Two (1964 film)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Two_(1964_film) an entity of type: Thing

Two ist ein Kurzspielfilm von Satyajit Ray aus dem Jahr 1964. rdf:langString
Two: A Film Fable adalah sebuah film pendek hitam putih India 1964 yang disutradarai oleh sutradara India Satyajit Ray. Film ini diproduksi di bawah spanduk . rdf:langString
Two: A Film Fable is a 1964 Indian black-and-white short film directed by Satyajit Ray. The film was made under the banner of at the request of a non-profit American public broadcasting television, PBS. It was made as part of a trilogy of short films from India. The other two films in the trilogy featured Indian Sitar player, Pandit Ravi Shankar and a Ballet troupe from Mumbai, then known as "Bombay". Ray, who worked prominently for Bengali cinema, was requested to make a film in English language with a Bengali setting, however Ray being an admirer of silent film decided to make a film without any dialogue as a tribute to the genre. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Two (1964)
rdf:langString Two (film 1964)
rdf:langString Two (1964 film)
rdf:langString Two
rdf:langString Two
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rdf:langString Two title card
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rdf:langString Title card of the film
rdf:langString India
rdf:langString Esso World Theater
rdf:langString No dialogue
rdf:langString Satyajit Ray
rdf:langString Esso World Theater
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rdf:langString Satyajit Ray
rdf:langString Street Kid
rdf:langString Ravi Kiran,
rdf:langString Two ist ein Kurzspielfilm von Satyajit Ray aus dem Jahr 1964.
rdf:langString Two: A Film Fable adalah sebuah film pendek hitam putih India 1964 yang disutradarai oleh sutradara India Satyajit Ray. Film ini diproduksi di bawah spanduk .
rdf:langString Two: A Film Fable is a 1964 Indian black-and-white short film directed by Satyajit Ray. The film was made under the banner of at the request of a non-profit American public broadcasting television, PBS. It was made as part of a trilogy of short films from India. The other two films in the trilogy featured Indian Sitar player, Pandit Ravi Shankar and a Ballet troupe from Mumbai, then known as "Bombay". Ray, who worked prominently for Bengali cinema, was requested to make a film in English language with a Bengali setting, however Ray being an admirer of silent film decided to make a film without any dialogue as a tribute to the genre. The short film shows an encounter between a child of a rich family and a street child, through the rich kid's window. The film is made without any dialogue and displays attempts of One-upmanship between kids in their successive display of their toys. The film portrays the childlike rivalry with the help of world of noise and that of music. The film is among less known films of Ray but experts rated the film as one of Ray's best. It is often regarded as a prelude to another Ray film, Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne (1969). Made during the Vietnam War, experts believe that the film makes "a strong anti-war statement"[which experts] as it ends with street kid's flute sound overpowering sound of expensive toys. Academy Film Archive, part of the Academy Foundation, took an initiative to restore Satyajit Ray's films and could successfully restore 19 Ray films. Two was preserved in 2006. The film's original script was included in a book named Original English Film Scripts Satyajit Ray, put together by Ray's son Sandip Ray.
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