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Little Children premiered at the 44th New York Film Festival, and was released October 6, 2006, on 5 screens, earning $145,946, with a $29,189 per-screen average. However, during its 64 weeks in theaters, 32 screens were the most on which New Line Cinema ever exhibited the film, only briefly increasing that count to 109 in the few weeks leading ...
Little Children is a 2004 novel by American author Tom Perrotta that interweaves the dark stories of seven main characters, all of whom live in the same Boston suburb during the middle of a hot summer.
Little Children may refer to: Little Children, by Tom Perrotta Little Children, based on the novel; Little Children, the official soundtrack of the film "Little Children" (song), a 1964 hit for Billy J. Kramer Little Children, the album containing it "Little Children", a song from the eponymous album Brian Wilson
This is a list of awards and nominations received by Little Children. The film received three Academy Award nominations, including Best Actress for Kate Winslet, Best Supporting Actor for Jackie Earle Haley, and Best Adapted Screenplay for Todd Field and Tom Perrotta.
Little Children is the original soundtrack, on the New Line Records label, of the 2006 Academy Award- and Golden Globe-nominated film Little Children starring Kate Winslet, Patrick Wilson, Jennifer Connelly, Phyllis Somerville and Jackie Earle Haley. The original score was composed by Thomas Newman.
Suffer Little Children is a 1983 British [1] shot-on-video horror film created by a cast of intergenerational students of South London's Meg Shanks Drama School (with a narrative inspired by films including Carrie, Psycho, Halloween and Mad Max) supervised by director Alan Briggs.
During their 2002 Little League World Series run, the Fort Worth team faced elimination 11 times and won every game. But in the semifinals, Fort Worth lost 2-1 to a team from Kentucky in 11 innings.
"Little Children" reached No.1 in the UK Singles Chart in March 1964, [1] and No. 7 in the US Hot 100 singles chart later the same year. [3] The B-side of "Little Children" in the U.S., "Bad to Me" (which had previously been an A-side in the UK and which made No. 1 there in August 1963) peaked at No. 9 on the US charts simultaneously to the success of "Little Children".