Sentences with phrase «art movie by»

Not exact matches

Media Duopoly: For Sarandos and Hastings, strong original programming is the key to global growth, as buzzworthy tv series and movies draw in more subscribers.Photograph by Art Streiber for Fortune
Place seems in its reality transformed, and by the mystery of the movie as an art form.
The Christian who has eyes to see and ears to hear can observe and perceive gospel truths all around them in music, movies, art, and plays, even when those things were created by people who were not Christians.
In The Square, a new movie written and directed by Ruben Östlund, the aspiration is voiced by Christian, the director of X-Royal, a museum of contemporary art in an unnamed Swedish city.
Outrage was typified by the Rev. Charles P. Smith, in Worship and Arts (April - May, 1967), under the headline «Filthy Movie Wins Award from National Council of Churches»:
Regal Premium Experience (RPX) theaters feature a custom - built premium environment featuring elegant and luxurious seats, a giant immersive screen illuminated by high - quality digital projectors and a state - of - the - art sound system movie fans.
While I'm not doing a Broadway boondoggle this fall, the hubby and kids do what we can to take in the ample arts and events in Austin — last week we sat in jaw - dropped amazement at Kooza by Cirque de Soleil and tonight the family is just taking it easy with a movie at home.
This entry was posted in Pen and Cob's Corner and tagged games, arts and crafts, TGIF, movies, family fun, bonding on September 3, 2015 by Swanling Marketing.
Richard Barnbrook, leader of the 11 BNP councillors in the borough of Barking and Dagenham, made a movie at art school which shows naked men frolicking by a river.
Updated at 8:12 p.m. ET on Tuesday 6/4 (CNN)-- Access to top Russian officials by U.S. lawmakers was helped along by action movie star Steven Seagal — and more specifically the actor's martial arts skills - the leader of a congressional delegation said Tuesday.
Speaking at the African University College of Communications on «The Lost Works of Quakes» moderated by a lecturer of the University Nana Achampong, he said that producers have to develop a perfect strategy to make their movies or art works attract higher demand and successful market.
According to him, people mostly produce a song or a movie before they think of a promotional plan but with his experience, it is always to precede the release of an art work by creating awareness and selling it even before it enters the market.
In the movies, he says, these chalkboards are always filled with the most complex, but unrelated equations — Schrödinger's right next to Heisenberg's — probably chosen by an art director.
Crystal and I will be gifting one of you a brand new copy of Choose Joy by Sara Frankl and Mary Carver, a beautiful Hallmark greeting card autographed by Dancing With the Stars own Julianne Hough (yep — seriously), a set of Hallmark Crown Collection Christmas movies (MY FAVORITE), a year long subscription to Relevant Magazine, an art print by Hey Emily Thomas, a pair of Vi Bella earrings, and a few other goodies that might just make their way into the prize pack.
Recapture that feeling by ignoring the typical shopping mall movie date in favor of a night at the Lido Theatre, a restored art - deco gem on Balboa Peninsula that is a slice of pastel - pink, 1930s perfection.
Southern Christian woman who loves the Lord, my family, educating and advocating for the rights of children with special needs, a water baby by way of GA (lol) who loves beaches & wants to learn to surf, loves books, mysteries, whodunits, action movies, animation, aquariums, art, music, singing,...
Very easy going, I enjoy traveling, cooking, music, movies, theater, cultural arts... If I sound like someone you would like to get to know stop by and say hello: --RRB-
Well travelled with a good sense of humour I am looking to meet interesting new contacts with similar interests arts and crafts walking by the sea swimming reading movies
New York's guide to theater, restaurants, bars, movies, shopping, fashion, events, activities, things to do, music, art, books, clubs, tours, dance News from across the five boroughs of New York City by the Times metro staff, including politics, schools, transportation, crime and city life and reader
Celebrating the finest movies offered up by both the multiplex and the art house.
By Reporter New York's guide to theater, restaurants, bars, movies, shopping, fashion, events, activities, things to do, music, art, books, clubs, tours, dance
On a scale of Excellent, Good, Fair, and Poor, Days of Heaven rates: Movie: Excellent Video: Excellent Sound: Excellent Supplements: Commentary with editor Billy Weber, art director Jack Fisk, costume designer Patricia Norris, casting director Dianne Crittenden; audio interview with Richard Gere; video interviews with Haskell Wexler, John Bailey, Sam Shepard; essay by Adrian Martin and a reprinted chapter from Néstor Almendros» autobiography Packaging: Keep case Reviewed: October 23, 2007
There is an art or at least a formula to doling out scares in horror movies and The Witch doesn't abide by it, frustratingly suffering as a result.
Probably more than any other filmmaker, his name evokes instant expectations on the part of audiences: at least two or three great chills (and a few more good ones), some striking black comedy, and an eccentric characterization or two in every one of the director's movies.Originally trained at a technical school, Hitchcock gravitated to movies through art courses and advertising, and by the mid -»20s he was making his first films.
The movie does benefit from some incredibly overblown art direction, made possible by a large amount of CGI.
Now, 36 years later, we have an update of The Haunting, directed by Jan De Bont of Speed and Twister fame, and, as with those two recent movies, all the stops are pulled out to provide a state - of - the - art, slam - bang movie experience.
Bulworth unfolds at an appropriately lively pace and veteran Bertolucci cinematographer Vittorio Storaro gives the movie a gritty - textured elegance, which is nicely complemented by a state - of - the - art soundtrack featuring rap and classical scoring, courtesy of Ennio Morricone.
Insight Edition's The Art of Ghost in the Shell, written by David S. Cohen with a foreword from WETA Workshop's Richard Taylor, goes behind - the - scenes of the how the movie was made.
For every movie featuring an Ellen Ripley, Sarah Connor, Alice or Katniss Everdeen, Asian film industries managed to produce several dozen more entertaining, hard - hitting action flicks featuring strong female characters portrayed by butt - kicking heroines, many of them real - life martial arts champions or physically gifted dancers or performers.
If it were up to us, graphic - novel legend Daniel Clowes (Ghost World, Art School Confidential) would have inspired at least a dozen movies by now — we're still waiting for our standalone Chicago feature.
Like a W magazine photo spread conceived by Baudelaire and art - directed in electric colours by giallo maestro Dario Argento, the opening of The Neon Demon offers a foretaste of the plasticated grand guignolerie that by the end of Nicholas Winding Refn's meretricious psychological horror movie has yielded both a feast and a bloodbath — in the precise senses of those words.
This movie's premise could easily have lent itself to schlock: Saoirse Ronan is a super-assassin who has been trained to kill by her «father» (Eric Bana) but has never learned about music or art or love, or the joy of painting your toenails.
«Outrage» (1950): Introducing this little - known drama, directed by Ida Lupino, about a woman's harassment and subsequent rape, Museum of Modern Art curator Anne Morra said the movie «speaks to MeToo issues 70 years ahead of its time.»
While many were perceived as contenders before the announcement, a handful of new titles appeared on today's list including Napping Princess and Sword Art Online: The Movie — Ordinal Scale while other titles, like Lu Over the Wall and Nutjob 2: Nutty By Nature were not.
Billing itself as «Television Chocolate» in a deep - voiced Oompa - Loompa's introduction, this presentation uses picture - in - picture to excerpt bonus material and showcase concept art plus pop - up graphics to display scene - specific fun facts and jokes (punctuated by obnoxious sounds) while the movie is playing.
John Wick: Chapter 2 La La Land A Brave Heart: The Lizzie Velasquez Story A Most Violent Year Adult Beginners Adventures of Power Afternoon Delight Alex of Venice All The Light In The Sky Amy Animal Kingdom Attenberg Avengers: Age of Ultron Bad Turn Worse Beats Rhymes & Life: The Travels of a Tribe Called Quest Bellflower Big Game Birdman Black Blue Ruin Blue Valentine Bones Brigade: An Autobiography Boyhood Brick Mansions Butter C.O.G. Ceremony Charlie Countryman Child of God Cop Car CXL Dark Places Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes Deadfall Don Jon Don't Think Twice Drive Dumb and Dumber To Embers Escape from Tomorrow Foxcatcher Frank Miller's Sin City: A Dame to Kill For Fubar: Balls to the Wall Fury Godzilla Going the Distance Gone Girl Grey Gardens Gridlocked Guardians of the Galaxy Holy Motors Holy Rollers Hungry Hearts Hunt for the Wilderpeople I Am Chris Farley Imperial Dreams In the Blood Inherent Vice Inside Out Iris Jack Goes Boating Jackass 3 Jersey Boys Joan Rivers: A Piece Of Work Joe Jurassic World Just Jim Kaboom Kill the Irishman Klovn: The Movie (Klown) Let Me In Liberal Arts Life Itself Live Die Repeat: Edge of Tomorrow Lola Versus Louder Than a Bomb Lucy LUV Mad Max: Fury Road Maggie Man of Steel Maps to the Stars Melancholia Men, Women, & Children Miami Connection Middle of Nowhere My Life Directed by Nicolas Winding Refn Nature Calls Nightcrawler Nighthawks Oddsac One & Two Only God Forgives Peep World Pincus Pricecheck Prince Avalanche Rabbit Hole Raze Robot & Frank Rosewater Rubber Rudderless San Andreas Save the Date Scream 4 Sleepwalk With Me Smashed Snowpiercer Somewhere Southpaw Spring Breakers Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens Submarine Sun Don't Shine Take Shelter Take This Waltz Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Terminator Genisys The Amazing Spider - Man The Bastard Sings The Sweetest Song The Cold Lands The Comedy The Equalizer The Expendables 3 The Fault in Our Stars The Gambler The Girl The Girlfriend Experience The Grand Budapest Hotel The Hateful Eight The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 1 The Kids Are All Right The Kings of Summer The One I Love The Raid The Rambler The Revenant The Rover The Second Mother (Que Horas Ela Volta?)
by Fillum Critick on Movie Review: Deadpool Is Spider - Man But With Nudity, Gore and No Fourth Wall (Arts)
This has all of the typical Guillermo del Toro touches, with gorgeously lavish dark, dingy sets, a wonderful score by Alexandre Desplat, an immense love for the art of cinema (she lives above a movie theater), not to mention a scaly fish creature (played of course by Doug Jones) who doesn't have any lines but does say plenty in his actions.»
By the same token, if you're someone who always prefers to show up in a jabbering throng at your local megaplex for tentpole movies on their first day — especially in IMAX — instead of arriving full of hope at small art houses, this list isn't for you, either.
Working Paper Series # 1: Michael A. Genovese, Art and Politics: The Political Film as a Pedagogical Tool # 2: Donald B. Morlan, Pre-World War II Propaganda: Film as Controversy # 3: Ernest D. Giglio, From Riefenstahl to the Three Stooges: Defining the Political Film # 4: John W. Williams, The Real Oliver North Loses: The Reel Bob Robert Wins # 5: Robert L. Savage, Popular Film and Popular Communication # 6: Andrew Aoki, «Chan Is Missing:» Liberalism and the Blending of a Kaleidoscopic Culture # 7: Barbara Allen, Using Film and Television in the Classroom to Explore the Nexus of Sexual and Political Violence # 8: Robert S. Robins & Jerrold M. Post, Political Paranoia as Cinematic Motif: Stone's «JFK» # 9: Richard A. Brisbin, Jr., From State and Local Censorship to Ratings: Substantitive Rationality, Political Entrepreneurship, and Sex in the Movies # 10: Stefanie L. Martin, Fiction and Independent Films: Creating Viable Communities and Coalitions by Reappropriating History # 11: Peter J. Haas, A Typology of Political Film # 12: Phillip L. Gianos, The Cold War in U.S. Films: Representing the Political Other # 13: Michael A. Genovese, The President as Icon & Straw Man: Hollywood & the Presidential Image # 14: Michael Krukones, Hollywood's Portrayal of the American President in the 1930s: A Strong and Revered Leader # 15.
There's also a sketch gallery of Hesher's tattoos and other movie art, plus around two minutes of outdoor footage being ruined by the sounds of airplanes passing overheard.
OPENING THIS WEEK Kam's Kapsules: Weekly Previews That Make Choosing a Film Fun by Kam Williams For movies opening April 10, 2009 BIG BUDGET FILMS Dragonball Evolution (PG for intense action and brief adult language) Sci - fi martial arts adventure, based on the Akira Toriyama novel about a young warrior (Justin Chatwin) who, with a handful of friends, sets out on a quest to save the planet from an evil king (James Marsters) bent on world domination.
A special award went to Adrienne Mancia, who, as a curator at New York's Museum of Modern Art for more than 30 years, «helped shape the movie - going tastes of New Yorkers by bringing the work of filmmakers like Bernardo Bertolucci, Manoel De Oliveira and Marco Bellocchio to the United States.»
The 52 page book: Forward by Abel Ferrara Essays by Nick Pinkerton, Michael Chaiken, and Sean Price Williams Photography by Eleonore Hendricks «The Story of the movie Hellaware and the Fake Horrorcore Band That Went Viral» by Michael M. Bilandic Original art by Mike Diana
An intriguing look into an art increasingly dominated by the digital domain, we see a more hands on, bespoke effort that matches the tone of the movie perfectly.
I'm disturbed by a recent trend of art movies not getting Blu - ray releases.
The striking new cover art by Devon Whitehead depicts all your favorite characters from the film in a retro - tastic bloody homage to one of my all time favorite genre movies.
Full disclosure — though I love being a citizen of the United States, I despise tribal identification, and have never enjoyed books, movies, music, art, etc., that ask me to sympathize with a story just by virtue of being a member of the tribe being depicted.
Brother Joel responded to one Taiwanese journalist unhappy that the critically favored Hou Hsiao - Hsien martial arts picture «The Assassin» didn't win the Palme by saying he thought it was «a great movie, beautifully directed movie
John L. Sullivan, played by Joel McCrea, is a successful Hollywood comedy director — but he wants to create serious art, in the form of a movie called O Brother, Where Art Thou, and as research, he leaves all his money behind and, disguised as a hobo, goes out to live among «real people.&raqart, in the form of a movie called O Brother, Where Art Thou, and as research, he leaves all his money behind and, disguised as a hobo, goes out to live among «real people.&raqArt Thou, and as research, he leaves all his money behind and, disguised as a hobo, goes out to live among «real people.»
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