On Wednesday January 1 2025, A&e broadcasts The First 48!
Streets of Pain Season 27 Episode 1 Episode Summary
The upcoming episode of “The First 48,” titled “Streets of Pain,” promises to deliver a gripping and emotional story. Set in Mobile, Alabama, this episode focuses on a tragic event that unfolds in the community. A violent chain reaction results in the death of a teenage girl, leaving families and friends in shock.
Viewers will see how detectives work to piece together the events leading up to this heartbreaking incident. The investigation will highlight the challenges law enforcement faces when trying to uncover the truth behind such violent acts. The episode aims to shed light on the impact of crime on neighborhoods and the lives of those affected.
As the story unfolds, the episode will also explore the emotional toll on the victim’s family and the community. It will show how the loss of...
Streets of Pain Season 27 Episode 1 Episode Summary
The upcoming episode of “The First 48,” titled “Streets of Pain,” promises to deliver a gripping and emotional story. Set in Mobile, Alabama, this episode focuses on a tragic event that unfolds in the community. A violent chain reaction results in the death of a teenage girl, leaving families and friends in shock.
Viewers will see how detectives work to piece together the events leading up to this heartbreaking incident. The investigation will highlight the challenges law enforcement faces when trying to uncover the truth behind such violent acts. The episode aims to shed light on the impact of crime on neighborhoods and the lives of those affected.
As the story unfolds, the episode will also explore the emotional toll on the victim’s family and the community. It will show how the loss of...
- 1/1/2025
- by US Posts
- TV Regular
On Friday 27 September 2024, U&Drama broadcasts Classic Casualty!
Taking It All Back to the Streets Season 16 Episode 38 Episode Summary
The upcoming episode of “Classic Casualty,” titled “Taking It All Back to the Streets,” promises to be an engaging look at the daily challenges faced by the staff at Holby City Hospital. This episode will air on U&Drama and is sure to capture the attention of fans who enjoy the blend of drama and real-life situations in the A&e department.
In “Taking It All Back to the Streets,” viewers can expect to see the young doctors and nurses navigating the highs and lows of their demanding roles. The episode will explore how they cope with the pressures of their jobs while dealing with a variety of patients, each with their own unique stories and needs. The title suggests a return to the core of what makes the hospital setting so compelling,...
Taking It All Back to the Streets Season 16 Episode 38 Episode Summary
The upcoming episode of “Classic Casualty,” titled “Taking It All Back to the Streets,” promises to be an engaging look at the daily challenges faced by the staff at Holby City Hospital. This episode will air on U&Drama and is sure to capture the attention of fans who enjoy the blend of drama and real-life situations in the A&e department.
In “Taking It All Back to the Streets,” viewers can expect to see the young doctors and nurses navigating the highs and lows of their demanding roles. The episode will explore how they cope with the pressures of their jobs while dealing with a variety of patients, each with their own unique stories and needs. The title suggests a return to the core of what makes the hospital setting so compelling,...
- 9/27/2024
- by Olly Green
- TV Regular
Every decade has movies where it feels like the entire point of the film goes over audiences' heads, and the 1980s were no different. As a complex era categorized by societies fractured by Reaganomic policies, Cold War anxieties, and widespread recession, movies often subtly reflected societies' woes in a way not every viewer picked up on. In certain cases, these misunderstandings led to great films completely bombing at the box office, and it's only in hindsight that their meaning and purpose seem obvious.
The most controversial movies ever made usually become notorious because of some major misunderstandings, as truly insightful films challenge audience expectations and social norms. This has been especially the case in past decades, as prior to widespread online discourse, it was more difficult for film lovers to gain behind-the-scenes information or deep analysis of a particular movie. While some viewers did not initially understand the message of these great films,...
The most controversial movies ever made usually become notorious because of some major misunderstandings, as truly insightful films challenge audience expectations and social norms. This has been especially the case in past decades, as prior to widespread online discourse, it was more difficult for film lovers to gain behind-the-scenes information or deep analysis of a particular movie. While some viewers did not initially understand the message of these great films,...
- 9/8/2024
- by Stephen Holland
- ScreenRant
Doors are open and it’s time to shop in a one-of-a-kind experience as you can now get tickets to the new anime film The Concierge today! Crunchyroll and Sony Pictures Entertainment will release The Concierge, one of the latest anime movies form Production I.G, for a one-day-only event on September 11 in the following North American theaters. Tickets back be purchased directly from the list of theaters before, as well at Fandango.com . United States Arizona Harkins Theatres Estrella Falls 16 Harkins Theatres Arizona Mills 18 with IMAX California AMC Burbank 16 AMC The Grove 14 Regal Delta Shores & IMAX Century Arden 14 Regal Edwards Mira Mesa AMC Mission Valley 20 Cinemark Century Oakridge 20 AMC Metreon 16 AMC Saratoga 14 Colorado AMC Westminster Promenade 24 Connecticut Cinemark Buckland Hills 18 Xd and IMAX Florida Cinemark Paradise 24 and Xd AMC Dine-in Disney Springs 24 Regal Waterford Lakes AMC Veterans 24 Georgia AMC Colonial 18 Hawaii Consolidated Theatres Ward with Titan Luxe Illinois AMC...
- 8/28/2024
- by Kyle Cardine
- Crunchyroll
The actor and director came together for a Mean Streets reunion at Tribeca film festival, with superfan Nas asking the questions
On paper, it had a certain Mad Libs quality to it: the Tribeca film festival programmed a fiftieth anniversary screening of downtown classic Mean Streets, with star and festival co-founder Robert De Niro on hand for a Q&a along with director Martin Scorsese – the curveball being that those questions were asked by none other than rapper, lifelong New Yorker, and evident film buff Nas.
The seeming incongruence faded away pretty quickly, and not just when Nas recalled shooting his Street Dreams music video as scrupulous homage to the Scorsese/De Niro joint Casino. He set the stage for the event by expressing everything Mean Streets means and has meant to him, part of the longstanding mutual admiration between gangster cinema and hip-hop. As a restless young man in...
On paper, it had a certain Mad Libs quality to it: the Tribeca film festival programmed a fiftieth anniversary screening of downtown classic Mean Streets, with star and festival co-founder Robert De Niro on hand for a Q&a along with director Martin Scorsese – the curveball being that those questions were asked by none other than rapper, lifelong New Yorker, and evident film buff Nas.
The seeming incongruence faded away pretty quickly, and not just when Nas recalled shooting his Street Dreams music video as scrupulous homage to the Scorsese/De Niro joint Casino. He set the stage for the event by expressing everything Mean Streets means and has meant to him, part of the longstanding mutual admiration between gangster cinema and hip-hop. As a restless young man in...
- 6/17/2024
- by Charles Bramesco in New York
- The Guardian - Film News
Have you ever wondered what it really means to put your heart and soul into a film? Steven Spielberg’s profound connection to Schindler’s List is compelling evidence of this very question, marking it as his most personal creation. The film, whose challenging production gradually turned into a passion project for the director, has since emerged as one of the most defining works that best explained the evil of the Holocaust.
Liam Neeson in Schindler’s List (1993) | Universal Pictures
Nonetheless, the journey to bring this heart-rending masterpiece to life was fraught with solemn notes of heartbreak, particularly for another acclaimed director. That being said, Billy Wilder, recipient of seven Academy Awards, envisioned Schindler’s List as a final ode to the loss of his own family during the Holocaust.
Spielberg once shared the tender yet devastating interaction between him and Wilder.
Exploring the What-Ifs: Billy Wilder & the Almost-Directed Schindler...
Liam Neeson in Schindler’s List (1993) | Universal Pictures
Nonetheless, the journey to bring this heart-rending masterpiece to life was fraught with solemn notes of heartbreak, particularly for another acclaimed director. That being said, Billy Wilder, recipient of seven Academy Awards, envisioned Schindler’s List as a final ode to the loss of his own family during the Holocaust.
Spielberg once shared the tender yet devastating interaction between him and Wilder.
Exploring the What-Ifs: Billy Wilder & the Almost-Directed Schindler...
- 6/13/2024
- by Siddhika Prajapati
- FandomWire
Fans of Modern Family are astounded at how much Aubrey Anderson-Emmons has grown up since the show ended in 2020.
Modern Family was everyone’s favorite TV show, including Michelle Obama, and Anderson Emmerson’s character, Lily, was truly iconic.
Aubrey Anderson-Emmons is known for her role as Lily Tucker-Pritchett on ABC’s Modern Family (Credit: ABC)
She stole the show with her sarcastic lines and spunky attitude and has now gone viral as a TikTok star.
Her Modern Family Character
The 16-year-old uses she/they pronouns and first appeared on Modern Family as a four-year-old. Lily Turner-Pritchett’s character is the adopted Asian daughter of gay dads Mitchell Pritchett and Cameron Turner.
She began portraying the character in 2011 as a four-year-old. The ABC states that her character “increased cultural diversity awareness as an Asian American playing a trans-racial adoptee of gay parents.”
At age 4, Aubrey Anderson-Emmons became the youngest person...
Modern Family was everyone’s favorite TV show, including Michelle Obama, and Anderson Emmerson’s character, Lily, was truly iconic.
Aubrey Anderson-Emmons is known for her role as Lily Tucker-Pritchett on ABC’s Modern Family (Credit: ABC)
She stole the show with her sarcastic lines and spunky attitude and has now gone viral as a TikTok star.
Her Modern Family Character
The 16-year-old uses she/they pronouns and first appeared on Modern Family as a four-year-old. Lily Turner-Pritchett’s character is the adopted Asian daughter of gay dads Mitchell Pritchett and Cameron Turner.
She began portraying the character in 2011 as a four-year-old. The ABC states that her character “increased cultural diversity awareness as an Asian American playing a trans-racial adoptee of gay parents.”
At age 4, Aubrey Anderson-Emmons became the youngest person...
- 6/1/2024
- by Jan Stromsodd
- Your Next Shoes
Doja Cat Slams “Deadbeat” Dad In Rage-Fueled Post(Photo Credit –Instagram)
American singer Doja Cat called out her estranged father for being an absentee parent in a brutal social media post. Doja Cat put her dad on blast on May 27 in a since-deleted X bio, writing: “My dad’s a deadbeat, but I did well.”
Doja Cat, 28, has been candid about her troubled relationship with her father, Dumisani Dlamini, who seemingly abandoned her after birth. When asked about her father during an interview with Radio One D.C, the “Streets” Performer said, “He’s an incredible dancer and a great actor. But yeah, I don’t know him very well.”
While Doja Cat has reiterated that she has never met her father, he has reached out to her a couple of times on social media after her rise to fame.
Trending Justice For Johnny Wactor GoFundMe Raises Over $38,000 As ‘General...
American singer Doja Cat called out her estranged father for being an absentee parent in a brutal social media post. Doja Cat put her dad on blast on May 27 in a since-deleted X bio, writing: “My dad’s a deadbeat, but I did well.”
Doja Cat, 28, has been candid about her troubled relationship with her father, Dumisani Dlamini, who seemingly abandoned her after birth. When asked about her father during an interview with Radio One D.C, the “Streets” Performer said, “He’s an incredible dancer and a great actor. But yeah, I don’t know him very well.”
While Doja Cat has reiterated that she has never met her father, he has reached out to her a couple of times on social media after her rise to fame.
Trending Justice For Johnny Wactor GoFundMe Raises Over $38,000 As ‘General...
- 5/28/2024
- by Anushree Madappa
- KoiMoi
Tribeca has revealed details for De Niro Con, coinciding with this year’s Tribeca Film Festival. Described as “a celebration of 80 years of Robert De Niro,” the three-day event is set to take place June 14th through 16th at New York City’s Spring Studios.
Also timed to mark the 50th anniversary of Mean Streets, programming includes 13 overall screenings, live conversations with collaborators, an immersive exhibit, and the world premiere of a short film titled De Niro, New York.
The star-studded screening lineup is set to feature Jackie Brown, followed by a conversation with director Quentin Tarantino and De Niro; Analyze This, followed by a conversation with stars Billy Crystal and De Niro and moderated by Whoopi Goldberg; Silver Linings Playbook, followed by a conversation with director David O. Russell; and many more. Plus, there will be a screening of Mean Streets screening featuring a conversation with De Niro and Martin Scorsese,...
Also timed to mark the 50th anniversary of Mean Streets, programming includes 13 overall screenings, live conversations with collaborators, an immersive exhibit, and the world premiere of a short film titled De Niro, New York.
The star-studded screening lineup is set to feature Jackie Brown, followed by a conversation with director Quentin Tarantino and De Niro; Analyze This, followed by a conversation with stars Billy Crystal and De Niro and moderated by Whoopi Goldberg; Silver Linings Playbook, followed by a conversation with director David O. Russell; and many more. Plus, there will be a screening of Mean Streets screening featuring a conversation with De Niro and Martin Scorsese,...
- 5/8/2024
- by Mary Siroky
- Consequence - Film News
The Scarlet Tour, the debut arena run from Doja Cat, made its way through North America in 2023. Each night, the singer and rapper ran through a discography-spanning setlist in a five-part show that featured a giant snake, a spinning stage, masterful choreography, and more. On Jan. 20, the tour will go from the stage to the screen as Doja Cat premieres The Scarlet Tour in VR via Meta Quest Platform.
The Scarlet Tour in VR was captured in December when Doja Cat took over Little Caesars Arena in Detroit. The concert...
The Scarlet Tour in VR was captured in December when Doja Cat took over Little Caesars Arena in Detroit. The concert...
- 1/16/2024
- by Larisha Paul
- Rollingstone.com
The Australian drama premiered at Cannes and stars Cate Blanchett.
Warwick Thornton’s The New Boy leads the nominations for the 2024 Aacta (Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts) Awards with 12 nods, closely followed by horror Talk To Me with 11 nominations.
The New Boy is up for best film, actress for Cate Blanchett and actor for newcomer Aswan Reid while Australian Indigenous filmmaker Thornton is nominated for best director, screenplay and cinematography.
The film is set in 1940s Australia and stars Blanchett (who also serves as a producer) as a nun who takes in a nine-year-old Aboriginal orphan boy. It...
Warwick Thornton’s The New Boy leads the nominations for the 2024 Aacta (Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts) Awards with 12 nods, closely followed by horror Talk To Me with 11 nominations.
The New Boy is up for best film, actress for Cate Blanchett and actor for newcomer Aswan Reid while Australian Indigenous filmmaker Thornton is nominated for best director, screenplay and cinematography.
The film is set in 1940s Australia and stars Blanchett (who also serves as a producer) as a nun who takes in a nine-year-old Aboriginal orphan boy. It...
- 12/11/2023
- by Michael Rosser
- ScreenDaily
Doja Cat is officially on the road with The Scarlet Tour!
The Grammy-winning singer kicked off the tour with a sold-out performance on Halloween night on Tuesday (October 31) at the Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif.
Doja played fan-favorite songs like “Paint the Town Red,” “Attention,” and “Kiss Me More” throughout the show. Rapper and singer Doechii opened the show.
The 24-date tour continues in Los Angeles before making stops in Las Vegas, Austin, Miami, Brooklyn, Toronto and more ahead of wrapping up on Wednesday, December 13 in Chicago at United Center.
Head inside to check out the set list…
Keep scrolling to check out the full set list…
**This set list is representative of the first show and might not be completely accurate for every show.
1. Wym Freestyle (What You Mean)
2. Demons
3. Tia Tamera
4. Shutcho
5. Agora Hills
6. Attention
7. Often
8. Red Room
9. Balut
10. Gun
11. Ain’t Shit
12. Woman
13. Say So
14. Get...
The Grammy-winning singer kicked off the tour with a sold-out performance on Halloween night on Tuesday (October 31) at the Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif.
Doja played fan-favorite songs like “Paint the Town Red,” “Attention,” and “Kiss Me More” throughout the show. Rapper and singer Doechii opened the show.
The 24-date tour continues in Los Angeles before making stops in Las Vegas, Austin, Miami, Brooklyn, Toronto and more ahead of wrapping up on Wednesday, December 13 in Chicago at United Center.
Head inside to check out the set list…
Keep scrolling to check out the full set list…
**This set list is representative of the first show and might not be completely accurate for every show.
1. Wym Freestyle (What You Mean)
2. Demons
3. Tia Tamera
4. Shutcho
5. Agora Hills
6. Attention
7. Often
8. Red Room
9. Balut
10. Gun
11. Ain’t Shit
12. Woman
13. Say So
14. Get...
- 11/1/2023
- by Just Jared
- Just Jared
Rapper and songwriter, J Trix, dropped his highly anticipated single “Sexy” from his debut EP ‘Middle-Class Boys’ on 27th July. The hard-hitting rap track serves as a testament to J Trix’s unwavering dedication and success within the music industry. With years of relentless hustle, J Trix has become a prominent figure in the rap game, earning widespread recognition for his exceptional talent and impactful music.
“Sexy” showcases his unapologetic attitude towards reaping the rewards of his hard work and serves as a vibrant anthem for those who refuse to settle for anything less than success.
Produced by the incredibly talented Subspace, “Sexy” delves into the realm of classic trap music, captivating listeners with its incendiary beat slaps and J Trix’s signature razor-sharp lyricism. The track solidifies J Trix’s growing discography and further establishes him as a force to be reckoned with in the Indian rap scene.
Notably,...
“Sexy” showcases his unapologetic attitude towards reaping the rewards of his hard work and serves as a vibrant anthem for those who refuse to settle for anything less than success.
Produced by the incredibly talented Subspace, “Sexy” delves into the realm of classic trap music, captivating listeners with its incendiary beat slaps and J Trix’s signature razor-sharp lyricism. The track solidifies J Trix’s growing discography and further establishes him as a force to be reckoned with in the Indian rap scene.
Notably,...
- 8/2/2023
- by Editorial Desk
- GlamSham
Hidden cinematic treasures are buried everywhere in Cannes. But even the most tireless hunters and diggers amongst us couldn’t have predicted that this year’s finest archeology film would not be found in James Mangold’s “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny,” but in Alice Rohrwacher’s whimsically ethereal tapestry of romance, history and afterlife, “La Chimera.”
A rich and humorous folk tale overflowing with cultural details, aesthetic pleasures and the effervescent musicality of the Italian language, Rohrwacher’s melancholically grainy pastoral fable isn’t exactly about professional archeology, to be perfectly clear. But what some of her characters—the ancient-grave-raiding collective “tombaroli,” led by Josh O’Connor’s (“The Crown”) enigmatic Arthur—lack in bona fide archeological expertise, they make up for with rebellion and a reckless sense of aspiration.
Violating the bottomless sacred burial grounds of their little Italian village and stealing historical wonders the Etruscan people have taken to their grave,...
A rich and humorous folk tale overflowing with cultural details, aesthetic pleasures and the effervescent musicality of the Italian language, Rohrwacher’s melancholically grainy pastoral fable isn’t exactly about professional archeology, to be perfectly clear. But what some of her characters—the ancient-grave-raiding collective “tombaroli,” led by Josh O’Connor’s (“The Crown”) enigmatic Arthur—lack in bona fide archeological expertise, they make up for with rebellion and a reckless sense of aspiration.
Violating the bottomless sacred burial grounds of their little Italian village and stealing historical wonders the Etruscan people have taken to their grave,...
- 5/26/2023
- by Tomris Laffly
- The Wrap
Watch the 1993 Short Film Frankenstein Reborn: "A HD version of a 1993 horror short entitled Frankenstein Reborn was quietly placed on YouTube yesterday after being unreleased for thirty years. It's a period Frankenstein story in the vein of Hammer, made by a bunch of young Long Islanders at The New York Institute of Technology."
"Shot on 16mm film, Frankenstein Reborn was directed by George Reis (The Bloody Ape), produced by Alex Kuciw, and stars Joseph Parda (Evil Streets), Kristine Strong, Debbie Rochon (Tromeo And Juliet), John Baszanda, and Joe Zaso."
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Exclusive Clip from The Dead Hour: "Terror Films are getting into the horror television business, premiering a new 12-episode horror series titled The Dead Hour on digital platforms in the spring.
Creators Daniel B. Iske & Scott Coleman say classic The Twilight Zone was their key inspiration for the limited series, which premieres May 12 globally.
It’s an anthology series...
"Shot on 16mm film, Frankenstein Reborn was directed by George Reis (The Bloody Ape), produced by Alex Kuciw, and stars Joseph Parda (Evil Streets), Kristine Strong, Debbie Rochon (Tromeo And Juliet), John Baszanda, and Joe Zaso."
---
Exclusive Clip from The Dead Hour: "Terror Films are getting into the horror television business, premiering a new 12-episode horror series titled The Dead Hour on digital platforms in the spring.
Creators Daniel B. Iske & Scott Coleman say classic The Twilight Zone was their key inspiration for the limited series, which premieres May 12 globally.
It’s an anthology series...
- 5/9/2023
- by Jonathan James
- DailyDead
Doja Cat rocks a black lingerie top for a few bathroom selfies. Pic credit: @dojacat/Instagram
Doja Cat shared a Labor Day weekend photo with fans in the bathroom, which has served as the backdrop of many of Doja’s selfies.
Doja took to her Instagram Stories to share a couple of bathroom selfies featuring her latest look. Doja looked serious as she posed with her lips slightly parted and stared at the viewfinder.
The Streets rapper opted for a mirror selfie with her iconic cell phone case that resembled a landline phone.
The artistic songstress has rocked a few different eyebrow art looks since she got rid of her facial hair last month. Doja’s latest eyebrow art was connected to her eye makeup and smoky-eye look. Each eyebrow featured two lines and a circle in between.
Doja rocked a black lace bustier with a ribbon on the bodice.
Doja Cat shared a Labor Day weekend photo with fans in the bathroom, which has served as the backdrop of many of Doja’s selfies.
Doja took to her Instagram Stories to share a couple of bathroom selfies featuring her latest look. Doja looked serious as she posed with her lips slightly parted and stared at the viewfinder.
The Streets rapper opted for a mirror selfie with her iconic cell phone case that resembled a landline phone.
The artistic songstress has rocked a few different eyebrow art looks since she got rid of her facial hair last month. Doja’s latest eyebrow art was connected to her eye makeup and smoky-eye look. Each eyebrow featured two lines and a circle in between.
Doja rocked a black lace bustier with a ribbon on the bodice.
- 9/5/2022
- by Shannon Sullivan
- Monsters and Critics
One of Angeleno Heights’ most famous residents is no longer welcome there, according to some who live in the Los Angeles neighborhood.
Specifically, they’re talking about Dominic Toretto, the main character of the Fast films played by Vin Diesel, whose onscreen home is a 4,800 square-foot home built in the area in 1906.
As filming of NBCUniversal’s Fast X, the 10th installment of the franchise, was set to take place today and Saturday in the area, residents took part in a protest saying they fear the movie will further glorify and encourage illegal street racing in their neighborhood.
“It’s super, super, super dangerous,” one resident told the crowd gathered for the late-morning protest. “I mean, come on guys, it doesn’t take a smart person to figure out that if you lose control, you’re going to hit somebody or something.”
She held up a photo of a crashed vehicle and said,...
Specifically, they’re talking about Dominic Toretto, the main character of the Fast films played by Vin Diesel, whose onscreen home is a 4,800 square-foot home built in the area in 1906.
As filming of NBCUniversal’s Fast X, the 10th installment of the franchise, was set to take place today and Saturday in the area, residents took part in a protest saying they fear the movie will further glorify and encourage illegal street racing in their neighborhood.
“It’s super, super, super dangerous,” one resident told the crowd gathered for the late-morning protest. “I mean, come on guys, it doesn’t take a smart person to figure out that if you lose control, you’re going to hit somebody or something.”
She held up a photo of a crashed vehicle and said,...
- 8/26/2022
- by Tom Tapp
- Deadline Film + TV
Doja Cat is keeping fans in the loop after revealing she had to get surgery recently. "Dr. just had to cut into my left tonsil," the 26-year-old tweeted on May 19, adding that it "had an abscess in it." She continued, "My whole throat is f--ked so i might have some bad news for yall coming soon." As Doja explained, the "Streets" rapper—who took home four trophies during the 2022 Billboard Music Awards on May 15—was already having trouble with her tonsils prior to the ceremony, but as she enjoyed a few drinks and her vape pen, it made matters worse. "My tonsils got infected before bbmas and i was taking f--kin...
- 5/20/2022
- E! Online
Messages from close friends and industry folks alike flooded Oliver Tree’s phone after the Kid Laroi released the cinematically eccentric video for “Thousand Miles” in late April. Friends and colleagues wanted to know if Tree had helped direct the video, as snippets from it seemed to mirror his own work.
The 28-year-old Canadian surf punk, who scored a hit in 2019 with “Matzoh Ball Hop,” took a closer look and realized that some scenes were nearly identical to visuals he came up with for his own music. So, on April...
The 28-year-old Canadian surf punk, who scored a hit in 2019 with “Matzoh Ball Hop,” took a closer look and realized that some scenes were nearly identical to visuals he came up with for his own music. So, on April...
- 5/2/2022
- by Tomás Mier
- Rollingstone.com
1992 was a year of high points for filmmaker Ernest Dickerson, who ended his career as a director of photography with Spike Lee’s majestic bio-pic Malcolm X and began life as a feature film director with the superb teen noir Juice. While Malcolm X may have been more epic in scope, Juice was, in its own compact way, a work of strong ambition and audacity as well, a flawlessly executed coming of age tale that borrowed from Mean Streets, Italian neorealism, and German expressionism but synthesized its influences with Dickerson’s awareness of contemporary New York street life to yield a […]
The post Juice, The Learning Tree and The Devil’s 8: Jim Hemphill’s Home Video Recommendations first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.
The post Juice, The Learning Tree and The Devil’s 8: Jim Hemphill’s Home Video Recommendations first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.
- 1/28/2022
- by Jim Hemphill
- Filmmaker Magazine-Director Interviews
1992 was a year of high points for filmmaker Ernest Dickerson, who ended his career as a director of photography with Spike Lee’s majestic bio-pic Malcolm X and began life as a feature film director with the superb teen noir Juice. While Malcolm X may have been more epic in scope, Juice was, in its own compact way, a work of strong ambition and audacity as well, a flawlessly executed coming of age tale that borrowed from Mean Streets, Italian neorealism, and German expressionism but synthesized its influences with Dickerson’s awareness of contemporary New York street life to yield a […]
The post Juice, The Learning Tree and The Devil’s 8: Jim Hemphill’s Home Video Recommendations first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.
The post Juice, The Learning Tree and The Devil’s 8: Jim Hemphill’s Home Video Recommendations first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.
- 1/28/2022
- by Jim Hemphill
- Filmmaker Magazine - Blog
Martin Scorsese is a jack of all trades when it comes to genre movies, as he has directed comedies, psychological thrillers, and kids' fantasy flicks. But no matter what he directs next, he'll always be known for being the king of epic gangster films.
Related: 10 Hollywood Actors Who Had Their Breakthrough In A Martin Scorsese Movie
Mean Streets, Casino, Goodfellas, and most recently, The Irishman, have all cemented Scorsese as the greatest gangster director in history. But the filmmaker's 2006 movie, The Departed, is arguably his best. The movie is unique among the director's filmography for many reasons, as it's his only movie with a modern-day setting and one of the few with a strong female character.
Related: 10 Hollywood Actors Who Had Their Breakthrough In A Martin Scorsese Movie
Mean Streets, Casino, Goodfellas, and most recently, The Irishman, have all cemented Scorsese as the greatest gangster director in history. But the filmmaker's 2006 movie, The Departed, is arguably his best. The movie is unique among the director's filmography for many reasons, as it's his only movie with a modern-day setting and one of the few with a strong female character.
- 10/5/2021
- ScreenRant
Equipped with a breakneck pace and a grimy visual aesthetic, “All the Streets Are Silent,” a streetwise documentary entrenched in the convergence between hip-hop culture and the skateboard scene in New York City during the late 80s and early 90s, swelters with an indisputable passion for its subject matter, but lacks a much-needed edge to accompany its information-heavy, insider-focused disposition.
The 25 Best Music Documentaries Of The 21st Century So Far
With director/editor Jeremy Elkin working behind the boards, ‘Streets’ features an eclectic assemblage of talking heads, ranging from hip-hop legends (including Kid Capri and Darryl McDaniels) to skateboard royalty.
Continue reading ‘All The Streets Are Silent’ Surges With A Love For Skateboarding And Hip-Hop But Has Little To Say [Review] at The Playlist.
The 25 Best Music Documentaries Of The 21st Century So Far
With director/editor Jeremy Elkin working behind the boards, ‘Streets’ features an eclectic assemblage of talking heads, ranging from hip-hop legends (including Kid Capri and Darryl McDaniels) to skateboard royalty.
Continue reading ‘All The Streets Are Silent’ Surges With A Love For Skateboarding And Hip-Hop But Has Little To Say [Review] at The Playlist.
- 7/23/2021
- by Jonathan Christian
- The Playlist
The R&b field at the Grammys is often one of the most interesting, with a balance of big hits, buzzy newcomers, and established veterans, and usually a couple of surprises when it comes to winners. Let’s review who’s in contention to get noms in the genre at this stage of the race.
Anderson Paak and Bruno Mars will surely be in contention for their work as supergroup Silk Sonic. Their song “Leave The Door Open” has been a smash, peaking at number-one on the Billboard Hot 100 with success on radio and streaming. The song is also very traditional, inspired by retro R&b, which is definitely something the Grammys are into. And Mars and Paak are Grammy favorites, with Mars’s last project, “24K Magic,” sweeping its six noms including three R&b categories. Paak, meanwhile, has four Grammys including two R&b awards for his album “Ventura” and song “Come Home.
Anderson Paak and Bruno Mars will surely be in contention for their work as supergroup Silk Sonic. Their song “Leave The Door Open” has been a smash, peaking at number-one on the Billboard Hot 100 with success on radio and streaming. The song is also very traditional, inspired by retro R&b, which is definitely something the Grammys are into. And Mars and Paak are Grammy favorites, with Mars’s last project, “24K Magic,” sweeping its six noms including three R&b categories. Paak, meanwhile, has four Grammys including two R&b awards for his album “Ventura” and song “Come Home.
- 5/8/2021
- by Jaime Rodriguez
- Gold Derby
With the 2022 Grammys eligibility period more than halfway done, it’s time we take a closer look at some early contenders in the pop field. It’s the only major field without a secret nomination review committee besides alternative, so it’s typically full of big commercial hits as well as some name-checks of familiar academy favorites. Let’s dive in.
SEEThe lady doth protest just enough: H.E.R. upsets to win Best Song at the Grammys and Oscars for fighting the power Best Pop Solo Performance
Olivia Rodrigo’s “Drivers License” is probably the safest front-runner at this point in the year. The song is the biggest hit eligible so far, spending eight weeks at number-one. All but one of the last 10 winners of this category have been huge hits, with eight reaching number-one; the only exceptions are Ed Sheeran’s “Thinking Out Loud,” which was blocked from the top...
SEEThe lady doth protest just enough: H.E.R. upsets to win Best Song at the Grammys and Oscars for fighting the power Best Pop Solo Performance
Olivia Rodrigo’s “Drivers License” is probably the safest front-runner at this point in the year. The song is the biggest hit eligible so far, spending eight weeks at number-one. All but one of the last 10 winners of this category have been huge hits, with eight reaching number-one; the only exceptions are Ed Sheeran’s “Thinking Out Loud,” which was blocked from the top...
- 5/4/2021
- by Jaime Rodriguez
- Gold Derby
Doja Cat and Sza have released a new collaborative single, “Kiss Me More,” alongside its sassy accompanying video. The groovy, disco-inflected jam is in the same vein as Doja Cat’s mega-hit “Say So,” with separate verses sung by both Doja Cat and Sza and a rap verse by Doja Cat. The song will appear on Doja Cat’s third album, Planet Her. The follow-up to 2019’s Hot Pink, Planet Her will arrive this summer.
In the Warren Fu-directed clip, an Earthling astronaut portrayed by Grey’s Anatomy actor Alex Landi...
In the Warren Fu-directed clip, an Earthling astronaut portrayed by Grey’s Anatomy actor Alex Landi...
- 4/9/2021
- by Claire Shaffer and Althea Legaspi
- Rollingstone.com
Doja Cat donned an alien cyborg outfit for her performance of a remixed “Say So” at the 63rd Annual Grammy Awards on Sunday night.
Doja Cat and her dancers themed themselves after aliens coming down from another planet, surrounded by blue laser lights. (Doja’s dancers also, appropriately, wore cat ears on top of their Covid-safe helmets and face shields.)
Doja Cat is up for three awards this year, including Best New Artist, Record of the Year for “Say So,” and Best Pop Solo Performance for “Say So.” “It sounds crazy,...
Doja Cat and her dancers themed themselves after aliens coming down from another planet, surrounded by blue laser lights. (Doja’s dancers also, appropriately, wore cat ears on top of their Covid-safe helmets and face shields.)
Doja Cat is up for three awards this year, including Best New Artist, Record of the Year for “Say So,” and Best Pop Solo Performance for “Say So.” “It sounds crazy,...
- 3/15/2021
- by Claire Shaffer
- Rollingstone.com
Not all of us have the makeup or dance skills to succeed at the many, many TikTok challenges that pop up on the social media platform, but fortunately for fans wanting to participate in the Silhouette Challenge, all we need is a little lesson from first-time Grammy nominee Doja Cat. The 25-year-old singer, whose real name is Amala Ratna Zandile Dlamini, is quite popular on TikTok. The Best New Artist nominee at the 2021 Grammys has over eight million followers on the app, and last year, her hit song "Say So" was turned into an iconic TikTok dance that was all over everyone's For You Page. Now, Doja Cat's song "Streets" is...
- 3/13/2021
- E! Online
Doja Cat has released the sultry — and scary — new music video for her viral single “Streets,” originally featured on her 2019 album Hot Pink.
In the horror-fantasy clip, directed by Christian Breslauer, a taxi driver stares out at a mannequin while Paul Anka’s “Put Your Head on My Shoulder” plays in the background. As the song transitions into “Streets,” the mannequin transforms into Doja playing a red-light dancer shown in silhouette — an homage to the viral silhouette challenge on TikTok that has been built around the song.
Doja then seduces the taxi driver,...
In the horror-fantasy clip, directed by Christian Breslauer, a taxi driver stares out at a mannequin while Paul Anka’s “Put Your Head on My Shoulder” plays in the background. As the song transitions into “Streets,” the mannequin transforms into Doja playing a red-light dancer shown in silhouette — an homage to the viral silhouette challenge on TikTok that has been built around the song.
Doja then seduces the taxi driver,...
- 3/9/2021
- by Claire Shaffer
- Rollingstone.com
Editors note: Aravind Adiga won the Man Booker Prize in 2008 for his debut novel The White Tiger, which his old Columbia University classmate Ramin Bahrani turned into the movie that has been generating awards buzz since its Netflix release in January. Adiga penned a guest column for Deadline about how the pair became fast friends by bonding over Scorsese films in Bahrani’s dorm room, a kinship that has lasted ever since.
Back in 1993, the idea that any living writer could come near the Russian novelist Dostoevsky in greatness would have struck me and my undergraduate friends at Columbia University as blasphemy. But this was precisely the claim that a fellow student was making one night as we were studying at the library. Even more shockingly, he was claiming that a living American filmmaker named Scorsese was as good as Dostoevsky. He had a video back in his dorm room that would prove it.
Back in 1993, the idea that any living writer could come near the Russian novelist Dostoevsky in greatness would have struck me and my undergraduate friends at Columbia University as blasphemy. But this was precisely the claim that a fellow student was making one night as we were studying at the library. Even more shockingly, he was claiming that a living American filmmaker named Scorsese was as good as Dostoevsky. He had a video back in his dorm room that would prove it.
- 3/3/2021
- by Aravind Adiga
- Deadline Film + TV
By most accounts, the story behind “The White Tiger” has been festering for almost 15 years. The Netflix project is based on Aravand Adiga’s award-winning 2008 novel that tracks the rags-to-riches saga of a young chauffeur who follows a criminal path to success in modern-day India. The roots of the project, however, stretch back to a Columbia University dorm room and a DVD of “Mean Streets.”
That was where aspiring filmmaker Ramin Bahrani met Adiga in 1993 through a group of largely Middle Eastern friends on campus. “We were all reading things like Dostoyevsky and Camus,” said Adiga, who was an English lit major raised in India. “One day, Ramin came up to the group in the library and said there was a film we ought to see that was as good as the books we were reading.”
Back in his room, Bahrani started the DVD player and made an impromptu case...
That was where aspiring filmmaker Ramin Bahrani met Adiga in 1993 through a group of largely Middle Eastern friends on campus. “We were all reading things like Dostoyevsky and Camus,” said Adiga, who was an English lit major raised in India. “One day, Ramin came up to the group in the library and said there was a film we ought to see that was as good as the books we were reading.”
Back in his room, Bahrani started the DVD player and made an impromptu case...
- 2/16/2021
- by Eric Kohn
- Indiewire
Olivia Rodrigo’s “Drivers License” was Number One again on the Rolling Stone Top 100 Songs chart. Rodrigo’s runaway hit has now been Number One for a month. In its fourth week at the top of the chart, “Drivers License” picked up more than 28 million streams.
While the single’s streaming totals have fallen each week since its release, “Drivers License” still out-streamed the second most popular song by a significant margin, more than 10 million streams. Sza’s “Good Days” held strong at Number Two (16.3 million streams), while Doja Cat...
While the single’s streaming totals have fallen each week since its release, “Drivers License” still out-streamed the second most popular song by a significant margin, more than 10 million streams. Sza’s “Good Days” held strong at Number Two (16.3 million streams), while Doja Cat...
- 2/8/2021
- by Elias Leight
- Rollingstone.com
Olivia Rodrigo’s “Drivers License” extended its impressive commercial run, spending a third straight week at Number One on the Rolling Stone Top 100 Songs chart. The track amassed more than 37 million streams; while that sum has declined each week since the single’s January 8th release, “Drivers License” still beat out the competition by a margin of nearly 20 million streams.
Sza’s “Good Days” also continued to perform well, holding down the Number Two spot. Sza released the track on Christmas, and it’s been in the Top Five for...
Sza’s “Good Days” also continued to perform well, holding down the Number Two spot. Sza released the track on Christmas, and it’s been in the Top Five for...
- 2/1/2021
- by Elias Leight
- Rollingstone.com
The Grammy Award for Best New Artist is a push from the industry for their favorite up-and-coming musicians making waves. While some past winners have admittedly faded away, a lot went on to become decade-defining or even generation-defining artists, like The Beatles (1965), Mariah Carey (1991) and Adele (2009). Let’s see who’s in line this year to join this list of influential winners.
Seea tale of two Taylors: Two generations of singer-songwriters could win Grammys for Best Pop Album
One of the front-runners here is definitely rapper and internet sensation Megan Thee Stallion. Megan notched two number-one hits in 2020, including the three-time Grammy-nominated song “Savage” with Beyoncé. Not only that, but her debut studio album “Good News” debuted at number-two on the Billboard 200 albums chart, becoming her third top-10 effort after her mixtape “Fever” (2019) and EP “Suga” (2020). Megan has also received acclaim for her confident lyrics and music, with “Wap” and...
Seea tale of two Taylors: Two generations of singer-songwriters could win Grammys for Best Pop Album
One of the front-runners here is definitely rapper and internet sensation Megan Thee Stallion. Megan notched two number-one hits in 2020, including the three-time Grammy-nominated song “Savage” with Beyoncé. Not only that, but her debut studio album “Good News” debuted at number-two on the Billboard 200 albums chart, becoming her third top-10 effort after her mixtape “Fever” (2019) and EP “Suga” (2020). Megan has also received acclaim for her confident lyrics and music, with “Wap” and...
- 1/30/2021
- by Jaime Rodriguez
- Gold Derby
It’s no easy feat to get Sacha Baron Cohen to explain himself. But with his dual roles in “The Trial of Chicago 7” and “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm” making the rounds in awards season, he has no choice but to play the game. “It hate it,” he admitted in a recent phone interview. “It’s fucking horrible.”
However, he insisted that the real motivator was the message he’s been pushing for the past several years — a desire to speak truth to power, rid the world of Trumpism, and save America from itself. “I felt the stakes were higher than any of the movies I’ve done before,” he said. “I really didn’t want anything I’d done to be misconstrued.”
Baron Cohen has been putting his life on the line for over 30 years. When he was 17 years old, he went to a neo-Nazi rally in London. Within a decade,...
However, he insisted that the real motivator was the message he’s been pushing for the past several years — a desire to speak truth to power, rid the world of Trumpism, and save America from itself. “I felt the stakes were higher than any of the movies I’ve done before,” he said. “I really didn’t want anything I’d done to be misconstrued.”
Baron Cohen has been putting his life on the line for over 30 years. When he was 17 years old, he went to a neo-Nazi rally in London. Within a decade,...
- 1/26/2021
- by Eric Kohn
- Indiewire
For half a century now, Martin Scorsese has been one of the greatest filmmakers in the world. From Mean Streets to Taxi Driver to Raging Bull to Goodfellas, Scorsese has been at the helm of some of the greatest movies ever made. The director tends to focus on character over plot, so casting the right actors to play each role is even more crucial in a Scorsese movie than any other.
Related: How Mean Streets Established Scorsese's Style
Scorsese’s long-running collaborations with his two favorite leading men Robert De Niro and Leonardo DiCaprio are renowned, but the director has a deeper bench of recurring actors than that.
Related: How Mean Streets Established Scorsese's Style
Scorsese’s long-running collaborations with his two favorite leading men Robert De Niro and Leonardo DiCaprio are renowned, but the director has a deeper bench of recurring actors than that.
- 12/12/2020
- ScreenRant
Four years ago, Doc NYC was the first major film festival after the election. It was an appropriate time for the country’s largest showcasing of non-fiction cinema, much of which speaks to some of the most pressing issues of our time. That’s true again this year, but the mood is likely to be quite different, and so is the experience as a whole. Like most of the festival circuit this year, Doc NYC is going virtual, which means that people across America can stream all 108 features and 92 shorts over the course of eight packed days.
The lineup encompasses a wide range of subjects, from activism to police brutality and the role of creativity to parse an increasingly complex world. Here are 11 highlights. Browse the full lineup and purchase tickets here. Doc NYC runs November 11-19.
“A La Calle”
Following in the tradition of revolutionary documentaries like “The Square” and “Winter on Fire,...
The lineup encompasses a wide range of subjects, from activism to police brutality and the role of creativity to parse an increasingly complex world. Here are 11 highlights. Browse the full lineup and purchase tickets here. Doc NYC runs November 11-19.
“A La Calle”
Following in the tradition of revolutionary documentaries like “The Square” and “Winter on Fire,...
- 11/10/2020
- by Eric Kohn, Kate Erbland, Chris O'Falt, Tambay Obenson and Jude Dry
- Indiewire
Exclusive: APA has signed Jamal Hill, the writer and director behind the Queen Latifah-produced drama Brotherly Love.
Hill recently directed True To The Game 2, the sequel to the 2017 drama starring Vivica A. Fox, Andra Fuller, Erica Peeples, Niatia “Lil Mama” Kirkland, Iyana Halley, and Jeremy Meeks. The pic is due to hit select theaters on Nov. 6. His past credits include Streets starring Meek Mill and Nafessa Williams, Netflix’s Deuces starring Meagan Good and Larenz Tate, and The Available Wife, starring Kj Smith and acquired by Umc.
Hill, who is set to direct a new Umc series titled Lace, will continue to be managed by Sean Mik’ael Butler of Cultivate Entertainment.
Hill recently directed True To The Game 2, the sequel to the 2017 drama starring Vivica A. Fox, Andra Fuller, Erica Peeples, Niatia “Lil Mama” Kirkland, Iyana Halley, and Jeremy Meeks. The pic is due to hit select theaters on Nov. 6. His past credits include Streets starring Meek Mill and Nafessa Williams, Netflix’s Deuces starring Meagan Good and Larenz Tate, and The Available Wife, starring Kj Smith and acquired by Umc.
Hill, who is set to direct a new Umc series titled Lace, will continue to be managed by Sean Mik’ael Butler of Cultivate Entertainment.
- 10/30/2020
- by Amanda N'Duka
- Deadline Film + TV
Exclusive: In what is expected to be a hot TV package, STXtv is bringing Once Upon a Time in Aztlan, a new TV series anchored by George Lopez, famed photographer Estevan Oriol and iconic Los Angeles-based artist Mister Cartoon aka Mark Machado to the market. Michael Connolly, under his Mad Hatter Entertainment banner, brought the elements together. Lopez is in final talks to star and executive produce through his Travieso Productions, and Javier Rodriguez will pen the pilot. Oriol and Cartoon also will exec produce.
“I’m thrilled to be teaming up with Cartoon, Estevan, Jada and Michael for this series and developing a show with STXtv,” Lopez said. “Cartoon and Estevan are the DaVincis of our community; they have been the street chroniclers of our uniquely Chicano story … our American story. I’m looking forward to working with them and the rest of the team to expand their canvas...
“I’m thrilled to be teaming up with Cartoon, Estevan, Jada and Michael for this series and developing a show with STXtv,” Lopez said. “Cartoon and Estevan are the DaVincis of our community; they have been the street chroniclers of our uniquely Chicano story … our American story. I’m looking forward to working with them and the rest of the team to expand their canvas...
- 7/23/2020
- by Justin Kroll
- Deadline Film + TV
The Streets has teamed up with East London singer-songwriter Hak Baker for a new song, “Falling Down,” set to appear on the British Mc’s upcoming mixtape, None of Us Are Getting Out of This Life Alive, out July 10th via Island Records.
The track opens with a simple beat of skittering percussion and a sweet piano loop, but steadily blossoms into something bigger, filled with steely guitar, synths, and a touch of orchestral strings. The Streets and Baker trade verses about bad days, bad dates, bad vibes, and the...
The track opens with a simple beat of skittering percussion and a sweet piano loop, but steadily blossoms into something bigger, filled with steely guitar, synths, and a touch of orchestral strings. The Streets and Baker trade verses about bad days, bad dates, bad vibes, and the...
- 6/23/2020
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
With late-night performers stuck in quarantine, artists have had to get a little creative with their at-home setups.
Last month on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert, Haim gave their rendition of “I Know Alone” a little pizazz by adding a laser light show to their bedrooms. And, on Monday night, also on Colbert, Kevin Parker of Tame Impala cloned himself for a performance of “Is It True,” from his latest album The Slow Rush.
Really, all Parker did was film himself performing three separate parts to the song, but...
Last month on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert, Haim gave their rendition of “I Know Alone” a little pizazz by adding a laser light show to their bedrooms. And, on Monday night, also on Colbert, Kevin Parker of Tame Impala cloned himself for a performance of “Is It True,” from his latest album The Slow Rush.
Really, all Parker did was film himself performing three separate parts to the song, but...
- 5/12/2020
- by Claire Shaffer
- Rollingstone.com
Fresh off his first song in nine years, the Streets has shared another new track with a title that feels incredibly relevant to the way time no longer seems to function during the Covid-19 crisis, “Where the F* & K Did April Go.”
The track a boasts funky, upbeat groove of skipping drums, wobbly bass and an agile piano loop, and the Streets’ goofy but sharp bars seem to capture the doldrums of life in quarantine, along with a general heavier malaise. He rhymes about obnoxious neighbors, dreams about doctors, escaping...
The track a boasts funky, upbeat groove of skipping drums, wobbly bass and an agile piano loop, and the Streets’ goofy but sharp bars seem to capture the doldrums of life in quarantine, along with a general heavier malaise. He rhymes about obnoxious neighbors, dreams about doctors, escaping...
- 5/8/2020
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
The Streets have returned with “Call My Phone Thinking I’m Doing Nothing Better,” a new track featuring Tame Impala. The song marks the U.K. rap project’s first new music in nine years, following 2011’s Computers and Blues.
The song’s video features the Streets’ Mike Skinner trying to call Tame Impala’s Kevin Parker as a vintage Nokia phone displays “Social Distancing” on its screen. “Callin’ call my phone thinking, I’m doing nothing better,” Skinner sings, sitting on a ski lift. Parker weaves his psychedelic vocals...
The song’s video features the Streets’ Mike Skinner trying to call Tame Impala’s Kevin Parker as a vintage Nokia phone displays “Social Distancing” on its screen. “Callin’ call my phone thinking, I’m doing nothing better,” Skinner sings, sitting on a ski lift. Parker weaves his psychedelic vocals...
- 4/13/2020
- by Angie Martoccio
- Rollingstone.com
For Variety‘s Writers on Writers, Ari Aster pens a tribute to “The Irishman” (written by Steve Zaillian [screenplay] and Charles Brandt [book]). For more, click here.
Steve Zaillian’s remarkably expansive screenplay covers a dizzying amount of territory, providing a wealth of context while never once feeling expository. The information stacks quickly, and continues to mount until we’ve forgotten where we started or how we got here or ultimately why any of it matters. In fact, “The Irishman,” which serves primarily as a confessional (or an anti-confessional), seems strikingly in denial — an insidious, casual, deep-seated denial, at once tragic and utterly banal. It also feels like the final, defeated word on so many of [Martin] Scorsese’s enduring themes and obsessions. If Judas is the figure that seems to have haunted the director more than any other over the course of his unrivaled career, then this feels like something of an...
Steve Zaillian’s remarkably expansive screenplay covers a dizzying amount of territory, providing a wealth of context while never once feeling expository. The information stacks quickly, and continues to mount until we’ve forgotten where we started or how we got here or ultimately why any of it matters. In fact, “The Irishman,” which serves primarily as a confessional (or an anti-confessional), seems strikingly in denial — an insidious, casual, deep-seated denial, at once tragic and utterly banal. It also feels like the final, defeated word on so many of [Martin] Scorsese’s enduring themes and obsessions. If Judas is the figure that seems to have haunted the director more than any other over the course of his unrivaled career, then this feels like something of an...
- 12/19/2019
- by Ari Aster
- Variety Film + TV
When Martin Scorsese is directing a movie on all cylinders — and that, more or less, is the only way he knows how to direct — he can give you a rush you won’t get from any other filmmaker. The camera isn’t just gliding, it’s dancing, as if hypnotized into a trance by the characters it’s staring at. The music on the soundtrack is probably some kind of vintage rock ’n’ roll, but it’s the last song you’d expect to hear at that moment, which is what makes it the perfect song — one that fuses in electric counterpoint with the images, so that we’re not just watching the scene, we’re in the scene. And the actors are doing something that Scorsese invented, and a lot of filmmakers have imitated, but never with his bravura: They’re confronting each other, maybe shouting at each other,...
- 11/14/2019
- by Owen Gleiberman
- Variety Film + TV
Jonathan Demme's death at the age of 73 prompted an outpouring of online memorials from film lovers who remembered the Oscar-winning director for his varied career: everything from the chilling, intelligent thriller The Silence of the Lambs to the brittle 2008 indie drama Rachel Getting Married. But for music fans, those highlights don't even scratch the surface of what cemented his legacy.
It's not hyperbole to say that Demme was arguably the greatest concert filmmaker ever – look at the number of them that he made, the range of artists he chronicled...
It's not hyperbole to say that Demme was arguably the greatest concert filmmaker ever – look at the number of them that he made, the range of artists he chronicled...
- 4/26/2017
- Rollingstone.com
Many of the films at this year’s True/False Film Festival spotlighted men and women who have been pushed to the margins but continue to fight for their voice to be heard. Whether it’s a film about young women in Copenhagen revealing their stories about sex and love (Venus) or the men and women from the city of Ferguson protesting in the streets (Whose Streets?), this year’s selection of films told the stories of those that are often ignored.
Dina Buno is one of those voices that is often ignored by society. Dina is an earnest look at a woman living with disabilities – both mental and physical. She lives with Asperger’s, depression, Ocd, and aspects of Autism (as we later learn while she gets her nails done). But she has also fallen victim to physical trauma that is slowly hinted at throughout the film, until a...
Dina Buno is one of those voices that is often ignored by society. Dina is an earnest look at a woman living with disabilities – both mental and physical. She lives with Asperger’s, depression, Ocd, and aspects of Autism (as we later learn while she gets her nails done). But she has also fallen victim to physical trauma that is slowly hinted at throughout the film, until a...
- 3/12/2017
- by Michael Haffner
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
“You don’t know how we live,” mutters Christine’a Rainey (aka “Ma Quest”). She’s talking at the television, where a then-campaigning Donald Trump is blustering out his “What do you have to lose?” speech. Certainly no one is more deserving of her ire, but there are many people in this country, including those who consider themselves sympathetic to the working poor, who also have no idea how the Rainey family lives.
Enter “Quest,” a sweeping and intimate documentary about the struggles of an average American family. Not that the Raineys are average, but with 14.5 percent of Americans living below the poverty line, they represent a large swath of this country that goes largely unseen. For his debut feature, Jonathan Olshefski spent nine years befriending and filming the Raineys, taking his time to produce a meditative portrait of what everyday life is like for so many people.
Read More: ‘Whose Streets?...
Enter “Quest,” a sweeping and intimate documentary about the struggles of an average American family. Not that the Raineys are average, but with 14.5 percent of Americans living below the poverty line, they represent a large swath of this country that goes largely unseen. For his debut feature, Jonathan Olshefski spent nine years befriending and filming the Raineys, taking his time to produce a meditative portrait of what everyday life is like for so many people.
Read More: ‘Whose Streets?...
- 1/23/2017
- by Jude Dry
- Indiewire
On Nov. 12 of this year, Impact Partners executive director and documentary producer Dan Cogan wrote a powerful call to action on Facebook. “The last 4 days have been a horror. The next 4 years will be worse,” he wrote. “And yet my pulse is quickening, because there is so much to be done, and we, the documentary film community, are in pole position to make a huge difference.”
Over 400 documentary filmmakers, producers and executives “liked” Cogan’s message—including Oscar-nominated directors Barbara Kopple, Matt Heineman, Heidi Ewing, Amy Berg and Lucy Walker—and over 40 individuals added comments.
But despite Cogan’s passionate and inspiring plea, the Facebook post also brought up some soul-searching within the documentary community: How do you make a difference if your work is only seen and discussed within the progressive “bubbles” of social media and urban centers? How do you avoid — as suggested by executives such as Jason Spingarn-Koff,...
Over 400 documentary filmmakers, producers and executives “liked” Cogan’s message—including Oscar-nominated directors Barbara Kopple, Matt Heineman, Heidi Ewing, Amy Berg and Lucy Walker—and over 40 individuals added comments.
But despite Cogan’s passionate and inspiring plea, the Facebook post also brought up some soul-searching within the documentary community: How do you make a difference if your work is only seen and discussed within the progressive “bubbles” of social media and urban centers? How do you avoid — as suggested by executives such as Jason Spingarn-Koff,...
- 12/15/2016
- by Anthony Kaufman
- Indiewire
‘La La Land’ (Courtesy: Lionsgate)
By: Carson Blackwelder
Managing Editor
If you’ve been paying attention to the 2017 Oscars race, you’ve likely heard of a little movie titled La La Land. The Damien Chazelle-directed romantic musical features numerous tunes throughout but Lionsgate is pushing hard for just two — “City of Stars” and “Audition” — in the best original song category. One question remains: does having multiple pieces nominated help or hurt a film? Let’s take a look back at what history seems to indicate.
La La Land — while likely a frontrunner for many categories at the upcoming Academy Awards, even the coveted best picture — we’re going to be focusing on the musical side. Both of the film’s stars, Ryan Gosling (jazz musician Sebastian) and Emma Stone (aspiring actress Mia), lent their vocal chops to these two numbers with him owning most of “City of Stars” and her dominating in “Audition.
By: Carson Blackwelder
Managing Editor
If you’ve been paying attention to the 2017 Oscars race, you’ve likely heard of a little movie titled La La Land. The Damien Chazelle-directed romantic musical features numerous tunes throughout but Lionsgate is pushing hard for just two — “City of Stars” and “Audition” — in the best original song category. One question remains: does having multiple pieces nominated help or hurt a film? Let’s take a look back at what history seems to indicate.
La La Land — while likely a frontrunner for many categories at the upcoming Academy Awards, even the coveted best picture — we’re going to be focusing on the musical side. Both of the film’s stars, Ryan Gosling (jazz musician Sebastian) and Emma Stone (aspiring actress Mia), lent their vocal chops to these two numbers with him owning most of “City of Stars” and her dominating in “Audition.
- 12/9/2016
- by Carson Blackwelder
- Scott Feinberg
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