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Suggestions of similar film to The Book Thief
There are 97 films with the same actors, 3 films with the same director, 62662 with the same cinematographic genres (including 4044 with exactly the same 2 genres than
The Book Thief), 16278 films with the same themes (including 0 films with the same 5 themes than
The Book Thief), to have finally
70 suggestions of similar films.
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The Book Thief, you will probably like those similar films :
, 9minutes
Directed by Brian PercivalOrigin United-kingdomGenres DramaThemes Films about children,
Films about child abuseActors Ashley-JadeRating67%
About a Girl opens with a striking shot of a silhouette — against a skyline of clouds above a field — of a girl singing the Britney Spears song "Stronger" and doing the dance routine. It cuts abruptly to a close-up of the girl talking in a strong Mancunian accent to the camera: "If Jesus were alive today — right, he'd probably be a singer." She is walking against a backdrop of Manchester's industrial landscape, talking non-stop, mixing wry statements about stardom and singers with random quotes from her parents and descriptions of her life: her relationship with her dad, her frustrations with her mum, her desire to become a famous singer, the band she has formed with her friends. Things any 13-year-old might talk about. Her monologue is interrupted and intercut with different scenes of her with her family and her dad; her in a perfume department, sitting on a bench singing "Stronger" again, and on the back of a bus with her girlfriends singing "Oops!... I Did It Again" by Britney Spears and doing the routine., 2h44
Directed by Steven SpielbergOrigin USAGenres Drama,
Thriller,
Action,
Spy,
Historical,
PoliticThemes Films set in Africa,
Spy films,
Films about religion,
Sports films,
Films about terrorism,
Films about the Olympic Games,
Political films,
Films about Jews and JudaismActors Eric Bana,
Daniel Craig,
Ciarán Hinds,
Mathieu Kassovitz,
Hanns Zischler,
Omar MetwallyRating74%
Munich begins with a depiction of the events of the 1972 Munich Olympics and then cuts to the home of Prime Minister of Israel Golda Meir, where Avner Kaufman (Eric Bana), a Mossad agent of German-Jewish descent, is chosen to lead an assassination mission against 11 Palestinians allegedly involved in the massacre. To give the Israeli government plausible deniability and at the direction of his handler Ephraim (Geoffrey Rush), Avner resigns from Mossad and operates with no official ties to Israel. His team includes four Jewish volunteers from around the world: South African driver Steve (Daniel Craig), Belgian toy-maker and explosives expert Robert (Mathieu Kassovitz), former Israeli soldier and "cleaner" Carl (Ciarán Hinds), and a Danish document forger named Hans (Hanns Zischler). They are given information by a shadowy French informant, Louis (Mathieu Amalric)., 2h4
Directed by Shekhar KapurOrigin United-kingdomGenres Drama,
Biography,
HistoricalThemes Feminist films,
Politique,
Films about religion,
Political films,
Films about royaltyActors Cate Blanchett,
Geoffrey Rush,
Abbie Cornish,
Christopher Eccleston,
Joseph Fiennes,
Clive OwenRating73%
In 1558, the Roman Catholic Queen Mary (Kathy Burke) dies of a cancerous tumour in her uterus, leaving her Protestant half-sister Elizabeth (Cate Blanchett) as queen. Elizabeth had previously been jailed for a supposed conspiracy to murder Mary but has now been freed for her coronation. The film shows Elizabeth being courted by suitors, including Henry, Duc d'Anjou (Vincent Cassel), the future King Henry III of France and Poland, whom she rejects, and urged by William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley (Richard Attenborough) to marry, which, as he states, would secure her throne. Instead, she has a secret affair with her childhood sweetheart, Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester (Joseph Fiennes). The affair is, however, no secret from Cecil, who makes it clear that a monarch has no private life. Elizabeth deals with various threats to her reign, including Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk (Christopher Eccleston); her Catholic cousin, Mary, Queen of Scots, who conspires to have her murdered; Mary's mother, Mary of Guise (Fanny Ardant), who brings French troops into Scotland to attack Elizabeth's forces when they invade., 2h26
Directed by Steven SpielbergOrigin USAGenres Drama,
War,
Action,
Adventure,
HistoricalThemes Films about animals,
Théâtre,
Films about horses,
Political films,
Films based on plays,
Mise en scène d'un mammifèreActors Jeremy Irvine,
Emily Watson,
David Thewlis,
Peter Mullan,
Niels Arestrup,
Benedict CumberbatchRating72%
In 1912, a teenage boy named Albert Narracott (Jeremy Irvine) from Devon, England, witnesses the birth of a Bay Thoroughbred foal and subsequently watches with admiration the growth of the young horse. Much to the dismay of his mother Rose (Emily Watson), his father Ted (Peter Mullan) buys the colt at auction, despite their needing a more suitable plough horse for the farm work. Albert's best friend, Andrew Easton (Matt Milne), watches as Albert teaches his colt many things, such as to come when he imitates the call of an owl by blowing through his cupped hands., 1h39
Directed by Stephen FrearsOrigin United-kingdomGenres Drama,
Biography,
Documentary,
HistoricalThemes Politique,
Political films,
Films about royaltyActors Helen Mirren,
Michael Sheen,
James Cromwell,
Helen McCrory,
Alex Jennings,
Roger AllamRating72%
In the 1997 general election, Tony Blair (Michael Sheen) becomes Britain's Labour prime minister. However, the Queen (Helen Mirren) is wary of Blair and his pledge to modernise Britain, despite his promises to respect the Royal Family. Three months later, Diana, Princess of Wales dies in a car crash at the Alma Bridge tunnel in Paris. Blair's director of communications, Alastair Campbell (Mark Bazeley), prepares a speech in which Diana is described as the people's princess. The phrase catches on and millions of people across London display an outpouring of grief at Buckingham and Kensington Palaces. Meanwhile, the Royal Family is still at their summer estate in Balmoral Castle. Diana's death sparks division amongst members of the family, with some of the view that since Diana was divorced from Prince Charles (Alex Jennings) a year prior to her death, she was no longer a part of the royal family. They argue that Diana's funeral arrangements are thus best left as a private affair of her noble family, the Spencers. Charles, however, argues that the mother of a future king cannot be dismissed so lightly, and persuades the Queen to authorise the use of an aircraft of the Royal Air Force to bring Diana's body back to Britain., 2h4
Directed by Philip KaufmanOrigin USAGenres Drama,
Biography,
Historical,
Romance,
Erotic thrillerThemes Films about writers,
Medical-themed films,
Psychologie,
Films about religion,
Films about sexuality,
Théâtre,
Erotic films,
BDSM in films,
LGBT-related films,
Transgender in film,
Films about psychiatry,
Films based on plays,
Erotic thriller films,
LGBT-related films,
LGBT-related film,
Cross-dressing in filmActors Geoffrey Rush,
Kate Winslet,
Joaquin Phoenix,
Michael Caine,
Billie Whitelaw,
Stephen MarcusRating71%
Quills begins during the Reign of Terror, with the incarcerated Marquis de Sade penning a story about the libidinous Mademoiselle Renard, an aristocrat who meets the preeminent sadist in her executioner., 1h54
Directed by Shekhar KapurOrigin United-kingdomGenres Drama,
Biography,
Historical,
RomanceThemes Politique,
Political films,
Films about royaltyActors Cate Blanchett,
Geoffrey Rush,
Clive Owen,
Rhys Ifans,
Jordi Mollá,
Abbie CornishRating67%
In 1585, Catholic Spain ruled by King Philip II of Spain (Jordi Molla) is the most powerful country in the world. Seeing Protestant England as a threat, and in retaliation for English piracy of Spanish ships, Philip declares war. He plans to take over England, and make his daughter Isabella the Queen of England in Elizabeth's place. Meanwhile, Elizabeth I of England (Cate Blanchett) is being pressured to marry by her advisor, Francis Walsingham (Geoffrey Rush). She is ageing and, with no child, the throne will pass to her cousin, Mary, Queen of Scots (Samantha Morton). The Queen is presented with portraits of appropriate suitors, but Elizabeth refuses to marry, particularly to the Charles II, Archduke of Austria (Christian Brassington), who has become infatuated with the Queen. English explorer Walter Raleigh (Clive Owen) is presented at Elizabeth's court, having returned from the New World, and offers her potatoes, tobacco, two Native Americans, and gold from a Spanish ship that he claims was "unable to continue its journey". Elizabeth commands that the Native Americans be treated well, and refuses to accept the gold., 2h3
Directed by John MaddenOrigin USAGenres Drama,
Biography,
Comedy,
Comedy-drama,
Romantic comedy,
Historical,
RomanceThemes Films about writers,
Films about sexuality,
Films about suicide,
Films about television,
Théâtre,
LGBT-related films,
Transgender in film,
Musical films,
Romeo and Juliet,
Political films,
Films based on plays,
Films based on works by William Shakespeare,
LGBT-related films,
Films about royalty,
LGBT-related film,
Cross-dressing in filmActors Joseph Fiennes,
Gwyneth Paltrow,
Geoffrey Rush,
Colin Firth,
Ben Affleck,
Tom WilkinsonRating70%
In 1593 London, William Shakespeare is a sometime player in the Lord Chamberlain's Men and poor playwright for Philip Henslowe, owner of The Rose Theatre. Shakespeare is working on a new comedy, Romeo and Ethel, the Pirate's Daughter. Suffering from writer's block, he has barely begun the play, but starts auditioning players. Viola de Lesseps, the daughter of a wealthy merchant, who has seen Shakespeare's plays at court, disguises herself as "Thomas Kent" to audition, then runs away. Shakespeare pursues Kent to Viola's house and leaves a note with the nurse, asking Thomas Kent to begin rehearsals at the Rose. He sneaks into the house with the minstrels playing that night at the ball, where her parents are arranging her betrothal to Lord Wessex, an impoverished aristocrat. While dancing with Viola, Shakespeare is struck speechless, and after being forcibly ejected by Wessex, uses Thomas Kent as a go-between to woo her. Wessex also asks Will's name, to which he replies that he is Christopher Marlowe., 1h44
Directed by Amma AsanteOrigin United-kingdomGenres Drama,
Historical,
RomanceThemes Films about slavery,
Films about racism,
Children's filmsActors Gugu Mbatha-Raw,
Tom Wilkinson,
Sarah Gadon,
Emily Watson,
Susan Brown,
Miranda RichardsonRating72%
Dido Elizabeth Belle Lindsay was born in 1761, the natural daughter of Maria Belle, an enslaved African woman in the West Indies, and Captain Sir John Lindsay, a British Royal Navy officer. After the death of Dido's mother, Captain Lindsay takes Dido from the slums of the West Indies in 1765 and entrusts her to his uncle William Murray, 1st Earl of Mansfield, the Lord Chief Justice, and his wife, Elizabeth, who live at Kenwood House, an estate in Hampstead outside London. Lord and Lady Mansfield raise Dido as a free gentlewoman, together with their niece Lady Elizabeth Murray, who came to live with them after her mother died and her father remarried. When the two cousins reach adulthood, the Mansfields commission an oil portrait of their two great-nieces, but Dido is unhappy about sitting for it as she is worried that it will portray her as a subordinate, like other portraits she has seen depicting aristocrats with black servants. Dido's father dies and leaves her the generous sum of £2,000 a year, enough to make her an heiress. Lady Elizabeth, by contrast, will have no income from her father, whose son from his new wife has been named his sole heir. Arrangements are made for Elizabeth to have her coming out to society, but Lord and Lady Mansfield believe no gentleman will agree to marry Dido because of her mixed-race status, so while she will travel to London with her cousin, she will not be "out" to society., 1h58
Directed by Tom HooperOrigin United-kingdomGenres Drama,
Biography,
HistoricalThemes Politique,
Political films,
Buddy films,
Films about language and translation,
Films about royaltyActors Colin Firth,
Geoffrey Rush,
Helena Bonham Carter,
Guy Pearce,
Timothy Spall,
Derek JacobiRating79%
Prince Albert, Duke of York, the second son of King George V, stammers through his speech closing the 1925 British Empire Exhibition at Wembley Stadium, while the resulting ordeal is being broadcast by radio worldwide. The Duke has given up hope of a cure, but his wife, Elizabeth, persuades him to see Lionel Logue, an Australian speech therapist in London. During their first session, Logue breaches royal etiquette by referring to the Prince as "Bertie", a name used only by his family. When the Duke decides Logue's methods and manner are unsuitable, Logue wagers a shilling that the Duke can recite Hamlet's "To be, or not to be" soliloquy without trouble while listening to "The Marriage of Figaro" on headphones. Logue records his performance on an acetate record. Convinced he has stammered throughout, Prince Albert leaves in anger, declaring his condition "hopeless" and dismissing Logue. Logue offers him the recording as a keepsake.