When Tomorrow Dies

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

When Tomorrow Dies is a Canadian drama film, directed by Larry Kent and released in 1965. The film stars Patricia Gage as Gwen James, a housewife trapped in an unfulfilling marriage to Doug (Douglas Campbell), who returns to university and embarks on an extramarital affair with her professor Patrick Trevelyan (Neil Dainard). The film had its theatrical premiere on November 24, 1965 in Vancouver. rdf:langString
rdf:langString When Tomorrow Dies
rdf:langString When Tomorrow Dies
rdf:langString When Tomorrow Dies
xsd:integer 70939232
xsd:integer 1107974798
rdf:langString Doug McKay
rdf:langString Canada
rdf:langString Hajo Hadeler
rdf:langString English
rdf:langString Jack Dale
rdf:langString Larry Kent
<second> 5220.0
rdf:langString Neil Dainard
rdf:langString Larry Kent Productions
rdf:langString Larry Kent
rdf:langString When Tomorrow Dies is a Canadian drama film, directed by Larry Kent and released in 1965. The film stars Patricia Gage as Gwen James, a housewife trapped in an unfulfilling marriage to Doug (Douglas Campbell), who returns to university and embarks on an extramarital affair with her professor Patrick Trevelyan (Neil Dainard). The film was shot in Vancouver, British Columbia, for a budget of $100,000, the largest budget Kent had worked with on any of his films to that time. It also marked his first time directing a screenplay that he had not written entirely on his own, as the film was written primarily by University of British Columbia creative writing professor Robert Harlow. The film had its theatrical premiere on November 24, 1965 in Vancouver. It was later screened at the 1984 Festival of Festivals as part of Front & Centre, a special retrospective program of artistically and culturally significant films from throughout the history of Canadian cinema. It was also part of a retrospective of Kent's films, alongside The Bitter Ash, Sweet Substitute and High, which screened at a number of venues in 2002 and 2003, including Cinematheque Ontario in Toronto, the Pacific Cinémathèque in Vancouver and the Canadian Film Institute in Ottawa.
<minute> 87.0
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3330
xsd:double 5220.0

data from the linked data cloud