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  1. Amazon.es - Compra Lost Language Of Cranes ( 1991) (import) a un gran precio, con posibilidad de envío gratis. Ver opiniones y detalles sobre la gran selección de Blu-ray y DVD, nuevos o de 2ª mano.

  2. Published in 1986 (at the height of the AIDS pandemic), David Leavitt's excellent novel The Language of Cranes provides a complex portrait of the journey most gay people travel as they find their complicated way to accepting their truth and living openly and honestly in a world still slowly moving toward acceptance of LGBTQ+ lifestyles It is the story of Phillip, his father Owen and his mother ...

  3. 29 de may. de 2007 · "The Lost Language of Cranes" is a most welcomed exception to the "Gay-themed" Rule. Based on the honesty (or lack there of) of family members towards each other, the secrets start unlocking when the son (Angus Macfadyn) announces to his parents that he's Gay, which starts a ripple effect touching both Mom and Dad who have secrets themselves.

  4. The Lost Language of Cranes is a 1991 British made-for-television drama film directed by Nigel Finch. It was adapted for television by Sean Mathias, based on the 1986 novel of the same name by David Leavitt. The film was produced by the BBC for their Screen Two series, and aired on 9 February 1992 after being shown at the London Film Festival in November 1991.

  5. 19 de jun. de 1992 · The Lost Language of Cranes, based on David Leavitt’s acclaimed 1986 novel, is about what happens when father and son reveal their homosexuality — to each other and to the only woman in their ...

  6. The Lost Language of Cranes es una película dramática británica de 1991 hecha para televisión dirigida por Nigel Finch . Fue adaptada para televisión por Sean Mathias , basada en la novela de 1986de David Leavitt . La película fue producida por la BBC para su serie Screen Two y se estrenó el 9 de febrero de 1992. Está protagonizada por Brian Cox , Eileen Atkins , Angus Macfadyen ...

  7. The Lost Language of Cranes was well out of my comfort zone but it was chosen for a book group, so I gave it a go. It was well written, I liked the author's style, but I'm not a fan of gay literature and this was pretty lurid in parts. In fact, there was more explicit sexual detail, than I'd really like even in my heterosexual reads.