User:Roman Spinner/E (disambiguation)

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Enfances[edit]

Enfances may refer to:

  • Enfances (essay), 1998 essay about impact of visual representation in media such as cinema and photography, written by French Nobel laureate (literature, 2008) J. M. G. Le Clézio for same-named book, co-written by actress Brigitte Fossey and set to photographs by Christophe Kuhn
  • Enfances (film), 2008 French feature, consisting of six vignettes by six directors, depicting formative incidents in pre-adolescent lives of iconic filmmakers Fritz Lang, Orson Welles, Jacques Tati, Jean Renoir, Alfred Hitchcock and Ingmar Bergman, with each segment structured to resemble its subject's signature style



Eternally Yours[edit]

Eternally Yours may refer to:

Film and television[edit]

  • Eternally Yours (film), American comedy film released in 1939 by United Artists; produced and directed by Tay Garnett for Walter Wanger Productions, with stars Loretta Young and David Niven
  • Eternally Yours, 2006 short film by Atsushi Ogata; sole Japanese entry selected for 2007 MoMA/Lincoln Center New Directors/New Films; winner as "Best Short Film" at 2007 Bangkok Film Festival
  • Eternally Yours (telenovela), Mexican serial [original title Eternamente Tuya] broadcast by TV Azteca from January to July 2009; directed by Andrés Biermann, with stars Fernanda Romero and Marimar Vega

Literature[edit]

  • Eternally Yours, American Christian non-denominational religious inspiration booklet published in 1962; first in Life Publications series from women's group Stonecroft Ministries
  • Eternally Yours, 1993 4-volume compilation of letters written by Jewish Ukrainian Hassidic scholar Nathan of Breslov (1780–1844), known as Reb Noson; published by Breslov Research Institute
  • Eternally Yours, October 1996 posthumous collection of essays by American newspaperman Jack Smith (columnist) for Los Angeles Times from 1958 until his death in January 1996
  • Eternally Yours, 1997 multicultural romance novel by Brenda Jackson, first African-American author whose writings were published as part of Silhouette Desire line of romances

Music[edit]

  • Eternally Yours (album), second album, released in 1978, by Australian punk rock band The Saints, formed in Brisbane in 1974; all tracks composed by Ed Kuepper and Chris Bailey; reissued in 2007
  • "Eternally Yours" (2 Unlimited song), 1991 track from Dutch Eurodance band 2 Unlimited's first studio album Get Ready!; never released commercially, but issued by Radikal Records as promo CD single



Evil Eye[edit]

Evil eye, belief in power of gaze to portend death, injury or misfortune

Films[edit]

  • The Evil Eye (1913 film), American silent short production from Lubin Manufacturing Company, distributed by General Film Company; writer, director and star is Romaine Fielding; leading lady is Mary Ryan
  • The Evil Eye (1917 film), American silent feature produced by Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company and distributed by Paramount Pictures; directed by George Melford, it stars Blanche Sweet and Tom Forman; one surviving print is preserved at Library of Congress
  • The Evil Eye (1920 serial), American silent 15-chapter play, produced and distributed by Hallmark Pictures; directed by J. Gordon Cooper and Wally Van with stars lightweight champion boxer Benny Leonard and female lead Ruth Dwyer
  • The Evil Eye (1937 film), Belgian feature (original titles Het kwade oog [Flemish/Dutch] and Le mauvais oeil [French]) directed by Charles Dekeukeleire, written by Herman Teirlinck (based on his play); rather than using actors, film focuses on inhabitants of Flemish villages
  • The Evil Eye (1963 film), American title for Italian giallo also exhibited as The Girl Who Knew Too Much (original title La ragazza che sapeva troppo); stars Letícia Román, John Saxon and Valentina Cortese; directed by giallo and horror veteran Mario Bava
  • Evil Eye (1975 film), American title for Italian giallo (original title Malocchio), with Mexican star Jorge Rivero and co-starring veteran American lead Richard Conte who died two months after its release in Italy; directed by Mario Siciliano
  • Evil Eye (1982 film), Italian horror film directed by Lucio Fulci; also known under English-language titles Manhattan Baby, Eye of the Evil Dead and Possessed (original title L'occhio del male); shot in Rome and New York with stars Christopher Connelly and Martha Taylor
  • Evil Eyes, 2004 direct-to-DVD American horror film produced by low-budget film studio/distributor, The Asylum; directed by Mark Atkins, starring Adam Baldwin, Jennifer Gates and Udo Kier; plot concerns writer haunted by his own screenplay of long-ago murder-suicide
  • Evil Eyes: Behind the Scenes, 2004 direct-to-DVD documentary which chronicles events relating to production and distribution of Evil Eyes

Episodes of TV series[edit]

  • "The Evil Eye", 14 January 1973 (season 1, episode 15) of Canada's longest-running (1972–90) dramatic series, The Beachcombers
  • "The Evil Eye" (Happy Days), 31 October 1978 (season 6, episode 9) of 1974–84 American sitcom; plot concerns curse put on Delvecchio's right arm by old witch with evil eye
  • "Evil Eye" (Seeing Things), 24 November 1982 (season 2, episode 6) of Canadian supernatural comedy-drama
  • "The Evil Eye" (Inhumanoids), 28 July 1986 (season 1, episode 5) of US-Japanese animated series based on Hasbro toys
  • "Evil Eye" (Taggart), 4 September 1990 (season 6, episode 1) of Scottish Television Enterprises police detective series
  • "Evil Eye", 7 April 1998 (season 2, episode 15) of US-Canadian TV production F/X: The Series centering on special effects creator who assists police detectives
  • "The Evil Eye", 12 April 2002 episode of 1998–2006 American documentary series seen on History Channel, History's Mysteries
  • "Evil Eyes", 12 January 2006 episode of US crime reality program, The Investigators (TruTV series)
  • "Evil Eyes" (72 Hours: True Crime), 12 February 2007 (season 3, episode 12) of Canada's CBC TV reality program, which focuses on first 72 hours after commission of crime
  • "Evil Eye", 10 May 2007 (season 1, episode 17) of Russian CTC (TV channel) production Svakha
  • "Evil Eye", 26 June 2012 (season 1, episode 16) of Norwegian comedy-music-reality TV series Rassisme, hosted by Kristopher Schau

Other[edit]

  • Evil Eye (also referenced as Evil Eye of Avalon), magical artifact (first appearance in September 1966, issue #54, of Fantastic Four) in shared plot and character compendium, known as Marvel Universe, where stories referencing titles, including those featuring most familiar characters, take place
  • Evil Eye (comics), British comic strip featuring ghostly disembodied optic organ which causes well-behaved citizens to indulge in criminal activities; part of 1974–85 comic magazine collection, Whoopee!, published by IPC Magazines Ltd
  • The Evil Eye (Ravenloft), 1996 adventure module for 2nd edition of Advanced Dungeons & Dragons, American fantasy role-playing game originally designed by Gary Gygax and Dave Arneson and first published in 1974; Ravenloft is alternate time-space existence known as pocket dimension
  • An Evil Eye, 2011 novel by English writer and historian Jason Goodwin whose works reflect his study of Byzantine and Ottoman periods as well as his myriad travels, particularly in Asia; plot centers on eunuch Yashim, Sultan's investigator (fourth book in Inspector Yashim Mysteries)
  • Evil Eye (Franz Ferdinand song), October 2013 third single released by Scottish indie rock band Franz Ferdinand from their fourth studio album, Right Thoughts, Right Words, Right Action; written by Alex Kapranos and Nick McCarthy, song was recorded in Scotland, London and Oslo

See also[edit]

  • Brown Eye, Evil Eye, 1967 film drama shot in Yugoslavia (where it was titled Smedje oko, zlo oko) by American director Robert Argus with local actress Vuka Dundjerovic, Welsh character star Hugh Griffith and English leading lady Rosemary Nichols