made at Cricklewood Studios in London. [2]
King of Hearts or Le Roi de coeur, a French film by Philippe de Broca; King of Hearts, an Iranian movie starring Mohammad-Ali Fardin; King of Hearts, a title used by Domon Kasshu and Master Asia, part of the Shuffle Alliance, in Mobile Fighter G Gundam; Jamai Raja, an Indian television series renamed King of Hearts for English viewers
The King of Kings is an upcoming American animated Christian film written and directed by Seong-ho Jang, loosely inspired by the short story The Life of Our Lord.It features the voices of Kenneth Branagh, Uma Thurman, Mark Hamill, Pierce Brosnan, Roman Griffin Davis, Forest Whitaker, Ben Kingsley and Oscar Isaac.
King of Hearts (German: Herzkönig) is a 1947 German comedy film directed by Helmut Weiss and starring Hans Nielsen, Aribert Wäscher, and Sonja Ziemann. [1] The film was the first production of Artur Brauner's CCC Films, which would develop into a leading company in West German cinema.
King of Hearts is a 1978 musical with a book by Joseph Stein, lyrics by Jacob Brackman, and music by Peter Link, orchestrated by Bill Brohn. It is based on the 1966 anti-war cult film of the same name .
Kind Hearts and Coronets was nominated for the British Academy Film Award for Best British Film, alongside Passport to Pimlico and Whisky Galore!, although they lost to The Third Man (1949). [35] The film was screened as one of Britain's entries to the 10th Venice International Film Festival; William Kellner won an award for Best Production ...
The Kerrs also collaborated on the Tony Award-winning King of Hearts (1954), which ran for 279 performances; he directed the play that she co-wrote with Eleanor Brooke. [2] King of Hearts was adapted for the screen in 1956 under the title That Certain Feeling. The film starred Bob Hope.