Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Nowhere to Go was the first Ealing film under the MGM arrangement not to receive a standalone release. Instead, MGM trimmed the film to a length of 89 minutes and released it in the UK on the bottom half of a double bill with the World War II submarine drama Torpedo Run (1958). The pairing premiered in the West End on 4 December 1958 at Fox's ...
Nowhere to Go, a 2004 album by Takayoshi Ohmura "Nowhere to Go" (Hayden James song), a 2019 single by Hayden James "Nowhere to Go", a song by Agnostic Front from their 1999 album Riot, Riot, Upstart
Nowhere to Run, an American TV film starring David Janssen; Nowhere to Run, a Chinese film directed by Wang Mengyuan; Nowhere to Run, a documentary film by Anthony Sherwood; Nowhere to Run, a video compilation of episodes of Animorphs "Nowhere to Run" (Highlander: The Series), an episode of Highlander: The Series "Nowhere to Run", an episode of ...
Nowhere Special is an internationally co-produced drama film written, directed, and produced by Uberto Pasolini. The film, set in Northern Ireland , stars James Norton and Daniel Lamont. The story follows John, a single parent to four-year-old Michael, who must make arrangements for the care of his son when he is faced with the reality of ...
The film was nominated for three national film Awards and was a German entry for the Cannes Film Festival Directors' Fortnight. [9] [10] In April 2001, the film won the Golden Tulip Award in the Cinema and Art competition at the International Istanbul Film Festival. [9] At the Miami Film Festival of 2001, it won the Critics' Choice Award. [11]
A Copy of My Mind is a 2015 Indonesian drama film written and directed by Joko Anwar. A low-budget co-production between Indonesia and South Korea, the film stars Tara Basro and Chicco Jerikho. At the 35th Citra Awards, the film received seven nominations, winning three: Best Director for Anwar, Best Actress for Basro, and Best Sound. [2]
Passport to Nowhere is a 1947 American short documentary film produced by Frederic Ullman Jr. as part of RKO Pictures' documentary series This Is America. Its subject was European refugees after World War II. [1] It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. [2] [3] The star of the film is Dwight Weist, who was the narrator. [4]
AlphaGo earned positive reviews. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 100%, with an average score of 8/10, based on 10 reviews. [4] Charlotte O'Sullivan of Evening Standard gave the film 4 stars out of five, calling it a "gripping, emotional documentary, which gets us thinking, about thinking, in a whole new way".