Cinema of Venezuela

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cinema_of_Venezuela an entity of type: Thing

يتناول المقال الأصول التاريخية و الخصائص الأساسية للسينما في فنزويلا. rdf:langString
El cine de Venezuela se remonta a finales del siglo XIX. Las primera películas realizadas en Venezuela fueron estrenadas el 28 de enero de 1897 en el Teatro Baralt de Maracaibo.​​ rdf:langString
Un nouveau cinéma vénézuélien, socialement engagé : * 1972 : de Mauricio Walerstein : adaptation du roman de Miguel Otero Silva * 1974 : de Román Chalbaud * 1975 : de Mauricio Walerstein * 1976 : de Prix Spécial du Jury au 1977 * 1977 : El Pez que fuma de Román Chalbaud : film emblématique mettant en scène la lutte pour le pouvoir dans une maison close de La Guaira * 1978 : (Alias)[Quoi ?] El Rey del Joropo de Carlos Rebolledo et Thaelman Urgelles ; de Mauricio Walerstein * 1979 : País Portátil de Ivan Feo et Felipe Llerandi rdf:langString
O cinema da Venezuela remonta ao final do século XIX. Os primeiros filmes feitos na Venezuela estrearam em 28 de janeiro de 1897 no de Maracaibo. rdf:langString
The cinema of Venezuela is the production and industry of filmmaking in Venezuela. Venezuelan cinema has been characterised from its outset as propaganda, partially state-controlled and state-funded, commercial cinema. The nation has seen a variety of successful films, which have reaped several international awards. Still, in terms of quality, it is said that though "we can point to specific people who have made great films in Venezuela [and] a couple of great moments in the history of Venezuelan cinema, [...] those have been exceptions". In the 21st century, Venezuelan cinema has seen more independence from the government, but has still been described as recently as 2017 to be at least "influenced" by the state. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Cinema of Venezuela
rdf:langString سينما فنزويلا
rdf:langString Cine de Venezuela
rdf:langString Cinéma vénézuélien
rdf:langString Cinema da Venezuela
rdf:langString Cinema of Venezuela
xsd:integer 29179971
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rdf:langString no
rdf:langString Box Office in USD, adjusted for inflation
rdf:langString National Cinema at Museo Bellas Artes
rdf:langString Chart | width = 200 | height = 200 | xAxisTitle = Year | xType = string | x = 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 | yAxisTitle = Box Office (USD) | yAxisMax = 230000000 | yAxisMin = 100000000 | yAxisFormat = $s | yGrid = yes | y = 182216130.276, 107177236.481, 158317535.367, 166737520.314, 225715819.818 | showSymbols = yes
rdf:langString Cinematográfica Blancica
rdf:langString Cines Unidos
rdf:langString Cinex
rdf:langString The Walt Disney Company Venezuela
xsd:integer 250
rdf:langString يتناول المقال الأصول التاريخية و الخصائص الأساسية للسينما في فنزويلا.
rdf:langString The cinema of Venezuela is the production and industry of filmmaking in Venezuela. Venezuelan cinema has been characterised from its outset as propaganda, partially state-controlled and state-funded, commercial cinema. The nation has seen a variety of successful films, which have reaped several international awards. Still, in terms of quality, it is said that though "we can point to specific people who have made great films in Venezuela [and] a couple of great moments in the history of Venezuelan cinema, [...] those have been exceptions". In the 21st century, Venezuelan cinema has seen more independence from the government, but has still been described as recently as 2017 to be at least "influenced" by the state. Film was introduced to the country in 1896, with the first national films screened in 1897. Several films were made in the last few years of the 19th Century, with a lower rate of production until the 1970s. The industry in the country has served political purposes from its early years and Juan Vicente Gómez' governments all the way through to current President Nicolás Maduro, and is also a mass-market entertainment base; sometimes the aims overlap. In the 21st century, attendance grew to a national average that would indicate every citizen visits the cinema once a year, though screenings began to decrease with the ongoing crisis after 2010. Since the mid-2000s and developing in the 2010s, the more successful national films have been LGBT-related as part of the broader wave of Latin American New Maricón Cinema, with several of the country's Oscar submissions being based in LGBT+ narratives.
rdf:langString El cine de Venezuela se remonta a finales del siglo XIX. Las primera películas realizadas en Venezuela fueron estrenadas el 28 de enero de 1897 en el Teatro Baralt de Maracaibo.​​
rdf:langString Un nouveau cinéma vénézuélien, socialement engagé : * 1972 : de Mauricio Walerstein : adaptation du roman de Miguel Otero Silva * 1974 : de Román Chalbaud * 1975 : de Mauricio Walerstein * 1976 : de Prix Spécial du Jury au 1977 * 1977 : El Pez que fuma de Román Chalbaud : film emblématique mettant en scène la lutte pour le pouvoir dans une maison close de La Guaira * 1978 : (Alias)[Quoi ?] El Rey del Joropo de Carlos Rebolledo et Thaelman Urgelles ; de Mauricio Walerstein * 1979 : País Portátil de Ivan Feo et Felipe Llerandi
rdf:langString O cinema da Venezuela remonta ao final do século XIX. Os primeiros filmes feitos na Venezuela estrearam em 28 de janeiro de 1897 no de Maracaibo.
xsd:integer 2429560
xsd:integer 30069381
xsd:integer 2013
rdf:langString VEF
rdf:langString VEF
xsd:integer 2013
rdf:langString -
xsd:integer 3
xsd:integer 18
xsd:integer 21
xsd:integer 2013
xsd:integer 481
xsd:double 1.8
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 72738

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