Holes
0 sources
Holes
Summary
Holes is a film[1]. Holes ranks in the top 0.9% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3,783 views/month, #845 of 94,065).[2]
Key Facts
- Holes's instance of is recorded as film[3].
- Holes's director is recorded as Andrew Davis[4].
- Holes's screenwriter is recorded as Louis Sachar[5].
- Holes's composer is recorded as Joel McNeely[6].
- Holes's genre is recorded as comedy drama[7].
- Holes's genre is recorded as mystery film[8].
- Holes's genre is recorded as comedy film[9].
- Holes's genre is recorded as Western film[10].
- Holes's genre is recorded as prison film[11].
- Holes's based on is recorded as Holes[12].
- Holes's cast member is recorded as Shia LaBeouf[13].
- Holes's cast member is recorded as Sigourney Weaver[14].
- Holes's cast member is recorded as Jon Voight[15].
- Holes's cast member is recorded as Tim Blake Nelson[16].
- Holes's cast member is recorded as Henry Winkler[17].
- Holes's cast member is recorded as Patricia Arquette[18].
- Holes's cast member is recorded as Max Kasch[19].
- Holes's cast member is recorded as Dulé Hill[20].
- Holes's cast member is recorded as Khleo Thomas[21].
- Holes's cast member is recorded as Eartha Kitt[22].
- Holes's cast member is recorded as Allan Kolman[23].
- Holes's cast member is recorded as Allison Smith[24].
- Holes's cast member is recorded as Byron Cotton[25].
- Holes's cast member is recorded as Nathan Davis[26].
- Holes's cast member is recorded as Roma Maffia[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Producers include Mike Medavoy[28], Andrew Davis[29], Teresa Tucker-Davies[30], and Lowell Blank[31]. Holes's director is recorded as Andrew Davis[4]. Holes's screenwriter is recorded as Louis Sachar[5]. Cast members include Shia LaBeouf[13], Sigourney Weaver[14], Jon Voight[15], Tim Blake Nelson[16], Henry Winkler[17], and Patricia Arquette[18].
Publication
Publication dates include +2003-04-18T00:00:00Z[32] and +2003-10-30T00:00:00Z[33]. Holes's original language of film or TV show is recorded as English[34]. Genres include comedy drama[7], mystery film[8], comedy film[9], Western film[10], and prison film[11].
Reception
Reviews include 78%[35], 7/10[36], and 71/100[37].
Why It Matters
Holes ranks in the top 0.9% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3,783 views/month, #845 of 94,065).[2] Holes has Wikipedia articles in 20 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[38] Holes is known by 5 alternative names across languages and contexts.[39]