Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The film's non-linear and fragmented structure allows the linking of images, sometimes almost subliminally, to evoke Szindbád's memories or his subconscious, and the description "Proustian" has repeatedly appeared in critical assessments (perhaps echoing a frequent characterization of the writings of the author of the original stories, Gyula ...
The piezoelectric properties of PVDF are exploited in the manufacture of tactile sensor arrays, inexpensive strain gauges, and lightweight audio transducers. Piezoelectric panels made of PVDF are used on the Venetia Burney Student Dust Counter, a scientific instrument of the New Horizons space probe that measures dust density in the outer Solar ...
Post-mortem photograph of a dead girl and her parents. In 1918, towards the end of First World War, on a battlefield, the Austrian soldier Tomás is left for dead after an artillery explosion, being thrown into the mass grave; however, an older soldier sees him still breathing in the pile of corpses and pulls him out of a flooded trench, where in a semi-conscious state due to the explosion, he ...
The company's new Smart Sonic Sound device still relies on a piezoelectric actuator, but vibrates against a film to generate as much volume as a regular speaker in a far thinner (under 1.5mm thick ...
The National Film Institute Hungary (NFI), known in its original full Hungarian name as Nemzeti Filmintézet Közhasznú Nonprofit Zártkörűen Működő Részvénytársaság, in short Nemzeti Filmintézet (NFI), was formed by the merger of the Magyar Nemzeti Filmalap and the Médiamecenatúra Program.
"Coming Out" is the story of Erik (Sándor Csányi), a radio personality, gay activist, and Hungary's most famous openly gay male celebrity.As Erik is preparing to marry his partner Balázs (Gábor Karalyos), he is shocked to discover he has a growing sexual attraction to women.
Bush Hager even recorded her own audition video in which she spoke the lyrics to Parton's hit, "Jolene." "I have prepared for you, miss Dolly Parton, the lyrics to 'Jolene.'
The film screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival, [1] and was awarded six prizes at the 1998 Hungarian Film Week, including best film, best direction, best cinematography, best actress (Ildikó Bánsági), best actor(s) (Djoko Rosic and János Derzsi), and the Foreign Film Critics' Gene Moskowitz prize. [2]