Paprika is a ground spice made from dried red pepper.
Paprika may also refer to:
Mars is the fourth planet from the Sun.
Hell, in many religions, is a place of suffering during the afterlife, where wicked or unrighteous souls are punished.
Lucy is an English feminine given name derived from the Latin masculine given name Lucius with the meaning as of light. Alternative spellings are Luci, Luce, Lucie, Lucia, and Luzia.
A ghost is a spirit of a dead person that may appear to the living.
A passenger is a passive traveler in a vehicle.
Dani may refer to:
Cosmos generally refers to an orderly or harmonious system.
Lover or lovers may refer to a person having a sexual or romantic relationship with someone outside marriage. In this context see:
Midnight is a time of day.
Love is an emotion of strong affection and personal attachment to people and things.
The bogeyman is a legendary monster.
Toto or TOTO may refer to:
Telefoni Bianchi films, also called deco films, were made by the Italian film industry in the 1930s and the 1940s in imitation of American comedies of the time in a sharp contrast to the other important style of the era, calligrafismo, which was highly artistic. The cinema of Telefoni Bianchi was born from the success of the Italian film comedy of the early 1930s; it was a lighter version, cleansed of any intellectualism or veiled social criticism.
Kirstine "Paprika" Steen is a Danish actress and director best known for her performances in Dogme 95 films Festen, The Idiots, Mifune, and Open Hearts. Steen was the first Danish actress since Karin Nellemose to win both Best Actress and Best Supporting Actress in the same year at the Robert Festival, the Danish equivalent of the Oscars.
The Invisible Man is an 1897 novel by H. G. Wells.
Paprika is a 1933 Italian "white-telephones" comedy film directed by Carl Boese and starring Vittorio De Sica. A German-language version Paprika and a French version Paprika were also made.
Carl Eduard Hermann Boese was a German film director, screenwriter, and producer. He directed 158 films between 1917 and 1957.
Paprika is a 1932 German comedy film directed by Carl Boese and starring Franciska Gaal, Paul Hörbiger and Paul Heidemann. Made by the German branch of Universal Pictures, it was based on a hit play by Max Reimann and Otto Schwartz. A French-language version and an Italian-language version were released the following year. It is also known by the alternative title of Marriage in Haste. In the US, the film was released almost 2 years later in German on 18 May 1934 in the Yorkville theater under the title Wie man Maenner fesselt (How to charm men).
Anna may refer to:
Eva Magni was an Italian stage and film actress. She was active between 1926 and the late 1970s.