Sentences with phrase «documentary feel for»

Nice Vanity Fair piece about the cinematography of the nominated films: The Hurt Locker «Äôs director of photography, Barry Ackroyd, uses Super-16 cameras to create a raw, documentary feel for his sun - drenched canvas in Kathryn...

Not exact matches

He spoke of the prestige of science in our culture and the corresponding lack of respect for religion («If it's a science programme it's a documentary, if the subject's politics there's a debate, but a religious programme, unless it's hymns for granny, will have people talking about their feelings»).
I felt for her when watching the documentary, she clearly had problems.
I really tuned in to learn about Sam Darnold's Mom I hope ESPN does one of there 30 for 30 documentaries on her so I can learn more about her career as a Middle school PE teacher I learned Darnold is a combination of Russell Wilson, Abraham Lincoln, Carrot top, and and the Messiah Oh and he is really competitive on the field and cool California on the sidelines I really felt bad for U$ C missing their top receiver and running back and had to suffer with a 5 star top whatever replacement while we were out our top playmaker and running back and at RB we have a walk - on who just got a scholy
His desire to win Madrid their 10th title — «La Decima» — would be another achievement for Mourinho and in a recent ITV documentary he felt he would always be incomplete without doing so.
To get Peres to agree to such a personal interview is undoubtedly a scoop for the makers of the documentary, but Peres is a skilled politician, and you get the feeling that he's the type of politician who can never quite switch off.
Watching the Vice documentary this morning I felt quite sorry for Corbyn's team, many of whom have clearly tried desperately hard to turn him into an effective opposition leader.
In a new documentary, filmmaker Lexi Marsh ponders how beards can act as a «membership card» into the scientific club, allowing men to bypass the many issues female paleontologists face daily, from fighting for recognition to feeling responsible for «representing» their gender.
Hi Dr Greger, I have been following your nutritional advice for the past year or so and I feel healthy, however I have just watched a documentary called «Cereal Killers» https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dON-fPp5Hy0
Habits app for iOS Sunwarrior < == 10 % off all Sunwarrior products (free shipping over $ 100) Joy McCarthy's website (Joyous Health) Joy McCarthy — Joyous Health (book) * Joy McCarthy — Feel Joyous, Look Great After Pregnancy (and beyond)(ebook) Joy McCarthy — Eat Well (online classes)-- no longer available Joy's previous TUHP interview (# 12) Leanne Phillipson - webb — Sprout Right (book) Patrick Halford — Optimum Nutrition Before, During and After Pregnancy (book) Pam England & Rob Horowitz — Birthing from Within (book) Toronto Yoga Mamas Birth As We Know It (documentary) Toronto Birth Centre Marni's Superfood Power Ball recipe
Your Root Cause book and the Thyroid Secret documentary have given me new hope after ten years of being told that not feeling good would be the new normal for me.
This occurs outside the piano lesson Samuel has insisted she take (though she has declared her preference for swimming, in effect, present bodyguard over absent dad), which underlines Creasy's dad function, and also, as Scott notes, shows the character's thinking, by way of a stunning visual composition: «It feels like part documentary, part grabbed real footage, and part opera.
Similarly, the idea of a potential rebirth sees Noxon leave the almost documentary - like reality of the rest of the film behind for a moment, but this major tonal shift would've felt more organic and tethered to Ellen's whole journey if it had been more clearly foreshadowed.
Working again in his native Baltimore, the writer - director maintains the documentary - style feel for place that has infused all his features.
Excellent movie quality casting for what felt like a historical documentary.
For those who regularly find themselves feeling ashamed and useless after wasting much of the day Wiki - surfing or browsing random Yelp reviews, the actual subject of the documentary Web Junkie will come as a huge relief.
Broken into nine chapters — one for each year — the documentary isn't a rigorous work but a felt piece of vital, if flawed, art.
Told in a TV - friendly 1:78:1 format and now a winner of a Teddy Award for best documentary, you also can't help but feel this Swedish - US co-production will reach a wide audience on TV in the not so distant future.
Doglegs is more challenging than a feel - good documentary like Murderball; the motivations of its protagonists are often difficult to understand — BDSM is frequently invoked as a justification for able - bodied heel «Antithesis» Kitajima's taunting of disabled face «Sambo» Shintaro — and some of the wrestling scenes are uncomfortable to watch.
Normally this kind of documentary manipulation would raise flags for some, but given Panahi's current predicament and subsequent longing for the medium (and additionally the film's unmanufactured feeling), it comes off as an intensely personal, resonant rebellion, an incredibly beautiful movie and one of his best films to date (read our review).
From the trailer, blurb and making - of documentary you get the feeling that this was supposed to be a huge step forward for feminism, or at the very least some kind of female version of American Pie.
Borrowing its title from Disney World's planning - stage moniker and not the focal motel which resembles a kitschy housing project on the outskirts of the Magic Kingdom, Sean Baker's The Florida Project is aptly named for another reason: with its largely non-pro, local, and grade school — age cast, it invariably feels like a documentary on its own making.
All we can do is go with what we've got, and while acknowledging and saluting and admiring these men and what they did on that train, the story as told here feels more suited for a hourlong documentary than a feature film.
For a film which features the word «irony» so prominently, it's suitably ironic that Reality Bites features a documentary given the commercial television treatment, as the movie as a whole has an underlying compelling story that feels like it has been drained of all uniqueness by the corporate interests handling the film.
That's the surface message of «A Lego Brickumentary,» a new film that feels more like a promotional piece for the celebrated building blocks than a documentary.
Of the other films I saw, the only real enthusiasm I felt was for the Inarritu's «Biutiful,» Bertrand Tavernier «The Princess of Montpensier,» the first Chad feature «A Screaming Man,» the South Korean «Poetry» and the out - of competition documentary «Inside Job.»
«Batkid Begins» June 26 This feel - good documentary tells the story of a five - year - old leukemia patient who inspired people from all over the world to help him live out his dream of being Batman for a day.
And seven or eight documentaries that play in the Backlot, TFF's smallest venue, devoted to movies about movies and biographies of artists, including one I feel somewhat responsible for, Volker Schlondorff's 1977 «Portrait of Valeska Gert,» the Weimar era dancer and cabaret star, which I saw in Bologna at Il Cinema Ritrovato in 2016 and raved about.
It's also close in feel to Brett Morgen's 30 for 30 documentary on OJ Simpson's famous Bronco chase, and, like that film, Berg slowly pieces together the action of the day — a minute's silence for the Newtown massacre's victims, the Red Sox's home game — to give a sense of a calm before the chaos.
Dusan Makavejev's Love Affair, or The Case of the Missing Switchboard Operator, combined boundary - pushing (for the time) nudity and sexuality with a collage - like style mixing documentary and drama, politics and romance, tragedy and playfulness in a way that still feels innovative.
As the 1980s began she felt increasingly on the margins of the film industry, although she later co-wrote the script for Claire Denis's coming - of - age film set in 60s France, US Go Home (1994), and also directed a number of well - regarded television documentaries, such as Les Anges 1943, Histoire d'un Film (2004), on Bresson's Les Anges du Péché.
With big wins for I Don't Feel At Home In This World Anymore, Beach Rats, Crown Heights, the documentary Chasing Coral, Roxanne Roxanne's Chante Adams, The Niles Hilton Incident and Last Men In Aleppo, the 2017 Sundance Film Festival handed out its awards tonight.
Last year's rap drama «Patti Cake $,» bought by Searchlight for $ 9.5 million, earned just $ 800,000 domestically ($ 1.5 million worldwide), while the feel - good documentary «Step» has grossed $ 1.1 million after a $ 4 million purchase last January.
Grand Jury Award: Carlos Puga, All That I Am Best Feature: Denis Henry Hennely, Goodbye World Best Documentary: Lucy Walker, The Crash Reel Best Animation: Eoin Duffy, The Missing Scarf Best Short Comedy: Michael Neithard, Alive feeling like a buck seventy five Best Short Drama: Michael Tyburski, Palimpsest Audience Choice — Documentary: Sean and Andrea Fine, Life According to Sam Audience Choice — Feature: Brant Sersen, SANATORIUM NH Feature of the Year: David Gordon Greene, Prince Avalanche NH Short Film of the Year: Sophia Savage, Empyrean Best NH Documentary: Todd Kwait, Tom Rush: No Regrets Best NH Performance: Morganna Ekkens for Only Daughter New Hampshire Film of the Year: Aaron Wiederspahn, Only Daughter Van McLeod Award: Lisa Muskat
For successfully employing multiple aspect ratios, cast comprised mostly of non-actors, documentary feel and extended takes, a film like Krisha would deserve acclaim for its technical aspects aloFor successfully employing multiple aspect ratios, cast comprised mostly of non-actors, documentary feel and extended takes, a film like Krisha would deserve acclaim for its technical aspects alofor its technical aspects alone.
What's especially interesting here is that, due to the extremely tight schedule, Yates decided to use even the scenes with Mitchum's less - than - perfect deliveries, which ultimately gave the film an obvious rawness and imperfection that accentuated the desired feel of authenticity and gritty, unpolished documentary - style filmmaking that Yates and the crew were going for.
Some lengthy making - of documentary material hands out the occasional insight, but it's aggressively edited and feels less like an earnest peak into game development and much more like a marketing material for a game you've already purchased.
As for the short film that occupies the latter 50 minutes or so, it's a tale of corporate intrigue featuring unknown but game actors, playing out a sexual blackmail that feels more the lark for the context provided by the attendant documentary.
Let me say right off the bat, I was disappointed by the film's video quality; the 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen image appears to have been derived from a PAL source, lending the picture a BBC feel that it does not have when excerpted for the documentary segment on the companion disc.
Femmes Vitales All This Panic (Jenny Gage, 2016) Around the 18 minute mark of this unprecedentedly intimate yet expansive documentary, a teen girl expresses her lustful feelings for some dude who has rejected her advances.
Topics discussed include Brolin's goatee continuity, the challenges of recreating such a recent period, the time it took to get the movie going, the films researched for look and feel (Body Heat for sweat, Stand by Me for nostalgia, Terrence Malick movies for editing), shooting things quickly documentary - style, and bits that were lost (including a Budweiser print ad meticulously recreated
While I have a feeling that the movie is about as much of documentary as The Blair Witch Project, the film still makes for an interesting and even thought - provoking experience.
The Kingdom of Dreams and Madness feels scattered and random, and its nearly two - hour running time — long for a documentary — makes it seem even more so.
In many ways, the final quarter seems to be both a misstep and an essential part of the documentary (for this reason I feel like I'm underrating it), a sort of other side to the other side.
While it's easy to accept the loss of any one of these features and it's tough to feel the need for extras beyond the over two - hour documentary included here, it is still frustrating for all this bonus material to get cut.
«We expect the film to stay alive in theaters for a while because it's that rare documentary where audiences feel better leaving the theater than they do going in.»
The horror and ultimate pathos audiences felt for Kong in the original 1933 production of King Kong still resonates in Max Steiner's ground - breaking score, and the composer gets some decent attention in the length making - of documentary on Warner Bros.» 2 - disc edition of King Kong, which arrived just in time for Christmas.
But while loads of folks really loved the movie, making it a relatively successful documentary while in theaters, I unfortunately found it to be nothing more than an overly long and tedious documentary that made me feel a tinge of guilt for not fully appreciating its apparent significance.
It felt strange not voting for The Look of Silence, Joshua Oppenheimer's searing companion piece to my favorite documentary of 2013, The Act of Killing, but I loved Amy so much that it just didn't feel right not putting it at the top.
Every so often a special documentary comes along that inspires us and warms out hearts leaving us with a feeling that our spirits have been lifted for having seen it.
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