Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Waterloo (Russian: Ватерлоо) is a 1970 English-language epic historical war film about the Battle of Waterloo. A co-production between Italy and the Soviet Union , it was directed by Sergei Bondarchuk and produced by Dino De Laurentiis .
After the start of World War I, many of the same filmmakers who produced Waterloo were put to work on propaganda films, the most famous of which is The Battle of the Somme. The original prints of The Battle of Waterloo were struck on nitrate film and have been lost. Only fragments survive in the British Film Institute's archive. The entire film ...
Waterloo is a 1929 German silent war film directed by Karl Grune and starring Charles Willy Kayser, Charles Vanel and Otto Gebühr. [1] It depicts the victory of the Allied Forces over Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815. It was made at the Emelka Studios of Bavaria Film in Munich. The film's sets were designed by the art director Ludwig ...
The Field of Waterloo, by J. M. W. Turner, 1818 "The morning after the battle of Waterloo", by John Heaviside Clark, 1816 Waterloo cost Wellington around 17,000 dead or wounded, and Blücher some 7,000 (810 of which were suffered by just one unit: the 18th Regiment, which served in Bülow's 15th Brigade, had fought at both Frichermont and ...
War and Peace (1966–67, USSR) (Война и мир in Russia) The Last Battalion (1967) Prussian soldiers fight against rushing Frenchmen; Waterloo (1970), depiction of the Battle of Waterloo; The Guerrilla (1973) Napoleon and Love (1974) Napoleons relationships with his women as a backdrop to his rise and fall; Love and Death (1975) Die ...
This list of World War II films (1950–1989) contains fictional feature films or miniseries released since 1950 which feature events of World War II in the narrative. The entries on this list are war films or miniseries that are concerned with World War II (or the Sino-Japanese War ) and include events which feature as a part of the war effort.
The Ohio Theatre is a performing arts center and former movie palace on Capitol Square in Downtown Columbus, Ohio. Known as the "Official Theatre of the State of Ohio", the 1928 building was saved from demolition in 1969 and was later completely restored. [3] [4] The theater was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1977. [3] [5]
Waterloo Bridge: A play in two acts is a 1930 play by Robert E. Sherwood. [1] It premiered on Broadway January 6, 1930 and ran until March 1930. It was the basis for three separate films: Waterloo Bridge (1931), Waterloo Bridge (1940), and Gaby (1956). It is based on the author's experiences during World War I. [2]