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Breaking Away is a 1979 American coming of age comedy-drama film produced and directed by Peter Yates and written by Steve Tesich. It follows a group of four male teenagers in Bloomington, Indiana , who have recently graduated from high school.
Like any self-respecting Hoosier, I hold a tremendous amount of affection for "Breaking Away," the Oscar-winning 1979 coming-of-age film about the Little 500 bike race at Indiana University.
Breaking Away is a 1979 film. Breaking Away may also refer to: Breaking Away, a 1980 series based on the film; Breaking Away (Tantrum album), 2005; Breaking Away (Jaki Graham album), 1986 which includes a song of the same name; Otryvayas (Breaking Away), an album by Mashina Vremeni "Breaking Away", a song by Ratatat from Ratatat
Breaking Away is a 1980 American comedy-drama television series. Based on the 1979 film of the same name, it was created by Steve Tesich, who wrote the original film, and the film's director Peter Yates served as executive producer. As a prequel, the series was set during the year prior to the events of the film.
Breakaway is a 2011 sports-comedy film directed by Robert Lieberman, [2] and produced by Akshay Kumar and Paul Gross.The film stars Vinay Virmani in his debut performance opposite Camilla Belle, with Rob Lowe, Russell Peters and Anupam Kher in pivotal roles. [3]
Angkasa (Rio Dewanto), Aurora (Sheila Dara Aisha), and Awan (Rachel Amanda) are siblings who live in a happy-looking family.After experiencing her first major failure, Awan meets Kale (Ardhito Pramono), an eccentric boy who gave Awan a new life experience, about breaking, rising, falling, growing, being, and all the fears of people in general.
Breakaway (cycling), a cycling term for a single rider or group of riders detaching from the peloton to advance their position in front of it Breakaway (ice hockey), a situation in which there are no defenders (except for the goaltender) between an attacking player and the goal
The cinema of Indonesia refers to films produced domestically in Indonesia. The statutory Indonesian Film Board, or BPI, defines Indonesian films as "movies that are made by or using Indonesian resources whose Intellectual Property Right is owned either entirely or partly by Indonesian citizen or Indonesian legal entity". [5]