Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Children of Darkness is a 1983 American documentary film on PBS produced by Ara Chekmayan and Richard Kotuk. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature . [ 1 ]
In 2010, Ruddy won the Archibald People's Choice Prize for his portrait of Warwick Thornton entitled The Prince of Darkness. [6] He was an Archibald Prize finalist in 2011 with a portrait of athlete Cathy Freeman and in 2020 with his portrait of author Bruce Pascoe. [4] [2]
Richard Kotuk (November 23, 1943 – February 10, 1998) was an American journalist, producer and documentary filmmaker. He directed and produced Travis, a 1998 documentary film for which he won a George Foster Peabody Award.
Archibald Campbell Mzolisa "A.C." Jordan (30 October 1906 – 20 October 1968) was a novelist, literary historian and intellectual pioneer of African studies in South Africa. Early life [ edit ]
When the lights come on, all the monsters are there laughing at them. Fatso, a large brown monster, grabs them as Uncle Archibald storms in. The monsters, fearing the wrath of their creator, let the two friends go. Archibald threatens the monsters; if they did not go back to the stories then he would send them to a soppy love story.
Ian Archibald Beck (born 17 August 1947 in Hove) is an English children's illustrator and author. In addition to his numerous children's books, he is also known for his cover illustration on Elton John's Goodbye Yellow Brick Road album. More than a million copies of his books have been sold worldwide. [1]
Children of the Dark (闇の子供たち, Yami no Kodomotachi), also known as Children of Darkness, is a 2008 Japanese crime film written and directed by Junji Sakamoto based upon the book by the same name by Yang Sok-il. The film premiered on August 2, 2008 in Japan and stars Yōsuke Eguchi, Aoi Miyazaki and Satoshi Tsumabuki.
《溫柔與暴烈》Wenrou yu baolie, Tenderness and Violence, 《烈女圖》Lienü tu [Portraits of martyred women,《烈佬傳》 Lielao zhuan, Children of Darkness Wong Bik-wan (Cantonese pronunciation) or Huang Biyun (Mandarin pronunciation, traditional Chinese : 黃碧雲 ; simplified Chinese : 黄碧云 ; born 1961) is a Hong Kong writer.