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The Tricky Game of Love (Czech: Hry lásky šálivé) is a Czech comedy film directed by Jiří Krejčík. It was released in two sequences on October 22, 1971, in Czechoslovakia . Cast
Awarded for Readers Choice by Board Game Geek and for the best Czech video game of the year by Games.cz. J.U.L.I.A. Among the Stars: Puzzle video game Adventure game: Windows, OS X, Linux: 2014 CBE Software: A remake of J.U.L.I.A. Jet Car Stunts: Racing video game: Windows, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, PlayStation Vita, Xbox 360: 2014 Grip Games
Steal This Film (2006) Hackers Are People Too (2008) Hackers Wanted (not officially released, but leaked in 2010) The Virtual Revolution (2010) We Are Legion (2012) The Internet's Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz (2014) Citizenfour (2014) Zero Days (2016) Lo and Behold, Reveries of the Connected World (2016) Cyberbunker: The Criminal ...
The film is loosely based on Čertův švagr by Božena Němcová. Some aspects were inspired by Fanfan la Tulipe. Writing took place in a group of Marcela Pittermannová. Filming took place in caves near Česká Lípa, in Průhonice, in village Střehom, at Sloup Castle and Kost Castle. [2]
Špunti na cestě is a 2022 Czech comedy and family series. The series was directed by Jiří Chlumský while script was written by Marcel Bystroň and Petr Hudský. The series is a sequel of a film River Rascals , which was seen in cinemas by almost half a million viewers. [ 1 ]
Exhibition about "Drei Haselnüsse für Aschenbrödel" in Moritzburg, Germany. Three Wishes for Cinderella (Czech: Tři oříšky pro Popelku; German: Drei Haselnüsse für Aschenbrödel, also called in English Three Hazelnuts for Cinderella or Three Gifts for Cinderella) is a 1973 Czechoslovak-East German film based on the fairy-tale Cinderella.
Cyberbully (stylized as cyberbu//y) is a teen drama television film that premiered on ABC Family (now Freeform) on July 17, 2011. The channel collaborated with Seventeen magazine to make the film, stating that they hoped it would "delete digital drama" in a press release. The film tells the story of a teenage girl who is bullied online. [1]
A typical Soviet opening credits sequence starts with a film company's logo (such as Mosfilm or Lenfilm), the film's title, followed by the scenarist (the Soviet Union considered the scriptwriter the principal "auteur" of its films [citation needed]), followed by the director, usually on separate screens, then continuing with screens showing ...