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German screenwriter and director Katja von Garnier`s fourth feature film was which was written by American screenwriter Jennifer Friedes, is inspired by real events. It premiered at the 20th Sundance Film Festival in 2004, was shot on locations in Richmond (1637), Virginia in the United States (1776) and is a U.S. production which was produced by American film and television producer Lydia Dean Pilcher. It tells the story about a student at the Kensington High School for Girls (1873) in London, England, an alumni at the Vassar College (1861) in New York, United States, a Doctor of Civil Law who was born in a house named Paulsdale (1840) and a valedictorian and presidential candidate from Fond du Lac County (1844) in the state of Wisconsin (1848) who named themselves the Silent Sentinels.Distinctly and precisely directed by German filmmaker Katja von Garnier, this quietly paced and somewhat fictional tale which is narrated from multiple viewpoints, draws a reflectively memorable portrayal of golden, white and purple angels with real human faces and voices. While notable for its atmospheric milieu depictions, distinct cinematography by cinematographer Robbie Greenberg and costume design by costume designer Caroline Harris, this dialog-driven and narrative-driven story about her humanity and the troubles of women was made four centuries after a Scottish 15th century poem which tells of arrows of gold, silver and steel was instigated by a father in captive`s sight, through his window, of a Queen of Scots and the Island of the Women in the United Mexican States were named by the Spanish (1500s), a country named Puerto Rico (1493), the publishing of a letter named “The New World” (1502-3) by a son of Italy from the Republic of Florence forenamed Amerigo, the Viceroyalty of New France (1534-1763), the Dutch Empire (1540-1975), Fort Caroline (1564), Her Most Excellent Majesty Queen Elizabeth I (1533-1601) granted a charter to an Englishman (1584), an Englishwoman named Eleanor White Dare (c.1568-1587) mothered (1587) a child named Virginia Dare in the Lost Colony (1583-1590) in North America, three centuries after the Thirteen Colonies (1607-1776), the daughter of Her Majesty the Archduchess of Tuscany named Joanna of Austria (1547-1578) named Marie de' Medici (1575-1642) was crowned Queen of France (1610), a Dutch daughter of a Joan forenamed Humility and a Dutch daughter of a Mary forenamed Remember made the voyage (1620) on an English sailing ship named the Mayflower and the signing of the Mayflower Compact (1620), the Great Migration (1620-1640) from England to America, a King of England, Scotland and Ireland introduced “Personal Rule” (1629-1640) with his royal prerogative, the Province of Maryland (1632-1776), the Pequot War (1636-1638), the city of Hartford (1637), Queens County (1683) in New York (1788) and the College of William and Mary (1695), two centuries after a life named Justicia americana was described (1753), an American homemaker named Lydia Chapin Taft (1712-1778) voted (1756) in Uxbridge, Massachusetts (1788), the Eastern State Hospital (1773) in Williamsburg (1661) in Virginia, the Continental Colors (1776-1777), the Great Seal of the United States (1782) and the Canada-United States border (1783).Made a century after the First United States Congress (1789) at Federal Hall (1842) in Wall Street, Manhattan (1624), a Cathedral (1720) in the French Quarter of New Orleans (1718), a house named Peacefield (1731) and Louisiana (1812), a city named Cumberland (1757), an Act of Congress called the Judiciary Act (1789) and a ship named Columbia Rediviva (1787) circumvented the globe (1790), a Hot Air Balloon flight (1793), a ship named USS Constellation (1797-1853), the Democratic-Republican Party (1799-1828) in the United States, a century after an Electress born in the Roman Empire (962-1806) forenamed Sophia became Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (1801-1922), the city of Florence (1818) on the Tennessee River, the Jackson Barracks (1834) in New Orleans, Mount Pleasant Female Prison (1835-1865), a rapid transit rail system called the New York City Subway (1863), three Marys and one Elizabeth were admitted (1837) as full students at Oberlin College (1837), Morvern Roman Catholic Church (1838) in Mull, Argyll, Scotland, Mount Constance, Mount Ellinor and the Brothers were named (1853) by an English surveyor (1852), the birth of an American newspaper editor named Ida Bell Wells-Barnett (1862-1931) in Holly Springs, Mississippi (1817), Death Valley was named (1849), Walton Gaol (1855) in Merseyside (1974), a Belgian daughter named Adele Brise (1831-1896) described a Queen who had appeared to her (1859) in Wisconsin, a steamship named USS Stars and Stripes (1861-1878) in a village named Mystic in New London County (1666), Connecticut (1788), Nebraska (1867), a theory named Dillon`s Rule (1868), the Citizenship Clause (1868) and the Equal Protection Clause (1868), a town named New Sweden (1870) in the state of Maine (1820) in New England, a city named Birmingham (1871) in Alabama (1819), Icelandic unmarried women and widows were granted municipal suffrage (1882), a ghost town named Cumberland in Far North Queensland, Australia, a poem named “The New Colossus” (1883) by an American poet named Emma Lazarus (1849-1887) and the National American Women Suffrage Association (1890), the D.C. Circuit (1893), a gateway named Ellis Island (1900), a person named Florence Leona Christie Owens Thompson (1903-1983) was born in Indian Territory (1834-1907) in the Cherokee Nation (1794-1907) and ninety-seven years after a song (1907) was written by an English hymnist named Ada Ruth Habershon (1861-1918).Made ninety-six years after the Sacred Twenty (1908), ninety-four years after the Occoquan Workhouse (1910-2001) in Laurel Hill, Virginia and an American sister from Brooklyn (1634) named Mary White Ovington (1865-1951) was appointed executive secretary of a permanent body named NAACP (1910), ninety years after the Heterodoxy Club (1912) in Greenwich Village, ninety-one years after the Congressional Union (1913-1917) and the first inauguration (1913) of an American president from the Commonwealth of Virginia named Thomas Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924), the Suffragist (1913-1920) and the Women Suffrage Parade (1913), eighty-eight years after the National Women`s Party (1916-1997) and a banner with the words: “… for the hand that rocks the cradle will never rock the boat …” (1916), eighty-six years after a Russian daughter and Grand Princess forenamed Anastasia (1901-1918) reached Yekaterinburg (1723), a speech at Caxton Hall (1883) called the Fourteen Points (1918), eighty-four years after the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution (1788) became constitutional law (1920), Women`s Suffrage was introduced in the United States of America (1920), the United States Court of Appeals (1891) declared the arrest of all two-hundred and eighteen suffragists unconstitutional (1920) and Election Day (1920), eighty years after a term phrased blue-collar (1924), seventy-three years after Rome Rose Garden (1931) on Aventine Hill in the Italian Republic, seventy-one years after an American photographer named Anita Lily Pollitzer (1894-1975) attained (1933) a master`s degree in international law, the Golden Gate Bridge (1937), sixty-seven years after the Second World War (1939-1945) and a tunnel named Delaware Aqueduct (1939-1945), sixty-six years after an American director middle named Louise (1892-1979) held a sheet of equal rights seals in California (1938) and an American actress named Helen Hayes MacArthur (1900-1993) participated in a three-act play named “Mary of Scotland” (1938), sixty-five years after a term phrased white-collar (1939), forty-six years after an American Associate Justice named Florence Ellinwood Allen (1884-1966) became (1958) Chief Judge of the United States of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit (1869), forty-two years after an American businesswoman middle named Nightingale and styled Elizabeth Arden (1878-1966) was awarded (1962) the National order of the Legion of Honour (1803) by the Government of the French Republic (1958), Sault Ste. Marie International Bridge (1962) and forty years after a mural named Presencia de América Latina (1964-1965).Made thirty-nine years after the Voting Rights Act (1965), thirty-seven years after Loving vs Virginia (1967) and an American MC who lived in Los Angeles (1781) in the late 1920s named Jeanette Pickering Rankin (1880-1973) articulated: “The individual woman is required … and rescue her self-respect out of the wreckage …” (1967), thirty-four years after Women`s Strike for Equality (1970), thirty-three years after the Laetare Medal (1972) was presented to an American mother who lived in a common-law marriage named Dorothy Day (1897-1980), twenty-four years after “Ordinary People” (1980), twenty years after a voice who relinquished her U.S. citizenship (2013) sang: “… whatever the reason you do it for me …” (1984), eleven years after a voice sang: “… around broken in two … I could feel myself under your … it was you …” (1993), ten years after a federal maximum security prison named ADX Florence (1994), the same year as the Freedom of Choice Act (2004) was introduced, a theatre square was named (2004) after a 20th century Jewish mystic with a name meaning joyful and Trespassers William sang: “… being cautious … not to break you … to read … so close … there`s no space between me and you … any fragment …” (2004), a year before a vocalist from the diocese city (997) sang: “… this is my kingdom … worth … climbs up over Victoria Hill … in my darkest hour I just killed your man - - with a silver bullet in the barrel of my gun - - I did it for you …” (2005), two years before Northern Irish musicians sang: “… earth … magic trick … the finish line`s a good place … start …” (2006), nine years before sixteen and seventeen-year-olds were permitted to vote in Maryland (2013), thirteen years before an American lawyer named Loretta Elizabeth Lynch was approved (2015) by the Senate Judiciary Committee (1816) as Attorney General of the United States Department of Justice and the introduction of the Fair Play Fair Pay Act (2015) and the United States National Health Care Act (2015) and twelve years before the Belmont-Paul Women`s Equality National Monument (2016) in the District of Columbia (1790), contains a great and timely score by composers Reinhold Heil and Johnny Klimek.This cinematographically romantic and historically educational retelling of reality from the early 2000s which is set in the early 20th century in the Land of Opportunity and where self-defined human beings who learned from the Irish, were trained by the English, practiced in a federation of fifty states and met at F street, voiced their protest to the White House (1800), is impelled and reinforced by its cogent narrative structure, substantial character development, rhythmic continuity, eloquent film editing, comment by a thirty-year-old human being: “That the civil and political rights belonging to citizens of the United States be guaranteed to us and our daughters forever.” and the advanced acting performances by American actress Hilary Swank, Australian actress Frances O`Connor, English actress Julia Ormond and Ukrainian actress Vera Farmiga. A venerating narrative feature.