All the Rage (1997 film)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/All_the_Rage_(1997_film) an entity of type: Thing

All the Rage is a 1997 American film by New York City-based writer Roland Tec. It was released theatrically in the U.S., was widely reviewed in numerous publications and continues to be a top-grossing film among gay-themed titles on Netflix and Amazon. All the Rage had its world premiere at the Castro Theatre during the San Francisco International Film Festival of 1997 after which it was released theatrically in the U.S. by Jour de Fete, a division of Rialto Pictures. In 2001, Strand Releasing brought the film out on DVD and in 2003, it was released internationally by . rdf:langString
rdf:langString All the Rage (1997 film)
rdf:langString All the Rage
rdf:langString All the Rage
xsd:integer 16275574
xsd:integer 1115114745
xsd:integer 100000
rdf:langString Film poster
rdf:langString Gretchen Widmer
rdf:langString United States
rdf:langString Jon Altschuler
xsd:integer 118590
rdf:langString English
rdf:langString Paul Outlaw
rdf:langString Roland Tec
rdf:langString unknown
rdf:langString sashanna forbes
<second> 6300.0
rdf:langString John-Michael Lander
rdf:langString All the Rage
rdf:langString Roland Tec
rdf:langString All the Rage is a 1997 American film by New York City-based writer Roland Tec. It was released theatrically in the U.S., was widely reviewed in numerous publications and continues to be a top-grossing film among gay-themed titles on Netflix and Amazon. All the Rage had its world premiere at the Castro Theatre during the San Francisco International Film Festival of 1997 after which it was released theatrically in the U.S. by Jour de Fete, a division of Rialto Pictures. In 2001, Strand Releasing brought the film out on DVD and in 2003, it was released internationally by . Hailed by Los Angeles Times film critic Kevin Thomas as "One of the sharpest, sexiest and most amusing satires of gay life and values ever filmed," it widely considered a hallmark of the Queer Independent Film movement of the late 1990s. This unique aspect of the film was highlighted in one of its first reviews by Dennis Harvey, writing about the film for Variety. The film features music by a number of indie artists, including , who recorded the song "Military Man".
<minute> 105.0
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3591
xsd:string 0118590
xsd:double 6300.0

data from the linked data cloud