Yahoo Italia Ricerca nel Web

Risultati di ricerca

  1. Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number (Spanish: Preso Sin Nombre, Celda Sin Numero) is a 1981 memoir by the left-wing Argentine journalist and publisher Jacobo Timerman, who was imprisoned without charge during the Dirty War in Argentina in April 1977 and subsequently tortured.

  2. 22 mag 1983 · Jacobo Timerman: Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number: Directed by Linda Yellen. With Roy Scheider, Liv Ullmann, Terry O'Quinn, Sam Robards. A well respected journalist in Buenos Aires, the editor of the major newspaper La Opinión, is kidnapped by the military for publishing articles critical of their terrorist tactics.

    • (133)
    • Drama
    • Linda Yellen
    • 1983-05-22
  3. Prigioniero senza nome disponibile su Netflix, TIMvision, Infinity, Google Play, iTunes? Scopri qui come guardare film online!

    • Linda Yellen
    • Roy Scheider
  4. Jacobo Timerman: Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number is a 1983 American made-for-television drama film written, directed and produced by Linda Yellen. It is based on Jacobo Timerman's 1981 autobiographical book Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number. It was originally broadcast May 22, 1983 on NBC. Cast

    • Drama
  5. 1 gen 2001 · Jacobo Timerman's memoir provides a harrowing account of his time spent as a prisoner of the Argentinian military dictatorship. He describes the horrors of torture and solitary confinement and sketches out Argentinia's peculiar political landscape in the later 1970's.

    • (585)
    • Paperback
  6. Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number is a non-fiction memoir published in 1981 by the Soviet-born Argentine author Jacobo Timerman. It details Timerman's torture and imprisonment at the hands of Argentine military police serving under the far-right dictator Jorge Rafael Videla from 1977 to 1979. Timerman has been called "the most ...

  7. 7 nov 2010 · Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number is a poignant and poetic memoir of Timerman's rapid descent from being a well-known public figure to a nameless and hidden victim of the 1976-1983 military junta's oppression, but also an exploration of the societal passivity that permits totalitarianism to take hold.