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[
"Kaj Gnudtzmann",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Kaj Svane Gnudtzmann (1 May 1880 – 22 September 1948) was a Danish gymnast who competed in the 1906 Intercalated Games.
In 1906 he won the silver medal as member of the Danish gymnastics team in the team competition. | null | null | null | null | 4 |
[
"Louis Larsen",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Louis Edmund Larsen (10 January 1874 – 26 May 1950) was a Danish gymnast who competed in the 1906 Intercalated Games.
In 1906 he won the silver medal as member of the Danish gymnastics team in the team competition. | null | null | null | null | 3 |
[
"Anton Gustafsson (athlete)",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Johan Gustaf Anton Gustafsson (6 February 1877 – 16 November 1943) was a Swedish athlete who won a bronze medal in the tug of war competition at the 1906 Intercalated Games. Gustafsson was a Swedish weightlifting champion in 1905–1907, and it is unclear why he did not compete in weightlifting at the 1906 Games. | null | null | null | null | 2 |
[
"Anton Gustafsson (athlete)",
"different from",
"Anton Gustafsson"
] | null | null | null | null | 7 |
|
[
"Georgios Psachos",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Georgios Psachos (Greek: Γεώργιος Ψάχος, also Psakhos; 1872–unknown) was a Greek tug of war athlete from Zarouchleika, Patras. He was the brother of Vassilios Psachos.Psachos was a member of Gymnastiki Etaireia Patron, that merged in 1923 with Panachaikos Gymnastikos syllogos to become Panachaiki Gymnastiki Enosi.
He competed for Greece in the 1906 Intercalated Games held in Athens, Greece, where he won the Silver medal in the tug of war competition. | null | null | null | null | 3 |
[
"Gustaf Grönberger",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Andreas Gustaf Grönberger (Stockholm Sweden, 12 June 1882 – Stockholm, 29 August 1972) was an athlete who won bronze medal at the 1906 Intercalated Games in tug of war.
He competed at the Tug war at the Games. There was direct elimination during the game. At first round Greece defeated Sweden, who later won at the round for the bronze medal against Austria | null | null | null | null | 5 |
[
"Gustaf Wretman",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Gustaf Wretman (10 August 1888 – 17 October 1949) was a Swedish backstroke and freestyle swimmer. He competed at the 1906 Intercalated Games and the 1908 Summer Olympics.Wretman represented Stockholms KK and SK Neptun. | null | null | null | null | 3 |
[
"Gustaf Wretman",
"participant of",
"1908 Summer Olympics"
] | Gustaf Wretman (10 August 1888 – 17 October 1949) was a Swedish backstroke and freestyle swimmer. He competed at the 1906 Intercalated Games and the 1908 Summer Olympics.Wretman represented Stockholms KK and SK Neptun.References
External links
Gustaf Wretman at Olympedia
Gustaf Wretman at the Swedish Olympic Committee (in Swedish) | null | null | null | null | 4 |
[
"Konstantinos Lazaros",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Konstantinos Lazaros (Greek: Κωνσταντίνος Λάζαρος; born 1877) was a Greek tug of war athlete.Lazaros was a member of Gymnastiki Etaireia Patron, that merged in 1923 with Panachaikos Gymnastikos syllogos to become Panachaiki Gymnastiki Enosi.
He competed for Greece in the 1906 Intercalated Games held in Athens, Greece, where he won the Silver medal in the tug of war competition. | null | null | null | null | 3 |
[
"Leopold Mayer",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | null | null | null | null | 2 |
|
[
"Leopold Mayer",
"different from",
"Leopold Mayer"
] | null | null | null | null | 5 |
|
[
"Panagiotis Trivoulidas",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | null | null | null | null | 3 |
|
[
"Panagiotis Trivoulidas",
"participant of",
"1920 Summer Olympics"
] | null | null | null | null | 4 |
|
[
"Pericle Pagliani",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | null | null | null | null | 5 |
|
[
"Pericle Pagliani",
"participant of",
"1908 Summer Olympics"
] | null | null | null | null | 9 |
|
[
"Ture Wersäll",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | == References == | null | null | null | null | 4 |
[
"Vassilios Psachos",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Vassilios Psachos (Greek: Βασίλειος Ψάχος), also Psakhos; 1877–?) was a Greek tug of war athlete from Zarouchleika, Patras. He was the younger brother of Georgios Psachos.Psachos was a member of Gymnastiki Etaireia Patron, that merged in 1923 with Panachaikos Gymnastikos syllogos to become Panachaiki Gymnastiki Enosi.
He competed for Greece in the 1906 Intercalated Games held in Athens, Greece, where he won the Silver medal in the tug of war competition. | null | null | null | null | 3 |
[
"Andreas Hagelund",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Andreas Hagelund (15 November 1881 – 19 September 1967) was a Norwegian gymnast who competed in the 1906 Summer Olympics.
In 1906 he won the gold medal as member of the Norwegian gymnastics team in the team competition. He was born in Fredrikshald and died in Fredrikstad, and represented the club Fredrikshalds TF. | null | null | null | null | 2 |
[
"Erik Klem",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Erik Walter Klem (25 July 1886 – 24 January 1965) was a Danish gymnast who competed in the 1906 Summer Olympics.
In 1906 he won the silver medal as member of the Danish gymnastics team in the team competition. | null | null | null | null | 5 |
[
"Finn Münster",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Finn Holmsen Münster (born 20 January 1887; date of death unknown) was a Norwegian gymnast who competed in the 1906 Summer Olympics.
In 1906 he won the gold medal as member of the Norwegian gymnastics team in the team competition. | null | null | null | null | 2 |
[
"Harald Eriksen (gymnast)",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Harald Anders Eriksen (3 July 1888 – 1 June 1968) was a Norwegian gymnast who competed in the 1906 Summer Olympics.
In 1906 he won the gold medal as member of the Norwegian gymnastics team in the team competition. | null | null | null | null | 2 |
[
"Johan Stumpf",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Johan Leopold Stumpf (19 May 1880 – 24 August 1944) was a Norwegian gymnast who competed in the 1906 Summer Olympics.
in Athens, Greece.Johan Leopold Stumpf was born at Kristiansand in Vest-Agder, Norway. He was the son of Ladislav Leopold Stumpf (1856-1944) and Amalie Gudine Olausdatter
(1851-1927). He competed as a member of the Kristiansands Turnforening gymnastics club. In 1906, he won the gold medal as a member of the Norwegian gymnastics team in the Gymnastics Team Combined Exercises at the Intercalated Olympic Games. He later emigrated to Texas. | null | null | null | null | 2 |
[
"John Møller",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | null | null | null | null | 2 |
|
[
"John Møller",
"different from",
"John Møller"
] | null | null | null | null | 9 |
|
[
"Karl Haagensen",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Karl Johan Haagensen (26 March 1871, in Oslo – 25 August 1918) was a Norwegian gymnast who competed in the 1906 Summer Olympics.
In 1906 he won the gold medal as member of the Norwegian gymnastics team in the team competition at the age of 35. | null | null | null | null | 4 |
[
"Ole Holm",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Ole Holm (28 December 1870 – 29 January 1956) was a Norwegian rifle shooter. He was born in Stange. He won a silver medal in free rifle team at the 1906 Summer Olympics in Athens, together with Gudbrand Skatteboe, Julius Braathe, Albert Helgerud and John Møller. | null | null | null | null | 4 |
[
"Rasmus Pettersen",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | null | null | null | null | 2 |
|
[
"Robert Haven Schauffler",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | null | null | null | null | 5 |
|
[
"Robert W. Edgren",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | null | null | null | null | 14 |
|
[
"Thorleif Petersen",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Thorleif Petersen (6 July 1884 – 22 February 1958) was a Norwegian gymnast who competed in the 1906 Summer Olympics.
In 1906 he won the gold medal as member of the Norwegian gymnastics team in the team competition. He was a brother of fellow gold medallist Rasmus Petersen, and represented the club Trondhjems TF.== References == | null | null | null | null | 2 |
[
"Fernand Vast",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Fernand Vast (26 May 1886 – 7 June 1968) was a French cyclist, who won the road race at the 1906 Intercalated Games in Athens, Greece.Career
In 1903, Vast came fifth in the Amateurs event at the 1903 French National Road Race Championships. In the same year, he came second at the Paris–Troyes race. In 1905, Vast came second at the France amateur middle-distance championship, behind his coach. He won the Amateurs event at the 1905 French National Road Race Championships.Vast won the road race at the 1906 Intercalated Games in Athens, Greece. The race ended in a sprint, where Vast beat Maurice Bardonneau, one of the race favourites. Vast also finished third in the 5,000m and 20 km track events. After the Games, Vast became a professional cyclist, and came fifth in the 1906 Paris-Brussels race. In the same year, he also came second at the 10 km "Athens Grand Prix" event, held on Bastille Day. Vast finished 20 metres (66 ft) behind race winner Maurice Bardonneau. In 1907, he came 11th at the French Road Championships, and 15th in the Paris–Tours race. | null | null | null | null | 3 |
[
"Kristian Fjerdingen",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Kristian Adolf Fjerdingen (16 September 1884 – 5 February 1975) was a Norwegian gymnast who competed in the 1906 Summer Olympics.
In 1906 he won the gold medal as member of the Norwegian gymnastics team in the team competition. He was born and died in Steinkjer and represented the club Steinkjer TF. | null | null | null | null | 2 |
[
"Mihály Dávid",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Mihály Dávid (31 July 1886 – 3 April 1945) was a Hungarian athlete who competed mainly in the shot put. He was born in the village of Porkerec, now Purcărete, part of Negrilești, Bistrița-Năsăud, Romania. He competed for Hungary in the 1906 Intercalated Games held in Athens in the shot put where he won the silver medal. He died in Budapest in 1945.References
Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Mihály Dávid". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. | null | null | null | null | 3 |
[
"Mihály Dávid",
"different from",
"Mihály Dávid"
] | null | null | null | null | 9 |
|
[
"Alexandre Maspoli",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Career
Sports career
Maspoli was born in Lyon, France. He was an amateur weightlifting champion 19 years in a row. Maspoli won the combined events at the unofficial 1902 Weightlifting World Championships, setting a new world record in the process. In 1905, Maspoli won the French National Championships. In the throwing event, he threw 130 kilograms (290 lb). At the 1906 Intercalated Games in Athens, Maspoli came joint third in the two hand lift event. Maspoli, Heinrich Schneidereit and Heinrich Rondl all lifted 129.5 kilograms (285 lb).: 146 He also participated in the one hand lift event, where he finished fourth, and the standing long jump event, where he finished 18th.: 54 In the same year, he featured in La Culture physique, as an example of "perfect masculine physicality". In 1907, Maspoli retained his French National Championship title. | null | null | null | null | 4 |
[
"Alexandre Maspoli",
"participant of",
"1924 Summer Olympics"
] | null | null | null | null | 5 |
|
[
"Konstantinos Kozanitas",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | null | null | null | null | 3 |
|
[
"Oswald Falch",
"participant of",
"1906 Intercalated Games"
] | Oswald Falch (21 July 1884 – 13 February 1977) was a Norwegian gymnast who competed in the 1906 Summer Olympics.
In 1906 he won the gold medal as member of the Norwegian gymnastics team in the team competition. | null | null | null | null | 2 |
[
"The Lion King (video game)",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | null | null | null | null | 2 |
|
[
"The Lion King (video game)",
"based on",
"The Lion King"
] | The Lion King is a platform game based on Disney's 1994 animated film The Lion King. The game was developed by Westwood Studios and published by Virgin Interactive Entertainment for the Super NES and Genesis in 1994, and was ported to MS-DOS, Amiga, Game Gear, Master System, and Nintendo Entertainment System. The Amiga, Master System, and NES versions were only released in the PAL region. It is the final licensed NES game worldwide. The game follows Simba's journey from a young cub to the battle with his uncle Scar as an adult.Gameplay
The Lion King is a side-scrolling platform game in which players control the protagonist, Simba, through the events of the film, going through both child and adult forms as the game progresses. In the first half of the game, players control Simba as a cub, who primarily defeats enemies by jumping on them. Simba's roar consumes a replenishable meter, and can be used to stun enemies or solve puzzles. In the second half of the game, Simba becomes an adult and gains access to various combat moves such as scratching, mauling, and throws. Simba starts the game with a certain number of lives, depending on the difficulty setting, which are lost if he runs out of health, falls into a bottomless pit, or a lake of water or lava, or is hit by a rolling boulder. Passing through checkpoints throughout the level allow Simba to restart the level from that point when he loses a life. The game ends prematurely when the player loses all of their lives, although they can continue playing from the current level as long as they have continues.
The player can collect various types of bugs. Some bugs restore Simba's health and roar meters, other more rare bugs can increase these meters for the remainder of the game, and black spiders reduce Simba's health. By finding certain bugs hidden in certain levels, the player enters bonus levels as Timon and Pumbaa to earn extra lives and continues. In Pumbaa's stages, he collects falling bugs and items until either one hits the bottom of the screen or he eats a bad bug, and in Timon's stages, he hunts for bugs within a time limit while avoiding spiders. | null | null | null | null | 10 |
[
"A Far Off Place",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | A Far Off Place (aka Far Off Place and Kalahari) is a 1993 American adventure drama film based on Laurens van der Post's works A Far Off Place (1974) and its prequel, A Story Like the Wind (1972). It stars Reese Witherspoon, Ethan Randall, Jack Thompson and Maximilian Schell. The plot concerns three young teenagers who must cross the Kalahari Desert to safety when their parents are murdered by a poacher.
A Far Off Place was filmed in Namibia and Zimbabwe from May to September 1992.Plot
Against his wishes, spoiled New York City teen Harry Winslow accompanies his father to Africa's Kalahari Desert to spend time with family acquaintances Paul and Elizabeth Parker. He clashes with the Parkers’ spirited 14-year-old daughter Nonnie, who wants to follow in her dad's footsteps as a wildlife commissioner fighting Africa's elephant poachers.
That night, Nonnie and the family dog, Hintza, sneak out of the house to meet her bushman friend, Xhabbo. Harry follows them to a cave, where they spend the night helping Xhabbo recover his strength after he is attacked by a leopard.
At dawn, Nonnie returns to the house to discover that her parents and Harry's father have been murdered for investigating the export of ivory, a poaching operation secretly run by Paul Parker's associate, John Ricketts. Nonnie hides from the poachers but Ricketts realizes Nonnie and Harry are missing.
Nonnie manages to grab explosives and attaches them to the bottom of the poachers' truck, killing several of Ricketts’ men. She flees to the cave and Xhabbo advises them to “follow the wind” by heading west across the Kalahari Desert. On the edge of the desert, Xhabbo communicates with a herd of elephants and convinces them to cover their tracks by following behind. Harry is furious to learn they have 2,000 kilometers to travel before reaching the seaport of Karlstown, but Nonnie remains optimistic.
Meanwhile, the Parkers’ close friend, Colonel Mopani Theron, learns of the attack. Unaware of Ricketts' involvement, he orders Ricketts to lead an aerial search party to find the missing children. Harry attempts to flag down an approaching plane, thinking they are being rescued, but Nonnie warns they could be poachers and says they should hide.
Harry stuffs their clothes with straw to make fake decoy bodies which they place in the sand. In hiding, the kids watch in horror as the plane passengers gun down the straw bodies. Nonnie sees it was Ricketts.
Over the next two months, the runaways dig up plant roots for sustenance, and Xhabbo teaches Harry how to speak his native language and hunt gemsbok. Col. Theron remains convinced that the Parkers’ death was a corporate conspiracy and continues his tireless search for the exporters’ store of elephant tusks, which he believes will lead him to the murderer.
Nonnie and Harry are forced to stop their journey when Xhabbo gets stung by a scorpion. While wandering in search of water, Nonnie collapses in the sand. Hearing the hum of Ricketts’ approaching helicopter, Nonnie and Xhabbo weakly thump their chests in the spiritual Bushman practice of “tapping,” summoning a sandstorm that forces Ricketts to flee.
Unaware they are only a few yards away from the Atlantic coast, the three youngsters fall unconscious and awaken in a Karlstown hospital. There, Nonnie is reunited with Col. Theron and informs him that Ricketts was responsible for her parents’ deaths. Once they recover, Nonnie and Harry accompany him to Ricketts’ mining facility, where they find his hoard of elephant tusks. They rig the place with dynamite and, just as Ricketts arrives, they lead him outside and light the fuse. Ricketts runs back into the mine trying to extinguish the flame, but the dynamite explodes and buries him within the mine.
Sometime later, Nonnie and Harry say goodbye to Xhabbo, who returns to the Kalahari. Harry kisses Nonnie before boarding an aircraft home to New York, and she tells him to leave without looking back. However, as Nonnie and Col. Theron begin cleaning the charred remains of the Parker home, Harry returns, and the youths embrace. | null | null | null | null | 1 |
[
"A Far Off Place",
"significant event",
"principal photography"
] | A Far Off Place (aka Far Off Place and Kalahari) is a 1993 American adventure drama film based on Laurens van der Post's works A Far Off Place (1974) and its prequel, A Story Like the Wind (1972). It stars Reese Witherspoon, Ethan Randall, Jack Thompson and Maximilian Schell. The plot concerns three young teenagers who must cross the Kalahari Desert to safety when their parents are murdered by a poacher.
A Far Off Place was filmed in Namibia and Zimbabwe from May to September 1992.Cast
Production
Principal photography was in Namibia and Zimbabwe in from May to September 1992. It was the directorial debut of cinematographer Mikael Salomon.The aircraft featured in A Far Off Place were: | null | null | null | null | 24 |
[
"Machine Gun Preacher",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | Machine Gun Preacher is a 2011 American biographical action drama film directed by Marc Forster and starring Gerard Butler, Michelle Monaghan, and Michael Shannon. It tells the story of Sam Childers, a former gang biker turned preacher, and his efforts to protect, in collaboration with the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA), the children of South Sudan from the atrocities of Joseph Kony's Lord's Resistance Army (LRA). The screenplay by Jason Keller was adapted from Childers' book Another Man's War and Ian Urbina's Vanity Fair article "Get Kony".The film premiered at the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival and opened in the United States on September 23, 2011.Plot
In 2003 in southern Sudan, the LRA attack a village and force a young boy to kill his mother.
A few years earlier, Sam Childers, an alcoholic drug-using biker from Pennsylvania, is released from prison and finds that his wife, Lynn, has given up her job as a stripper after accepting Christ as her savior. Dumbfounded by her decision, he returns to a life of crime and partying and doing heroin with his friend Donnie, and one night he almost kills a vagrant. Shaken by the experience, Sam goes to church with Lynn, where he is baptized and offered salvation.
With a new outlook on life, Sam is able to find a stable job as a construction worker and later starts his own company. He helps Donnie get sober and goes on a missionary trip to Uganda to build homes for refugees. While there, he asks Deng, one of the SPLA soldiers watching over his group, to take him north to see Sudan. Deng warns him that it is a war zone, but Sam still wants to go. In a medical tent, Sam is asked by a female doctor to help move a woman who has just had her lips cut off by Joseph Kony's LRA rebels. That night, Sam witnesses the large numbers of children who come from their villages to sleep outdoors on the ground at the displaced persons camp because it is safer than staying at home, and Sam brings as many as will fit into his and Deng's room to sleep. The next day, Deng takes Sam to a village that was attacked by the LRA, and Sam sees a child get killed by a land mine.
Traumatized and changed by the trip, Sam receives a vision from God that tells him to build both a church in his own neighborhood, which will not turn anyone away, and an orphanage in southern Sudan. He begins preaching at the church once it is built and then returns to Africa to build the orphanage. During construction, the LRA attack, destroying everything. Sam calls Lynn to tell her what happened and that he is giving up, but she says it is a test from God and he should start building again. After the orphanage is complete, a young girl brought there dies of her injuries, prompting Sam to start to lead armed raids to rescue children, including child soldiers, from the LRA.
At home, Sam becomes increasingly unempathetic toward his family and their petty problems, his sermons become angrier, and his sole focus becomes raising money to fund his work in Africa. In Sudan, he starts to make an impact, with Kony putting a price on his head and SPLA-leader John Garang inviting him to upcoming peace talks, though Sam does not attend. One night, he and some SPLA soldiers are attacked on the road by the LRA. After chasing off the attackers, they search the area and discover a large group of children hiding in a ditch. They cannot take all of the children to the orphanage in one trip, and when they return for the children they left behind, they find a pile of burned bodies. Events such as this, along with Donnie's death from an overdose after Sam yelled at him and he broke his sobriety, push Sam away from God and further into despair. He sells his construction company and goes back to Sudan, but his changed attitude leads his men to no longer trust him to lead them in battle.
William, the boy who was forced to kill his mother at the start of the film and subsequently ended up at the orphanage, tells Sam his story and reminds Sam that their fight is already lost if they become full of hate. His faith and purpose revitalized, Sam begins to play with the children at the orphanage and calls his daughter to say he loves her. Later, he goes out with some SPLA soldiers and rescues a caravan of children kidnapped by the LRA. There is again not enough space to take everyone to the orphanage in one trip, but this time Sam and a few soldiers stay to protect the remaining children. | null | null | null | null | 1 |
[
"Machine Gun Preacher",
"different from",
"Sam Childers"
] | null | null | null | null | 21 |
|
[
"Africa Addio",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | Africa Addio (also known as Africa: Blood and Guts in the United States and Farewell Africa in the United Kingdom) is a 1966 Italian mondo documentary film co-directed, co-edited and co-written by Gualtiero Jacopetti and Franco E. Prosperi with music by Riz Ortolani. Jacopetti and Prosperi had gained fame (along with co-director Paolo Cavara) as the directors of Mondo Cane in 1962.
Africa Addio documents the end of the colonial era in Africa, and the violence and chaos that followed. The film was a huge success, which ensured the viability of the so-called "Mondo film" genre, a cycle of "shockumentaries"- documentaries featuring sensational topics. The film encountered criticism and praise due to its controversial content, but is nevertheless considered to be a very important film in the history of documentary filmmaking.Vignettes
The narrator (Gualtiero Jacopetti) explains the purpose of the film: to document that Africa has changed forever following decolonization and to show the turmoil in the time immediately following the withdrawal of Europeans from the continent. The narrator states that the film will not tell its audience what to think about these events, but rather that the viewer will have to make up their own minds about what they see.
Somewhere in sub-Saharan Africa, the natives celebrate the British relinquishing control and allowing them to establish their own government. Celebrations start with fireworks but end with mobs of locals destroying imported goods from European countries or African colonies that have not yet gained independence, such as Portuguese eggs and South African oranges and beer.
In Kenya, we see shots of the Mau Mau Uprising. One of the Mau Maus is arrested for the mass murder of an entire family of white farmers and their staff. After the massacre, 100 Mau Maus descended on the farm, tortured the animals and committed cannibalism. The surviving animals are euthanized out of mercy. The organizer of the crimes is sentenced to hard labor for life.
In the White Highlands area, many white farmers, unwilling to remain without the protection of their governments, sell their farms at a loss and prepare to leave the continent forever. The lawns and gardens of their homes are then bulldozed by the new owners to make way for more farmland. The coffins of dead homeowners are exhumed and are taken by their families to be buried again on another continent.
Armies of poachers descend on the savanna, now no longer protected as wildlife preserves. Hundreds of animals, including many elephants, are killed for their pelts and ivory. The British still do their best to protect the wildlife, by moving wildlife preserves and giving medical care to injured baby animals who were orphaned by poachers. A poaching operation is stopped by authorities, and they discover that the poachers had used grenades to kill 300 baby elephants. Hundreds of rotting animals, mainly zebras and gazelles, that had been killed and left by poachers must be burned by authorities for health reasons.
In Zanzibar during its revolution, rebels target Arab civilians as revenge for Sultanate oppression that occurred almost a millennium prior. The camera crew arrives in Zanzibar from Tanganyika and attempts to land, but they are not granted permission. They attempt to land anyway, but are shot at and narrowly manage to take off again and escape. A second plane containing three German journalists is unable to leave, and the plane is burned.
Between January 18 and 20, 1964, a genocide occurs in Zanzibar, with endless lines of captive Arab civilians are marched at gunpoint to a location where they will be shot by a firing squad. The bodies of countless thousands, some in mass graves and most others strewn across the ground, are photographed from a helicopter. The narrator confirms that this footage is the only documentation to prove that this genocide ever took place. Entire Arab villages march to the sea in a futile attempt to escape the carnage, despite the fact that there is no way off of the island. The filmmakers fly over the beach again the following day and find the bodies of all the villagers who tried to get to the ocean. The genocide claimed the lives of approximately 5,000 Arab and South Asian civilians (estimates range up to 20,000 in the aftermath).
At Fort São Sebastião, one of the fortresses on the Ilha de Moçambique built by Vasco de Gama along the coast of Mozambique, Portuguese soldiers attend a Catholic Mass and receive the Eucharist while guerilla rebels on the mainland travel hesitantly through the morning fog. In Angola during the Angolan War of Independence, Portuguese soldiers lay traps for the rebel guerillas in the forest. The narrator bitterly laments that the Portuguese have consistently tried to integrate black Africans into society, while the Portuguese settlers were hated and shunned in return. | null | null | null | null | 0 |
[
"The Four Feathers (2002 film)",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | null | null | null | null | 4 |
|
[
"The Four Feathers (2002 film)",
"based on",
"The Four Feathers"
] | The Four Feathers is a 2002 war drama film directed by Shekhar Kapur and starring Heath Ledger, Wes Bentley, Djimon Hounsou and Kate Hudson. Set during the British Army's Gordon Relief Expedition (late 1884 to early 1885) in Sudan, well after the formation of Mahdiyya, it tells the story of a young man accused of cowardice. This film, with altered plot events, is the latest in a long line of cinematic adaptations of the 1902 novel The Four Feathers by A.E.W. Mason. Other versions of the story have been set in the 1890s, with different battle events. | null | null | null | null | 38 |
[
"Tears of the Sun",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | null | null | null | null | 1 |
|
[
"The Flight of the Phoenix (1965 film)",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | null | null | null | null | 0 |
|
[
"The Flight of the Phoenix (1965 film)",
"main subject",
"aviation"
] | The Flight of the Phoenix is a 1965 American survival drama film produced and directed by Robert Aldrich, based on the 1964 novel of the same name by English author Elleston Trevor. The story follows a small group of men struggling to survive their aircraft's emergency landing in the Sahara. It stars an ensemble cast, with James Stewart, Richard Attenborough, Peter Finch, Hardy Kruger, Ernest Borgnine, Ian Bannen, Ronald Fraser, Christian Marquand, Dan Duryea and George Kennedy.
Though the film was not a financial success, it was well-received by critics, who praised Aldrich’s direction and the performances of its cast. It was nominated for two Academy Awards: Best Supporting Actor for Bannen and Best Editing for Michael Luciano. Hardy Krüger was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor, and Aldrich was nominated for Best Motion Picture – Drama.
The Flight of the Phoenix was remade in 2004, titled as Flight of the Phoenix. | null | null | null | null | 23 |
[
"The Flight of the Phoenix (1965 film)",
"based on",
"The Flight of the Phoenix"
] | null | null | null | null | 32 |
|
[
"Shooting Dogs",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | null | null | null | null | 1 |
|
[
"Shooting Dogs",
"main subject",
"Rwandan genocide"
] | Shooting Dogs, released in the United States as Beyond the Gates, is a 2005 film, directed by Michael Caton-Jones and starring John Hurt, Hugh Dancy and Clare-Hope Ashitey. It is based on the experiences of BBC news producer David Belton, who worked in Rwanda during the Rwandan genocide. Belton is the film's co-writer and one of its producers.
The setting of the film is the École Technique Officielle (ETO) in Kigali, Rwanda, in 1994, during the Rwandan genocide. Hurt plays a Catholic priest (loosely based on Vjekoslav Ćurić) and Dancy an English teacher, both Europeans, who are caught up in the events of the genocide.
Unlike Hotel Rwanda, which was filmed in South Africa using South African actors, the film was shot in the original location of the scenes it portrays. Also, many of the massacre survivors were employed as part of the production crew and in minor acting roles.
The film's title refers to the actions of UN soldiers in shooting at the stray dogs that scavenged the bodies of the dead. Since the UN soldiers were not allowed to shoot at the Hutu extremists who had caused the deaths in the first place, the shooting of dogs is symbolic of the madness of the situation that the film attempts to capture.Plot
Joe Connor is a teacher at the École Technique Officielle outside Kigali, run by Father Christopher. The school is also home to a company of Belgian soldiers under the command of Captain Delon, as part of the UN peacekeeping mandate. Joe is close to a girl, Marie, who Christopher believes has a crush on him. In early April 1994, they observe a number of events that cause Christopher some concern, including lists being made of Tutsi families, reports of Hutu mobs attacking Tutsis elsewhere in the country, and a suspicious interest shown by Christopher's government contact in the number of UN troops at the school.
On the night of 6 April 1994, distant explosions and gunshots are heard, and Delon hears that the President's plane has been shot down. He mobilises his men to guard the school perimeter, turning it into a military base. Refugees arrive at the gates, and Christopher, over Delon's objections, insists that they are let in. The next morning, Joe drives to Marie's house to fetch her, but the house is deserted save for a dog. He returns to the school to find that she has arrived through the rear entrance, as the front entrance is now guarded by a Hutu mob. The refugees organise themselves under the leadership of Roland, Marie's father. A number of European refugees also arrive, and, to Christopher's frustration, Delon arranges for them to be given better quarters. Christopher continues with church services as usual, while Joe attempts to help the refugees.
As a mob surrounds the school, Joe thinks it would help the refugees if their plight is televised and requests Delon's assistance to fetch BBC journalist Rachel and bring her to the compound. Delon is initially cooperative, but abruptly changes his mind and refuses when he hears that the Belgian soldiers guarding Prime Minister Uwilingiyimana have been massacred. Joe decides to leave anyway and get his friend François, who is a Hutu, to escort him instead, but François is not at home. Joe finds Rachel and her cameraman and persuades them to come to the school by telling them there are Europeans there. As they are returning to the school they are stopped at a roadblock and dragged from their vehicle at gunpoint. While Rachel tries to negotiate their way out, Joe is distraught to see a Tutsi man dragged off and hacked to death with machetes. He is further horrified to see that François is with the mob, holding a bloody machete. François arranges for Joe and the BBC team to be let through. The journalists seem much more dispassionate about the events than Joe, which he later discusses with Rachel, who is a veteran reporter with experience of similar events in Bosnia.
During an interview with Delon, Rachel asks him why his troops do not intervene to stop the killings and queries the UN mandate. Delon terminates the interview and tells her that he has requested a change to his mandate to allow him to intervene, without success. Christopher delivers the baby of Edda, one of the refugees, who names the baby after him. Christopher later leaves the school to find medicine for the baby and to visit a nearby convent, which he has heard has been attacked. At the pharmacist, he pays a bribe to get the medicine and angrily lies that the child is Hutu. When he arrives at the convent, he finds that the nuns have all been killed. Outside, the school's hurdles which he lent out as a favour are being used as part of the roadblock, something his government contact gleefully points out. On Christopher's return to the school, Delon tells him they will begin shooting the dogs scavenging nearby bodies. Christopher sarcastically asks if the dogs have been shooting at the UN troops, in reference to their limited mandate.
French troops arrive at the base but announce they are only there to take French refugees. After a furious outburst from Delon, they agree to take all the Europeans. Joe attempts to negotiate for Marie to take his place on the trucks but is rebuffed. Rachel leaves with the French, telling Joe he should leave too. A group of refugees, including Edda, try to escape through the rear of the school but are ambushed by a mob. Most of them are killed, but a few make it back to the safety of the compound. Edda initially avoids them by hiding, but her baby begins crying, alerting the killers to her presence. As Joe watches, she and her baby are hacked to death.
Delon eventually receives orders to withdraw from the school. While the Belgians are preparing to leave, Roland begs Delon to shoot the refugees, to spare them murder by machete, but Delon refuses. Joe decides he cannot bear it anymore and leaves with Delon. He encounters Marie as he is boarding the truck and cannot say anything but "I'm sorry". Christopher elects to stay behind, before realising he can smuggle children out in the back of the school truck. He takes a small group of children, including Marie, intending to return for more, but as soon as he leaves the school, the mob attacks and massacres the remaining refugees.
Christopher is stopped at a roadblock, which is led by his friend Julius. Despite Christopher's attempts to talk his way through and appeal to their relationship, Julius is openly hostile. When Christopher refuses to cooperate, Julius fatally shoots him. Marie, observing their conversation and fearing that the truck will be searched, meanwhile manages to slip away unnoticed with the children. Christopher sees Marie escape before dying.
Footage of Marie running is intercut with interview footage over the UN's reluctance to term the events in Rwanda a "genocide". In a brief epilogue, Marie tracks down Joe, who is now a teacher at Christopher's old school, and they briefly discuss their experiences.
The film closes with information about the genocide in Rwanda and the killings at the ETO in particular, with details of the personal experiences of some of the film crew during the genocide. | null | null | null | null | 10 |
[
"Beyond Borders (film)",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | null | null | null | null | 1 |
|
[
"The Wild",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | null | null | null | null | 4 |
|
[
"The Wild",
"narrative location",
"New York City"
] | null | null | null | null | 8 |
|
[
"The Wild",
"main subject",
"volcano"
] | null | null | null | null | 10 |
|
[
"The Wild",
"different from",
"jungle"
] | null | null | null | null | 29 |
|
[
"The Wild",
"main subject",
"zoo animals"
] | null | null | null | null | 37 |
|
[
"The Wild",
"main subject",
"father and son"
] | null | null | null | null | 38 |
|
[
"The Jewel of the Nile",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | The Jewel of the Nile is a 1985 American action-adventure romantic comedy film directed by Lewis Teague and produced by Michael Douglas, who also starred in the lead role, reuniting with co-stars Kathleen Turner and Danny DeVito, reprising their roles from the 1984 action-adventure film Romancing the Stone.
Like Romancing the Stone, the opening scene takes place in one of Joan's novels. This time, instead of Jesse and Angelina in Joan's wild-west scenario, Joan and Jack are about to be married when pirates attack their ship. The Jewel of the Nile sends its characters off on a new adventure in a fictional African desert, in an effort to find the fabled "Jewel of the Nile". | null | null | null | null | 4 |
[
"The Jewel of the Nile",
"follows",
"Romancing the Stone"
] | null | null | null | null | 6 |
|
[
"The Jewel of the Nile",
"based on",
"list of Romancing the Stone characters"
] | null | null | null | null | 26 |
|
[
"Aventures électroniques",
"follows",
"La Forge de Vulcain"
] | English translations
As of 2015, only a limited number of Yoko Tsuno comics have been translated to English. Books #3 and 6 (La Forge de Vulcain and Les Trois soleils de Vinéa) were released in English in 1989 under the series title, The Adventures of Yoko, Vic and Paul by Catalan Communications under their "Comcat" line. Some liberties were taken in the translation to English. For example, Yoko's last name was changed to "Suno", Khany was renamed "Kani" and the Vineans became "Vinans" from the planet "Vina". Plot transitions between individual episodes were also altered; for instance, at the conclusion of The Prey and the Ghost (original issue #12), Vic tells Yoko in the original version that he was contacted by Khany, leading to the events of issue #13, The Archangels of Vinea; in the English translation, instead he tells her that it was her father who gave him a message for her, which in the Comcat line of continuity would lead to Daughter of the Wind (original issue #9).
Comcat planned next on reprinting books nos. 8, 10, 13, and possibly no. 17, but the company went under.
Sixteen books have been translated into English and published by Cinebook Ltd:
On the Edge of Life (La Frontière de la vie), published July 2007, ISBN 978-1-905460-32-8
The Time Spiral (La Spirale du temps), published January 2008, ISBN 978-1-905460-43-4
The Prey and the Ghost (La Proie et l'ombre), published July 2008, ISBN 978-1-905460-56-4
Daughter of the Wind (La Fille du Vent), published July 2009, ISBN 978-1-905460-94-6
The Dragon of Hong Kong (Le Dragon de Hong Kong), published July 2010, ISBN 978-1-84918-041-2
The Morning of the World (Le Matin du Monde), published June 2011, ISBN 978-1-84918-082-5
The Curious Trio (Le trio de l'étrange), published July 2012, ISBN 978-1-84918-127-3
The Devil's Organ (L'Orgue du Diable), published July 2013, ISBN 978-1-84918-164-8
The Forge of Vulcan (La Forge de Vulcain), published August 2014, ISBN 978-1-84918-197-6
Message for Eternity (Message pour l'éternité), published August 2015, ISBN 978-1-84918-251-5
The Three Suns of Vinea (Les Trois soleils de Vinéa), published May 2016, ISBN 978-1-84918-302-4
The Titans (Les Titans), published May 2017, ISBN 978-1-84918-350-5
The Light of Ixo (La Lumière d'Ixo), published April 2018, ISBN 978-1-84918-392-5
The Archangels of Vinea (Les Archanges de Vinéa), published May 2019, ISBN 978-1-84918-438-0
Wotan's Fire (Le Feu de Wotan), published May 2020, ISBN 978-1-84918-536-3
The Cannon of Kra (Le Canon de Kra), published May 2021, ISBN 978-1-80044-019-7
The Exiles of Kifa (Les Exilés de Kifa), published May 2022, ISBN 978-1-80044-065-4
The Rhine Gold (L'Or du Rhin), published May 2023, ISBN 978-1-80044-093-7 | null | null | null | null | 1 |
[
"Aventures électroniques",
"followed by",
"Message for Eternity"
] | null | null | null | null | 4 |
|
[
"Aventures électroniques",
"narrative location",
"Earth"
] | null | null | null | null | 6 |
|
[
"Carl Peters (film)",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | Carl Peters is a 1941 German historical drama film directed by Herbert Selpin and starring Hans Albers, Karl Dannemann, and Fritz Odemar. It was produced as an anti-British propaganda film during the Second World War.
Albers portrays the titular German colonial leader. Bayume Mohamed Husen plays his native guide.
The art director Fritz Maurischat worked on the film's sets. It was shot at the Bavaria Studios in Munich and the Barrandov Studios in Prague.Synopsis
The film is a biopic of Carl Peters, one of the founders of German East Africa, and takes place while he is under investigation by the Reichstag for unnecessary brutality. Instead, Peters openly calls for a global policy of colonialism and conquest, which he says will require issuing carte blanche to hard-hearted men like himself. He defends his policy of using execution without trial to prevent a native uprising, which, he insists, the parliamentarians could not have prevented. The parliamentarians, who are all depicted as Jews, refuse to accept this explanation, demonstrating the alleged dangers of democracy, constitutional monarchy, and all other political systems in which the Fuhrer principle is ignored.Plot
The story begins in London in 1892. Members of the British civil service in a club discuss Carl Peters, who has just crossed the English Channel with intelligence officers, wondering whether to stop Peters before he tries to achieve his objective and consolidate the position of the German Empire in East Africa.
Carl Peters returns to Germany to garner support, but his exploration projects are met with little response. He left on his own for Africa; arrived in Zanzibar, where he tries to convince the German consulate to support his effort. He intends to establish a colony and make it a protectorate of the imperial government. Peters concludes commercial treaties with local tribal leaders, before the British or the Belgians manage to do so.
Carl Peters then survives a tropical disease and an attempted poisoning from the Intelligence Service. He finally receives a letter from Kaiser Wilhelm I assuring protection for his colony.
Carl Peters returns to Africa and suffers through various trials, not only from the British, but also from the director of the Colonial Department of the German Foreign Office, who happens to be Jewish. Carl Peters escapes danger, but his friend Karl Ludwig Jühlke is a victim. While Peters leads his expedition to an end, bad news reaches Berlin. Chancellor Bismarck must resign, but Peters is appointed Reichskommissar (Commissioner of Colonies). Back in Berlin, however, Peters must answer to the German people's elected representatives in the Reichstag and to respond to accusations of brutality by the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD). Despite the support of a witness in his favour, who is none other than a black Anglican Bishop, and despite the heated rhetoric that Peters uses, he is forced to resign. | null | null | null | null | 2 |
[
"Carl Peters (film)",
"depicts",
"German colonial empire"
] | Carl Peters is a 1941 German historical drama film directed by Herbert Selpin and starring Hans Albers, Karl Dannemann, and Fritz Odemar. It was produced as an anti-British propaganda film during the Second World War.
Albers portrays the titular German colonial leader. Bayume Mohamed Husen plays his native guide.
The art director Fritz Maurischat worked on the film's sets. It was shot at the Bavaria Studios in Munich and the Barrandov Studios in Prague.Synopsis
The film is a biopic of Carl Peters, one of the founders of German East Africa, and takes place while he is under investigation by the Reichstag for unnecessary brutality. Instead, Peters openly calls for a global policy of colonialism and conquest, which he says will require issuing carte blanche to hard-hearted men like himself. He defends his policy of using execution without trial to prevent a native uprising, which, he insists, the parliamentarians could not have prevented. The parliamentarians, who are all depicted as Jews, refuse to accept this explanation, demonstrating the alleged dangers of democracy, constitutional monarchy, and all other political systems in which the Fuhrer principle is ignored. | null | null | null | null | 43 |
[
"I'm for the Hippopotamus",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | null | null | null | null | 0 |
|
[
"Gorillas in the Mist",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | Gorillas in the Mist is a 1988 American biographical drama film directed by Michael Apted from a screenplay by Anna Hamilton Phelan and a story by Phelan and Tab Murphy. The film is based on the work by Dian Fossey and the article by Harold T. P. Hayes. It stars Sigourney Weaver as naturalist Dian Fossey and Bryan Brown as photographer Bob Campbell. It tells the story of Fossey, who came to Africa to study the vanishing mountain gorillas, and later fought to protect them.
The film was theatrically released in the United States by Universal Pictures on September 23, 1988. At the 61st Academy Awards, it earned five nominations, including Best Actress for Weaver and Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium. The film won Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama for Weaver and Best Original Score for Jarre at the 46th Golden Globe Awards, where it was also nominated for Best Motion Picture – Drama.Plot
Occupational therapist Dian Fossey is inspired by anthropologist Louis Leakey to devote her life to the study of primates. She writes ceaselessly to Leakey for a job cataloging and studying the rare mountain gorillas of Africa. Following him to a lecture in Louisville, Kentucky in 1966, she convinces him of her conviction.
They travel to the Congo, where Leakey and his foundation equip her to make contact with the gorillas, and introduce her to a local animal tracker, Sembagare. Settling deep in the jungle, Fossey and Sembagare locate a troop of gorillas, but are displaced by the events of the Congo Crisis and forcibly evicted from their research site by Congolese soldiers, who accuse Fossey of being a foreign spy and agitator.
Fossey is resigned to returning to the United States, but Sembagare and her temporary host Rosamond Carr motivate her to stay in Africa. Fossey establishes new research efforts in the jungles of neighboring Rwanda, where rampant poaching and corruption become apparent when she discovers several traps near her new base at Karisoke. Nevertheless, Fossey and her colleagues make headway with the gorillas, taking account of their communication and social groups. Her work impresses Leakey and gains international attention.
National Geographic, which funds her efforts, dispatches photographer Bob Campbell to highlight her research. Fossey, initially unreceptive, grows increasingly attached to Campbell after several photo sessions with the gorillas, and the two become lovers, in spite of Campbell's marriage. Campbell proposes to divorce his wife and marry Fossey but insists that she would have to spend time away from Karisoke and her gorillas, leading her to end their relationship. Fossey forms an emotional bond with a gorilla named Digit, and attempts to prevent the export of other gorillas by trader Van Vecten.
Appalled by the poaching of the gorillas for their skins, hands, and heads, Fossey complains to the Rwandan government and is dismissed, but a government minister (Waigwa Wachira) promises to hire an anti-poaching squad. Fossey's frustrations reach a climax when Digit is beheaded by poachers. She leads numerous anti-poaching patrols, burns down the poachers' villages, and even stages a mock execution of one of the offenders, serving to alienate some of her research assistants and gaining her various enemies. Sembagare expresses concern at Fossey’s opposition to the emergent industry of gorilla tourism, but she nonchalantly dismisses his worries.
On December 27, 1985, Dian Fossey is murdered in the bedroom of her cabin by an unseen assailant. At a funeral attended by Sembagare, Carr, and others, she is buried in the same cemetery where Digit and other gorillas had been laid to rest. Sembagare symbolically links the graves of Fossey and Digit with stones as a sign that their souls rest in peace together before leaving.
The epilogue text explains that Fossey’s actions helped save the gorillas from extinction, while her death remains a mystery. | null | null | null | null | 3 |
[
"Gorillas in the Mist",
"based on",
"Gorillas in the Mist"
] | null | null | null | null | 34 |
|
[
"Trader Horn (1931 film)",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | Trader Horn is a 1931 American Pre-Code adventure film directed by W.S. Van Dyke and starring Harry Carey and Edwina Booth. It is the first non-documentary film shot on location in Africa. The film is based on the book of the same name by trader and adventurer Alfred Aloysius Horn and tells of adventures on safari in Africa.
The film's dialogue was written by Cyril Hume. John Thomas Neville and Dale Van Every wrote the adaption. Trader Horn was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture in 1931. Edwina Booth, the female lead, contracted a career-ending illness while filming in Africa, for which she later sued Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.Plot
The film depicts the adventures of real-life trader and adventurer Alfred Aloysius "Trader" Horn (Harry Carey), while on safari in Africa. Much of the film is fictional, including the discovery of a white blonde jungle queen, the lost daughter of a missionary (Edwina Booth). A scene based upon a genuine incident occurs in which Carey as Horn swings on a vine across a river filled with genuine crocodiles, one of which comes very close to taking his leg off. | null | null | null | null | 1 |
[
"The Dogs of War (film)",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | The Dogs of War is a 1980 American war film based upon the 1974 novel of the same name by Frederick Forsyth. Largely filmed in Belize, it was directed by John Irvin and starred Christopher Walken and Tom Berenger. In it a small mercenary unit of soldiers is privately hired to depose the president of a fictional African country modeled after Guinea-Bissau, Guinea-Conakry, Equatorial Guinea and Angola (as they were in the late 1970s), so that a British tycoon can gain access to a platinum deposit.The title is based on a phrase from William Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar: "Cry, 'Havoc!', and let slip the dogs of war." | null | null | null | null | 1 |
[
"The Dogs of War (film)",
"different from",
"Los perros de la guerra"
] | null | null | null | null | 18 |
|
[
"The Dogs of War (film)",
"based on",
"The Dogs of War"
] | The Dogs of War is a 1980 American war film based upon the 1974 novel of the same name by Frederick Forsyth. Largely filmed in Belize, it was directed by John Irvin and starred Christopher Walken and Tom Berenger. In it a small mercenary unit of soldiers is privately hired to depose the president of a fictional African country modeled after Guinea-Bissau, Guinea-Conakry, Equatorial Guinea and Angola (as they were in the late 1970s), so that a British tycoon can gain access to a platinum deposit.The title is based on a phrase from William Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar: "Cry, 'Havoc!', and let slip the dogs of war." | null | null | null | null | 33 |
[
"Luc Orient",
"narrative location",
"Universe"
] | null | null | null | null | 1 |
|
[
"Golem XIV",
"narrative location",
"Earth"
] | null | null | null | null | 3 |
|
[
"Allan Quatermain and the Lost City of Gold",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | Allan Quatermain and the Lost City of Gold is a 1986 American adventure comedy film directed by Gary Nelson and released in West Germany on December 18, 1986, and in the United States on January 30, 1987. It is loosely based on the 1887 novel Allan Quatermain by H. Rider Haggard. It is the sequel to the 1985 film King Solomon's Mines.
The role of Allan Quatermain is reprised by Richard Chamberlain as is that of Jesse Huston by Sharon Stone, who was nominated for a Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Actress for this role, for which she lost to Madonna for Who's That Girl. The film also starred James Earl Jones as Umslopogaas, Henry Silva as Agon, Aileen Marson as Queen Nyleptha, Cassandra Peterson as Queen Sorais and Chamberlain's then real-life partner Martin Rabbett as Robeson Quatermain.Plot
After surviving their expedition to King Solomon's Mines, Allan Quatermain and Jesse have settled down in colonial Africa. They are engaged to be married and Jesse plans that they will travel to America for the wedding. But Allan is restless.
A man chased by two strange masked men emerges from the jungle, and is recognised as one of Quatermain's friends. He is delirious and is cared for by Jesse and Allan, but at night, his pursuers return and kill him.
Before he dies, he tells Allan that his brother, supposedly lost, is alive, and that they have found the legendary 'Lost City of Gold'. Quatermain immediately starts preparing for an expedition to find his lost brother. Jesse is furious and stalks off, but then realises how important this is to Allan.
Allan and Jesse are assisted by Umslopogaas, a fearless warrior and old friend of Allan's, to put together an expedition. Swarma, a spiritual guru, and five Askari warriors, accompany them. The group crosses a desert and reaches the Walls of Japora; two Askari are lost when Swarma trips a boobytrap that opens a pit under the road to the city. Another member of the party is lost when savage Eshowe warriors attack the group. Many spears are thrown at Quatermain and his friends, but Umslopogaas deflects most of them with his giant axe. The remaining askaris are lost in a subterranean river.
Quatermain and his friends indeed discover the city. The inhabitants, both black and white, are friendly, and Allan meets his brother Robeson, seemingly in good health and at peace in the society. The city has two queens — the noble and beloved, Nyleptha and her power-hungry sister, Sorais. But the real leader is the evil High Priest, Agon, feared by all.
Allan raises the population against Agon and Sorais, who musters an army to recover the city by force. Allan realizes that they can make all the weapons they need out of gold, which is mined by the population. The final battle ends when, atop the temple, during a lightning storm, Allan uses Umslopogaas' axe to channel the lightning and melt the gold, causing it to flow off the side of the structure and pour over the attacking horde, turning Agon and his army into gold statues. | null | null | null | null | 2 |
[
"Allan Quatermain and the Lost City of Gold",
"based on",
"Allan Quatermain"
] | null | null | null | null | 16 |
|
[
"Battlefield Earth (novel)",
"narrative location",
"Earth"
] | Battlefield Earth: A Saga of the Year 3000 is a 1982 science fiction novel written by L. Ron Hubbard, founder of Scientology. He also composed a soundtrack to the book called Space Jazz.Setting
In the year 3000 AD, the Psychlos, an alien race, have ruled Earth for a millennium. The Psychlos discovered a deep space probe (suggested to be Voyager 1) with directions and pictures mounted on it and the precious material, gold, which led them straight to Earth.
Psychlos stand up to 9 feet (2.7 m) tall and weigh up to 1,000 pounds (450 kg). They originate from Psychlo, a planet with an atmosphere radically different from Earth, located in another universe with a distinct set of physical laws characterized by a lack of elements that are radioactive. Their "breathe-gas" explodes on contact with even trace amounts of radioactive material, such as uranium. The Psychlos have been the dominant species across multiple universes for at least 100,000 years.
After one thousand years, humanity is an endangered species numbering fewer than 35,000 and reduced to tribes in isolated parts of the world while the Psychlos strip the planet of its mineral wealth.Plot
The novel follows Jonnie Goodboy Tyler, a young man in one such tribe, who lives near the ruins of Denver in the shadow of the Rocky Mountains. Depressed by the recent death of his father and both the lethargy and sickness of the surviving adults in his tribe, he leaves his village to explore the lowlands and to disprove the superstitions long held by his people of monsters in those areas.
On a brief excursion to the ruins of Denver Terl, Psychlo chief of mine site security, encounters and captures Jonnie. After forcing Jonnie to learn the Psychlo language, Terl learns “home office” has extended his tour of duty on Earth. Maddened by the prospect of being stuck on a minor planet in an insignificant universe, Terl schemes to take a lode of gold in the Rockies for himself and escape. Uranium deposits surround the lode, making mining by Psychlos impossible, forcing Terl to resort to using humans as forced labor.
Terl orders a fellow Psychlo named Ker to train Jonnie in the use of Psychlo machinery. Ker, markedly different both in height (7 feet (2.1 m) tall) and in temperament from other Psychlos, trains Jonnie as ordered but the Psychlo and Jonnie also become friends. Terl and Jonnie travel to Scotland where Jonnie recruits eighty-three Scottish people led by Robert the Fox to help with the mining. Using Terl's inability to understand English as a weapon, Jonnie plots with the Scotsmen to take back the Earth.
Months later Jonnie and the Scots disrupt the semi-annual teleportation of personnel and other goods to Psychlo, using Psychlo technology against the Psychlos and gaining control of the planet. A year after humans gained control of the planet, other alien races arrive and orbit the Earth. Threatened by these races, Jonnie at the same time opposes a race of intergalactic bankers seeking to repossess the Earth for unpaid debts. The security and independence of humanity once again threatened, Jonnie eventually discovers that Psychlo ended up destroyed by Jonnie and the Scots, and that all other Psychlo facilities throughout the universes also ended up destroyed, effectively dooming the Psychlos to extinction. He then works out a way to prevent the repossession of Earth.
With the help of an aged Psychlo engineer, Jonnie learns about Psychlo math and how the Psychlos protected their technology. Humans begin to rediscover their history, and with the Earth secure and the human population growing, a middle-aged Jonnie takes supplies and quietly slips away to the Rocky Mountains. He becomes a figure of legend. | null | null | null | null | 0 |
[
"Quax in Africa",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | Plot
The year is circa 1932, and the initial setting is Bavaria, Germany. The novice aviator Otto Groschenbügel, nicknamed Quax (see the previous film Quax the Crash Pilot), has advanced to become a professional flying instructor at the Flying School of Bergried. Although by nature a congenial fellow, he decides to adopt an authoritarian manner when learning of his pupils' unruly womanising. However his stern lectures that women have no place on an aerodrome are undermined when his friend Marianne unexpectedly visits him, and even more so when two female trainee pilots are assigned to him. Soon, the flying school's chief instructor announces that the Europaflug contest (an air rallye from Germany via Spain to Africa and back) is scheduled to start from Bergried, and Quax together with one male and the two female trainee pilots take part, by which time Quax is finally persuaded of the women's flying abilities. En route in Spain they indulge in local dances and merriment and Quax casts off his disciplinarian persona. In Africa, the team crash their two planes and are discovered by natives. Quax is obliged to marry the tribal chief's daughter Banani, and they take part in an African ritual dance. Finally a rescue plane arrives and returns the aviators to their home country.Production
Both the precursor film Quax the Crash Pilot and the sequel Quax in Africa are based on books written by Dr. Herrmann Grote (1904–1980). The first book carried the same title Quax der Bruchpilot as the first film and was published in 1936, while the second book was originally published under the title Quax auf Abwegen [Quax off track] before being republished as Quax in Afrika.
The film was shot from July 1943 to January 1944, but was not released during the war. In 1945 it was banned by the Allied occupation authorities and, although it was distributed in Sweden in 1947, did not get a full West German release until 1953.
It was made at the Babelsberg Studios in Potsdam. Some scenes were shot at an airfield near the Bavarian town of Kempten while parts of Brandenburg doubled for the African scenes. The film's sets were designed by Willi Herrmann.
Although the female lead from the previous film Karin Himboldt appears again, the principal romantic interest is now played by Rühmann's real-life wife Hertha Feiler. | null | null | null | null | 0 |
[
"La Spirale du temps",
"followed by",
"La Proie et l'ombre"
] | English translations
As of 2015, only a limited number of Yoko Tsuno comics have been translated to English. Books #3 and 6 (La Forge de Vulcain and Les Trois soleils de Vinéa) were released in English in 1989 under the series title, The Adventures of Yoko, Vic and Paul by Catalan Communications under their "Comcat" line. Some liberties were taken in the translation to English. For example, Yoko's last name was changed to "Suno", Khany was renamed "Kani" and the Vineans became "Vinans" from the planet "Vina". Plot transitions between individual episodes were also altered; for instance, at the conclusion of The Prey and the Ghost (original issue #12), Vic tells Yoko in the original version that he was contacted by Khany, leading to the events of issue #13, The Archangels of Vinea; in the English translation, instead he tells her that it was her father who gave him a message for her, which in the Comcat line of continuity would lead to Daughter of the Wind (original issue #9).
Comcat planned next on reprinting books nos. 8, 10, 13, and possibly no. 17, but the company went under.
Sixteen books have been translated into English and published by Cinebook Ltd:
On the Edge of Life (La Frontière de la vie), published July 2007, ISBN 978-1-905460-32-8
The Time Spiral (La Spirale du temps), published January 2008, ISBN 978-1-905460-43-4
The Prey and the Ghost (La Proie et l'ombre), published July 2008, ISBN 978-1-905460-56-4
Daughter of the Wind (La Fille du Vent), published July 2009, ISBN 978-1-905460-94-6
The Dragon of Hong Kong (Le Dragon de Hong Kong), published July 2010, ISBN 978-1-84918-041-2
The Morning of the World (Le Matin du Monde), published June 2011, ISBN 978-1-84918-082-5
The Curious Trio (Le trio de l'étrange), published July 2012, ISBN 978-1-84918-127-3
The Devil's Organ (L'Orgue du Diable), published July 2013, ISBN 978-1-84918-164-8
The Forge of Vulcan (La Forge de Vulcain), published August 2014, ISBN 978-1-84918-197-6
Message for Eternity (Message pour l'éternité), published August 2015, ISBN 978-1-84918-251-5
The Three Suns of Vinea (Les Trois soleils de Vinéa), published May 2016, ISBN 978-1-84918-302-4
The Titans (Les Titans), published May 2017, ISBN 978-1-84918-350-5
The Light of Ixo (La Lumière d'Ixo), published April 2018, ISBN 978-1-84918-392-5
The Archangels of Vinea (Les Archanges de Vinéa), published May 2019, ISBN 978-1-84918-438-0
Wotan's Fire (Le Feu de Wotan), published May 2020, ISBN 978-1-84918-536-3
The Cannon of Kra (Le Canon de Kra), published May 2021, ISBN 978-1-80044-019-7
The Exiles of Kifa (Les Exilés de Kifa), published May 2022, ISBN 978-1-80044-065-4
The Rhine Gold (L'Or du Rhin), published May 2023, ISBN 978-1-80044-093-7 | null | null | null | null | 3 |
[
"La Spirale du temps",
"follows",
"La Lumière d'Ixo"
] | null | null | null | null | 6 |
|
[
"La Spirale du temps",
"narrative location",
"Earth"
] | null | null | null | null | 7 |
|
[
"La Proie et l'ombre",
"narrative location",
"Earth"
] | null | null | null | null | 0 |
|
[
"La Proie et l'ombre",
"followed by",
"Les Archanges de Vinéa"
] | English translations
As of 2015, only a limited number of Yoko Tsuno comics have been translated to English. Books #3 and 6 (La Forge de Vulcain and Les Trois soleils de Vinéa) were released in English in 1989 under the series title, The Adventures of Yoko, Vic and Paul by Catalan Communications under their "Comcat" line. Some liberties were taken in the translation to English. For example, Yoko's last name was changed to "Suno", Khany was renamed "Kani" and the Vineans became "Vinans" from the planet "Vina". Plot transitions between individual episodes were also altered; for instance, at the conclusion of The Prey and the Ghost (original issue #12), Vic tells Yoko in the original version that he was contacted by Khany, leading to the events of issue #13, The Archangels of Vinea; in the English translation, instead he tells her that it was her father who gave him a message for her, which in the Comcat line of continuity would lead to Daughter of the Wind (original issue #9).
Comcat planned next on reprinting books nos. 8, 10, 13, and possibly no. 17, but the company went under.
Sixteen books have been translated into English and published by Cinebook Ltd:
On the Edge of Life (La Frontière de la vie), published July 2007, ISBN 978-1-905460-32-8
The Time Spiral (La Spirale du temps), published January 2008, ISBN 978-1-905460-43-4
The Prey and the Ghost (La Proie et l'ombre), published July 2008, ISBN 978-1-905460-56-4
Daughter of the Wind (La Fille du Vent), published July 2009, ISBN 978-1-905460-94-6
The Dragon of Hong Kong (Le Dragon de Hong Kong), published July 2010, ISBN 978-1-84918-041-2
The Morning of the World (Le Matin du Monde), published June 2011, ISBN 978-1-84918-082-5
The Curious Trio (Le trio de l'étrange), published July 2012, ISBN 978-1-84918-127-3
The Devil's Organ (L'Orgue du Diable), published July 2013, ISBN 978-1-84918-164-8
The Forge of Vulcan (La Forge de Vulcain), published August 2014, ISBN 978-1-84918-197-6
Message for Eternity (Message pour l'éternité), published August 2015, ISBN 978-1-84918-251-5
The Three Suns of Vinea (Les Trois soleils de Vinéa), published May 2016, ISBN 978-1-84918-302-4
The Titans (Les Titans), published May 2017, ISBN 978-1-84918-350-5
The Light of Ixo (La Lumière d'Ixo), published April 2018, ISBN 978-1-84918-392-5
The Archangels of Vinea (Les Archanges de Vinéa), published May 2019, ISBN 978-1-84918-438-0
Wotan's Fire (Le Feu de Wotan), published May 2020, ISBN 978-1-84918-536-3
The Cannon of Kra (Le Canon de Kra), published May 2021, ISBN 978-1-80044-019-7
The Exiles of Kifa (Les Exilés de Kifa), published May 2022, ISBN 978-1-80044-065-4
The Rhine Gold (L'Or du Rhin), published May 2023, ISBN 978-1-80044-093-7 | null | null | null | null | 5 |
[
"La Proie et l'ombre",
"follows",
"La Spirale du temps"
] | null | null | null | null | 6 |
|
[
"Message pour l'éternité",
"narrative location",
"Earth"
] | null | null | null | null | 0 |
|
[
"Message pour l'éternité",
"follows",
"Aventures électroniques"
] | null | null | null | null | 4 |
|
[
"Message pour l'éternité",
"followed by",
"The three suns of Vina"
] | English translations
As of 2015, only a limited number of Yoko Tsuno comics have been translated to English. Books #3 and 6 (La Forge de Vulcain and Les Trois soleils de Vinéa) were released in English in 1989 under the series title, The Adventures of Yoko, Vic and Paul by Catalan Communications under their "Comcat" line. Some liberties were taken in the translation to English. For example, Yoko's last name was changed to "Suno", Khany was renamed "Kani" and the Vineans became "Vinans" from the planet "Vina". Plot transitions between individual episodes were also altered; for instance, at the conclusion of The Prey and the Ghost (original issue #12), Vic tells Yoko in the original version that he was contacted by Khany, leading to the events of issue #13, The Archangels of Vinea; in the English translation, instead he tells her that it was her father who gave him a message for her, which in the Comcat line of continuity would lead to Daughter of the Wind (original issue #9).
Comcat planned next on reprinting books nos. 8, 10, 13, and possibly no. 17, but the company went under.
Sixteen books have been translated into English and published by Cinebook Ltd:
On the Edge of Life (La Frontière de la vie), published July 2007, ISBN 978-1-905460-32-8
The Time Spiral (La Spirale du temps), published January 2008, ISBN 978-1-905460-43-4
The Prey and the Ghost (La Proie et l'ombre), published July 2008, ISBN 978-1-905460-56-4
Daughter of the Wind (La Fille du Vent), published July 2009, ISBN 978-1-905460-94-6
The Dragon of Hong Kong (Le Dragon de Hong Kong), published July 2010, ISBN 978-1-84918-041-2
The Morning of the World (Le Matin du Monde), published June 2011, ISBN 978-1-84918-082-5
The Curious Trio (Le trio de l'étrange), published July 2012, ISBN 978-1-84918-127-3
The Devil's Organ (L'Orgue du Diable), published July 2013, ISBN 978-1-84918-164-8
The Forge of Vulcan (La Forge de Vulcain), published August 2014, ISBN 978-1-84918-197-6
Message for Eternity (Message pour l'éternité), published August 2015, ISBN 978-1-84918-251-5
The Three Suns of Vinea (Les Trois soleils de Vinéa), published May 2016, ISBN 978-1-84918-302-4
The Titans (Les Titans), published May 2017, ISBN 978-1-84918-350-5
The Light of Ixo (La Lumière d'Ixo), published April 2018, ISBN 978-1-84918-392-5
The Archangels of Vinea (Les Archanges de Vinéa), published May 2019, ISBN 978-1-84918-438-0
Wotan's Fire (Le Feu de Wotan), published May 2020, ISBN 978-1-84918-536-3
The Cannon of Kra (Le Canon de Kra), published May 2021, ISBN 978-1-80044-019-7
The Exiles of Kifa (Les Exilés de Kifa), published May 2022, ISBN 978-1-80044-065-4
The Rhine Gold (L'Or du Rhin), published May 2023, ISBN 978-1-80044-093-7 | null | null | null | null | 7 |
[
"La Frontière de la vie",
"followed by",
"Les Titans"
] | English translations
As of 2015, only a limited number of Yoko Tsuno comics have been translated to English. Books #3 and 6 (La Forge de Vulcain and Les Trois soleils de Vinéa) were released in English in 1989 under the series title, The Adventures of Yoko, Vic and Paul by Catalan Communications under their "Comcat" line. Some liberties were taken in the translation to English. For example, Yoko's last name was changed to "Suno", Khany was renamed "Kani" and the Vineans became "Vinans" from the planet "Vina". Plot transitions between individual episodes were also altered; for instance, at the conclusion of The Prey and the Ghost (original issue #12), Vic tells Yoko in the original version that he was contacted by Khany, leading to the events of issue #13, The Archangels of Vinea; in the English translation, instead he tells her that it was her father who gave him a message for her, which in the Comcat line of continuity would lead to Daughter of the Wind (original issue #9).
Comcat planned next on reprinting books nos. 8, 10, 13, and possibly no. 17, but the company went under.
Sixteen books have been translated into English and published by Cinebook Ltd:
On the Edge of Life (La Frontière de la vie), published July 2007, ISBN 978-1-905460-32-8
The Time Spiral (La Spirale du temps), published January 2008, ISBN 978-1-905460-43-4
The Prey and the Ghost (La Proie et l'ombre), published July 2008, ISBN 978-1-905460-56-4
Daughter of the Wind (La Fille du Vent), published July 2009, ISBN 978-1-905460-94-6
The Dragon of Hong Kong (Le Dragon de Hong Kong), published July 2010, ISBN 978-1-84918-041-2
The Morning of the World (Le Matin du Monde), published June 2011, ISBN 978-1-84918-082-5
The Curious Trio (Le trio de l'étrange), published July 2012, ISBN 978-1-84918-127-3
The Devil's Organ (L'Orgue du Diable), published July 2013, ISBN 978-1-84918-164-8
The Forge of Vulcan (La Forge de Vulcain), published August 2014, ISBN 978-1-84918-197-6
Message for Eternity (Message pour l'éternité), published August 2015, ISBN 978-1-84918-251-5
The Three Suns of Vinea (Les Trois soleils de Vinéa), published May 2016, ISBN 978-1-84918-302-4
The Titans (Les Titans), published May 2017, ISBN 978-1-84918-350-5
The Light of Ixo (La Lumière d'Ixo), published April 2018, ISBN 978-1-84918-392-5
The Archangels of Vinea (Les Archanges de Vinéa), published May 2019, ISBN 978-1-84918-438-0
Wotan's Fire (Le Feu de Wotan), published May 2020, ISBN 978-1-84918-536-3
The Cannon of Kra (Le Canon de Kra), published May 2021, ISBN 978-1-80044-019-7
The Exiles of Kifa (Les Exilés de Kifa), published May 2022, ISBN 978-1-80044-065-4
The Rhine Gold (L'Or du Rhin), published May 2023, ISBN 978-1-80044-093-7 | null | null | null | null | 1 |
[
"La Frontière de la vie",
"narrative location",
"Earth"
] | null | null | null | null | 2 |
|
[
"La Frontière de la vie",
"follows",
"The three suns of Vina"
] | null | null | null | null | 5 |
|
[
"Paradise (video game)",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | Plot
The central protagonist of Paradise is a young woman called Ann Smith, the daughter of King Rodon, the dictator of the fictional African country of Maurania. Ann is in Europe when she hears that her father is seriously ill, but while she is en route to see him, her aircraft is shot down by rebels. She is rescued, but when she regains consciousness she cannot remember her identity or what she is doing in Africa. | null | null | null | null | 0 |
[
"Paradise (video game)",
"different from",
"Paradise"
] | null | null | null | null | 15 |
|
[
"Allan Quatermain and the Temple of Skulls",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | Allan Quatermain and the Temple of Skulls is a 2008 American adventure film directed by Mark Atkins and starring Sean Cameron Michael, Christopher Adamson, Sanaa Lathane, Daniel Bonjour, and Wittly Jourdan. It was created by The Asylum. The film follows the adventures of explorer Allan Quatermain, and was filmed entirely on location in South Africa. It was released directly to DVD.The film is a mockbuster of Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, and while the film contains some elements similar to Crystal Skull, the film itself is a loose adaptation of the 1885 novel King Solomon's Mines by H. Rider Haggard.Plot
The adventurer Allan Quatermain has been recruited to lead a British-American expedition in search of a fabled treasure deep within unexplored Africa. Throughout the film, Quatermain must avoid hidden dangers, violent natives and other unseen traps during their quest for the treasure of the Temple of Skulls, travelling by train, river and air to reach his goal, while being pursued by rival treasure-seekers and unfriendly natives who wish to sabotage his expedition.Main cast
Sean Cameron Michael as Allan Quatermain
Christopher Adamson as Hartford
Natalie Stone as Lady Anna
Daniel Bonjour as Sir Henry
Wittly Jourdan as UmbopaReferences
External links
Allan Quatermain and the Temple of Skulls at IMDb
Allan Quatermain and the Temple of Skulls at The Asylum
Allan Quatermain and the Temple of Skulls at TCMDB
Allan Quatermain and the Temple of Skulls at AllMovie
Review of film at MTV
Zone Troopers: Website about the different Allan Quatermain and King Solomon's Mine films | null | null | null | null | 0 |
[
"Allan Quatermain and the Temple of Skulls",
"based on",
"King Solomon's Mines"
] | null | null | null | null | 12 |
|
[
"Afrika (video game)",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | null | null | null | null | 1 |
|
[
"Africa Paradis",
"narrative location",
"Africa"
] | Africa Paradis is a 2006 satirical speculative fiction film written and directed by Beninese actor Sylvestre Amoussou. It was produced in France and Benin and was intended to comment on the situation of African refugees in Europe.Plot
In the year 2033, the United States of Africa is a thriving and affluent country located in Africa. At the same time, Europe struggles with economic and political crisis, poverty and underdevelopment. Olivier is a computer scientist who lives in France with Pauline, a teacher. Both are unemployed with few prospects given Europe's dire economy. The desperate couple decide to immigrate to Africa in hope of finding a better life, even knowing they will face anti-European discrimination in Africa.
On arrival in Africa, Olivier and Pauline's entrance visa is rejected. The couple then try to illegally cross the border hidden in a smuggler vehicle, but are stopped by border police and detained until they can be deported back to France. Olivier manages to escape, and is taken in by a group of poor white Africans who live in housing projects. He eventually steals the identity of a dead white man so he will have employment documentation.
Meanwhile, Pauline gets a job as a domestic servant to Modibo Koudossou, a politician who is sponsoring a controversial immigration reform bill to address the flood of economic refugees from Europe. Against a backdrop of political intrigue that includes an assassination attempt by corrupt political opponents, Pauline and Modibo grow increasingly attracted to one another. Eventually Olivier is caught and faces deportation to Europe, forcing Pauline to make a choice between the two men and the course of her own life. | null | null | null | null | 0 |
[
"L'Or du Rhin",
"narrative location",
"Earth"
] | null | null | null | null | 0 |
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