Sentences with phrase «rabe who»

This film is a look at German Industrialist John Rabe who lived and worked in China, and was one of the key players who established a safety zone for the locals during the occupation of China by the ruthless Japanese Imperial Army.
What we get here is the story of John Rabe who was essentially the Oskar Schindler of China.
At the same time I am fascinated by John Rabe who is at first depicted as cold and imperious (the first shots of the movie involve «Deutschland uber Alles» and a smaller Nazi flag) before realizing a responsibility to the people of China.

Not exact matches

I love broccoli rabe... I don't really know many people other than those in my family who do.
I shared the recipe with my 2nd generation Italian mother - in - law (incredible cook, moderately broccoli rabe obsessed) who loved it as well!
For the reviewer who asked for clarification about the amount of broccoli rabe: broccoli rabe is a different veggie than broccolini, baby broccoli, etc..
I suspect some of the reviewers who found this dish too salty were using table salt, or maybe over-seasoned the rabe during the saute.
In a statement by the Army Director of Information, Brig General Rabe Abubakar, the Army said it has observed an increased number of journalists and documentarists who travel in security areas and might be mistaken in the process.
Rabe, who conducted the survey with Christopher Borick, director of the Muhlenberg College Institute of Public Opinion, said public opinion research on geoengineering is limited.
That could propel the climate issue into the initial GOP debates, and maybe beyond, said Barry Rabe, a professor at the University of Michigan who follows climate politics.
-- Joseph Carrillo, who's worked with Alexa Chung, Portia Doubleday, and Lily Rabe
Creator Ryan Murphy reveals how he plans to use returning cast members Zachary Quinto, Lily Rabe, Evan Peters, and Sarah Paulson — not to mention Jessica Lange, who is now officially the show's star — will be playing in their new roles:
Naomi has only one other friend in town, a music producer named Buddy (Jason Schwartzman), who is also married, to Jess (Analeigh Tipton), whose sister Sam (Lily Rabe) plays a similarly judgmental / single role as Gwen does to Alyssa.
Actress Lily Rabe, who was announced to be joining the cast of Mockingjay Part 2 as Commander Lyme back in September, will not longer be kicking Capitol butt with Katniss Everdeen.
Also part of the ensemble are Mary - Louise Parker as Alyssa's hard - charging sister, Gwendolyn; Lily Rabe as Gwendolyn's beleaguered assistant, Sam; Analeigh Tipton as Sam's sister, Jess; and Jason Schwartzman as Jess's husband, Buddy, who's also a childhood friend of Naomi's.
Buddy might be quicker to act on his feelings if he weren't married to Jess (Analeigh Tipton), the film's quietest and most contented character, who spends a lot of time acting as a sounding board for her unhappy sister, Sam (Lily Rabe).
The fine supporting cast includes Steve Buscemi, as a cynical American doctor who at first doesn't get along with Rabe; and Anne Consigny, as the French head of a local school for Chinese girls.
Rabe was a German businessman who was able to save more than 200,000 Chinese during the Japanese siege of Nanking in 1937, during which countless civilians and POWs were raped and slaughtered by the Nippon army — an event that even now Japan officially refuses to fully acknowledge.
Set in 1937, the tale centers on businessman John Rabe (well played by the great German actor Ulrich Tukur), who for nearly 30 years has been living with his wife Dora in the capital city of China, Nanking, where he heads the Siemens branch.
But Hart, who was a high - school teacher herself for many years, offers moments of real insight, and Rabe is excellent in the central role.
Miss Stevens, the directorial debut of Julia Hart (she had previously written the script for The Keeping Room), is a small but likable film about a teacher (Lily Rabe) who takes three of her students on a weekend road trip to a state drama competition.
Also new this week is John Rabe (Strand), directed by Florian Gallenberger and starring Ulrich Tukur as the Nazi businessman in 1937 China who saved over 200,000 Chinese civilians in the Nanking Massacre perpetrated by the invading Japanese army, plus That Evening Sun (Image) with Hal Holbrook, the Slovenian thriller A Call Girl (Film Movement), and releases of two older British productions: Four in the Morning (VCI) with Dame Judy Dench and Hell is Sold Out (VCI) with Herbert Lom and Richard Attenborough.
The experiences of educators such as Rabe, and many others who put Turning Points into practice, provide what authors Jackson and Davis call the «muscle, heart, and soul» to the renewed push for middle grades reform.
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