Our Mr. Sun

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

Our Mr. Sun is a 1956 one-hour American television film in Technicolor written, produced, and directed by Frank Capra. It is a documentary that explains how the Sun works and how it also plays a huge part in human life. It was first broadcast on television by CBS in 1956. Our Mr. Sun, and a companion film Hemo the Magnificent (about blood circulation), were popular favorites for showing in primary and secondary school science classrooms from the late 1950s until the early 1980s. The film is currently available on DVD with another Frank C. Baxter film The Strange Case of the Cosmic Rays (1957). rdf:langString
rdf:langString Our Mr. Sun
rdf:langString Our Mr. Sun
xsd:integer 14596339
xsd:integer 1112609593
rdf:langString Harold E. Wellman
rdf:langString United States
rdf:langString William T. Hurtz
xsd:integer 159620
rdf:langString our_mr_sun
rdf:langString English
rdf:langString Frank Capra
<second> 3240.0
rdf:langString Our Mr. Sun
rdf:langString Frank Capra
rdf:langString Our Mr. Sun is a 1956 one-hour American television film in Technicolor written, produced, and directed by Frank Capra. It is a documentary that explains how the Sun works and how it also plays a huge part in human life. It was first broadcast on television by CBS in 1956. The film starred Frank Baxter as "Dr. Research", and Eddie Albert as "the fiction writer", the other recurring character in The Bell Laboratory Science Series. Marvin Miller voiced the animated sun. Sterling Holloway, who was uncredited, voiced an animated version of chlorophyll. The film is notable as the last project of actor Lionel Barrymore, who provided the voice of Father Time. The film was first broadcast on television two years after Barrymore's death in 1954. Our Mr. Sun, and a companion film Hemo the Magnificent (about blood circulation), were popular favorites for showing in primary and secondary school science classrooms from the late 1950s until the early 1980s. The film is currently available on DVD with another Frank C. Baxter film The Strange Case of the Cosmic Rays (1957).
<minute> 54.0
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 22130
xsd:string 0159620
xsd:double 3240.0

data from the linked data cloud