Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Blizzard of Souls (Latvian: Dvēseļu putenis), or The Rifleman (English title), [2] is a 2019 Latvian historical drama film directed by Dzintars Dreibergs . [1] It premiered on 8 November 2019 in Latvia [ 3 ] and on 20 February 2020 internationally, at the European Film Market . [ 4 ]
State censorship body Glavlit and CPSU Department of Culture had the control over releasing the movies. [6] The first Latvian feature films produced during the era still had to meet the ideological requirements of the Soviet regime: The Story of a Latvian Rifleman (1957) directed by Pāvels Armands and "Tobago" Changes Its Course (1965 ...
The Latvian pagan metal band Skyforger has the album Latviešu strēlnieki dedicated to the Latvian Riflemen and their battles in the World War I. A former Latvian rifleman is the protagonist of the 2007 film Defenders of Riga, set in the final days of World War I and the subsequent Latvian War of Independence.
Japanese and Latvian co production Astoņas zvaigznes (Eight stars) Askolds Saulītis-Documentary about Latvian Riflemens: The author of the script : Dainis Īvāns, Askolds Saulītis. Latvian films for centenary of Republic of Latvia: Vectēvs, kas bīstamāks par datoru (Grandfather more dangerous than a computer) Varis Brasla: Markuss Jānis ...
In the 1960s, Johnson appeared four times on CBS's Gunsmoke, three times on ABC's The Guns of Will Sonnett starring Walter Brennan, and three times on ABC's The Rifleman, first in 1960 as Kansas Sawyer in the episode "The Horse Trader", then in 1960 as Mr. Avery in "The Spoiler", and again in 1962 in "Guilty Conscience" as the old man.
Flow, Latvia’s wordless adventure story about a cat surviving a fantastical flood, has made quite a splash this awards season.. The modest independent film has upended the animated feature race ...
A trope is an element of film semiotics and connects between denotation and connotation.Films reproduce tropes of other arts and also make tropes of their own. [6] George Bluestone wrote in Novels Into Film that in producing adaptations, film tropes are "enormously limited" compared to literary tropes.
In 1961, he portrayed the gangster Vincent Coll in Mad Dog Coll, and a kind of mad-dog teen killer in The Young Savages later the same year. He appeared in several of Sam Peckinpah's Western films, and on television between the 1960s and 1990s in The Rifleman; Route 66; Straightaway; The Virginian; Adam-12; Gunsmoke; Walker, Texas Ranger; Quincy, M.E.; Columbo; Murder, She Wrote; and Star Trek ...