Safety Not Guaranteed, written by Derek Connolly (who won the Sundance
Screenwriting Award as well) and directed by Colin Trevorrow, is about the classified ad placed in a paper looking for someone to «travel back in time with.»
Not exact matches
The Waldo Salt
Screenwriting Award: U.S. Dramatic was presented to: Christina Choe, for her film Nancy (Director & Screenwriter: Christina Choe, Producers: Amy Lo, Michelle Cameron, Andrea Riseborough)-- Blurring lines between fact and fiction, Nancy becomes increasingly convinced she was kidnapped
as a child.
After securing the 2013 Sundance Film Festival's
Screenwriting award, a slot on the National Board of Review's top ten list of indie films, and the vocal support of critical heavy hitters like A.O. Scott, Lake Bell's pitch - perfectly precise comedy In A World... announced itself
as one of the more confident debut features in recent memory, let alone from an actor - turned - director / writer.
The writing is stellar, and, in fact, it won the Waldo Salt
Screenwriting Award here at Sundance
as well.
As we previously reported, Zoey would be performing a live reading of selected scenes from this year's five winning scripts at the 2017 Academy Nicholl Fellowships in
Screenwriting Awards Presentation & Live Read, along with Gugu Mbatha - Raw, Rodrigo Santoro and Vince Vaughn.
In addition, Lonergan won the Waldo Salt
screenwriting award, and Kusama was picked
as best director.
The World Cinema
Screenwriting Award was presented to Young & Wild, co-written by Marialy Rivas, Camila Gutiérrez, Pedro Peirano, Sebastián Sepúlveda — 17 - year - old Daniela, raised in the bosom of a strict Evangelical family and recently unmasked
as a fornicator by her shocked parents, struggles to find her own path to spiritual harmony.
Often touted
as an heir to Tarkovsky, Russian cinema's other famously austere Andrey, Zvyagintsev previously competed at Cannes with «Leviathan» (2014), which won the jury's
screenwriting award and went on to score an Oscar nomination for foreign - language film.
The Women Film Critics Circle has chosen Lady Bird
as the Best Movie About Women of 2017, also rewarding the film with their Best Movie By a Woman and Best Woman Storyteller
screenwriting award.
Eleanor Coppola's feature film directorial and
screenwriting debut at the age of 81 stars Academy
Award nominee Diane Lane
as a Hollywood producer's wife who unexpectedly takes a trip through France, which reawakens her sense of self and her joie de vivre.