It was
a documentary about his vision, civil rights and his assassination.
Not exact matches
For the supplemental materials, there's an excerpt from the
documentary Michelangelo Antonioni: The Eye That Changed Cinema; Blow - Up of «Blow - Up», a new
documentary about the film; two interviews with David Hemmings, one on the set of Only When I Larf from 1968, and the other on the TV show City Lights from 1977; 50 Years of Blow - Up: Vanessa Redgrave / Philippe Garner, a 2016 SHOWstudio interview; an interview with actress Jane Birkin from 1989; Antonioni's Hypnotic
Vision, featuring two separate pieces
about the film: Modernism and Photography; both the teaser and theatrical trailers for the film; and a 68 - page insert booklet containing an essay on the film by David Forgacs, an updated 1966 account of the film's shooting by Stig Björkman, a set of questionnaires that the director distributed to photographers and painters while developing the film, the 1959 Julio Cortázar short story on which the film is loosely based, and restoration details.
Like his last film, the under - appreciated and costly The Walk, Robert Zemeckis» The Women Of Marwen is a true story
about an eccentric artistic
vision that's already been told in an acclaimed
documentary — in this case, 2010's Marwencol.
Extras like: Bay On Action — an in - depth interview with Michael Bay
about his
vision and approach to the film's high - octane action sequences; the eight - part making of
documentary, Evolution Within, Extinction and an Angry Birds Transformers trailer «where birds and pigs turn into Autobots and Deceptihogs, creating havoc on Piggy Island» — and that's just for starters.
In the autobiographic
documentary, Dolce Vita Africana, Sidibé speaks candidly
about his personal
vision.