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The Red Violin


 

The Red Violin (French: Le Violon rouge, German: Die Rote Geige, Italian: Il Violino Rosso, Mandarin: ???) is a Canadian film released on November 13, 1998 (in the USA on June 11, 1999). The film received an Academy Award for the Best Original Score (John Corigliano), 8 Genie Awards, 9 Jutra Awards, a Golden Reel Award (for sound editing), and a Best Artistic Contribution Award from the Tokyo International Film Festival. The film is notable in that dialogue is spoken in the language appropriate to each setting, with subtitles. It was the first film since Grand Illusion (1937), directed by Jean Renoir, to have dialogue in more than four languages (in this case five): Italian, German, French, Mandarin and English. While the film's title actually contains words in all five languages, it is generally known by either the English or the French portions.

Related Topics:
French - German - Italian - Mandarin - Canadian - Film - November 13 - 1998 - USA - June 11 - 1999 - Academy Award - Best Original Score - John Corigliano - Genie Award - Jutra Award - Golden Reel Award - Sound editing - Best Artistic Contribution Award - Tokyo International Film Festival - Dialogue - Language - Setting - Subtitle - Grand Illusion - 1937 - Jean Renoir - English

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