Sentences with phrase «features commentary about»

This audio guide features commentary about selected works in the exhibition Stuart Davis: In Full Swing, especially for kids.
Check out SciAm.com for the latest science news, including our blog, which this week features my commentary about an interpretation of Darwinian evolution from Howard Stern.

Not exact matches

Along with it's commentary about the actual Silicon Valley, the series features some of culture's most subversive and innovative comics and and improv actors including TJ Miller, Martin Starr, and Kumail Nanjiani.
The past few years have brought in bumper crops of B + horror from around the world: fun, unnecessarily thoughtful, poignant, often featuring implicit social commentary, about 90 minutes long and available for streaming.
Ionic Silver Hydrosols and Colloids: Colloidal Silver 101, Basic Information on the benefits and use of silver - This section features important articles and commentaries that provide basic and important general information about antimicrobial silver hydrosols for use in medicine, especially for those who are just beginning research.
Blog will feature both scholarly commentary on current events as well as pieces about new and recently published scholarship.
New York, London, Milan, Paris About Blog Bryanboy is a fashion, style and travel blog featuring photos and commentary by fashion blogger Bryan.
Plano, Texas About Blog The NBRI Survey Research Blog features insights, commentary, news, and tips written weekly by Ph.Ds & expert survey research consultants.
Pasadena, CA About Blog News, features, reviews and commentary on the world's most popular theme and amusement parks.
Tokyo, Japan About Blog Latest news and features from Japan: business, politics, commentary culture, life & style, entertainment and sports Frequency about 168 posts per week Website japantimes.co.jp + Follow Facebook fans - 638About Blog Latest news and features from Japan: business, politics, commentary culture, life & style, entertainment and sports Frequency about 168 posts per week Website japantimes.co.jp + Follow Facebook fans - 638about 168 posts per week Website japantimes.co.jp + Follow Facebook fans - 638,930.
Blog will feature both scholarly commentary on current events as well as pieces about new and recently published scholarship.
I've written 4,000 blog posts featuring leading - edge insight and commentary on all aspects of the business of online dating, ranging from industry news, site reviews, emerging trends, analysis of dating site features, discussion about safety, finance and other high - impact issues facing the online dating industry.
About Blog NekoPOP features reviews, interviews, and commentary for J - Pop, idols, dance, and other cool things from Japanese pop culture.
Additional special features include audio commentary with Ben Affleck and writer Chris Terrio, interviews with the key players in the 1979 Iran hostage crisis including President Jimmy Carter, former CIA agent Tony Mendez, and the houseguests, a featurette on recreating the era for film, a peek inside the Canadian government, a bit about how Istanbul was chosen for shooting the film, and a look back at how the CIA made Hollywood believe in a fictional film.
The final bonus feature is an audio commentary by film historians Travis Crawford and Bill Ackerman, who prepared a discussion that covers the movie from its origin to its release, with plenty of information about Marvin, Mifune, Boorman, and others.
The Visual Commentary combines just about every single behind - the - scenes feature and puts it in the movie so you can watch it in place.
The feature is equal parts thriller and social commentary about an unfeeling and uncaring health system.
The highlight of the Producers Cut extras for me is the highly informative feature commentary with Howarth and Farrands, who answers just about every question I've ever had about this movie.
Feature Commentary with Director Craig Gillespie: An intriguing and informative commentary in which the director gives you lots of interesting background info about the making ofCommentary with Director Craig Gillespie: An intriguing and informative commentary in which the director gives you lots of interesting background info about the making ofcommentary in which the director gives you lots of interesting background info about the making of the film.
Everything you'd want to know about one of Fincher's movies can be learned in one of his commentary tracks, which are usually joined by other excellent and informative bonus features, including a highly reccomended Panic Room commentary featuring screenwriter William Goldman.
Director Michael Lembeck pretends in his feature - length yakker that he's made a pseudo-documentary about Santa Claus — a joke that would probably go over better if any child anywhere had ever expressed interested in listening to a commentary track (though I'm sure W.D. Richter will get something out of it).
If you're wanting to watch the trailers and also learn more about the films there's a lovely audio commentary that goes with the trailers featuring Kim Newman and David Flint.
Also on board is an audio commentary from» 09 — Disney, alas, has dropped the picture - in - picture option that made this a full - blown «Cine - Explore feature» on the PE — teaming Leonard Maltin with Disney animator («and unashamed animation geek») Eric Goldberg and film historian J.B. Kaufman, who at the time was writing a book about the making of Pinocchio that finally got published in 2015.
It's about as mediocre as a studio can get these days, featuring just enough deleted scenes (seven, to be exact), two production featurettes (the making - of featurette «Plebe Year» and the boxing extra «The Brigade»), as well as a filmmaker commentary with director Justin Lin and writer Dave Collard.
Aside from a THX Optimizer test, the first disc features a commentary track from director Bigelow that begins promisingly enough with a tidbit about the six - month growing process of a stunt mosquito to insure its lack of contaminants but quickly devolves into long silences, plot regurgitation, and a mock - philosophical musing on the film.
The commentariesfeaturing 1) director Darren Lynn Bousman and J LaRose, 2) stars Tobin Bell and Shawnee Smith, and 3) writer Leigh Whannell — are easily the best part of the two - disc set, but that's about where the fun ends.
This Blu - ray ports over most of the bonus features found on previous discs, including the original 19 - minute making - of featurette from the DVD and a commentary track with Lee and writer / producer James Schamus, who does a good job of leading his counterpart through a conversation about the film.
An audio commentary ported over from the 1998 DVD release features Soderbergh and Neil LaBute talking about the film some of the time and everything else the rest of the time.
A trailer for The Girl Next Door (despite the parenthetical «diRRRty,» it's not exactly redband material), a reel promoting Cheaper by the Dozen, Stuck on You, and Welcome to Mooseport, and spots for the Broken Lizard's Club Dread and There's Something About Mary DVDs round out side B. Side A features not only the aforementioned Greenfield commentary, but also a riotously informative trivia track (did you know that it takes two tablespoons of blood to erect a penis?
Features commentary by film scholar Dana Polan, a new interview with Gloria Grahame biographer Vincent Curcio, a 20 - minute piece with filmmaker Curtis Hanson produced for the 2002 DVD release, a condensed version of the 1975 documentary I'm a Stranger Here Myself (this runs about 40 minutes), and the radio adaptation of the original novel produced for «Suspense» in 1948, plus a fold - out booklet with an essay by Imogen Sara Smith.
The feature - length commentary is a group effort from second - unit director Terry Sanders, the critic F.X. Feeney, archivist Robert Gitt, who saved the movie's rushes, and historian Preston Neal Jones, who wrote a book about the production.
The game's Creative Director, Neill Glancy, provides some commentary about the rooms and areas that are featured.
Extras: Audio commentary from 1994 featuring Demme, Foster and Hopkins, screenwriter Ted Tally, and former FBI agent John Douglas; new interview with critic Maitland McDonagh; thirty - five minutes of deleted scenes; interview from 2005 with Demme and Foster; «Inside the Labyrinth,» a 2001 documentary; «Page to Screen,» a 2002 program about the adaptation; «Scoring The Silence,» a 2004 interview program featuring composer Howard Shore; «Understanding the Madness,» a 2008 program featuring interviews with retired FBI special agents; behind - the - scenes featurette; trailer; an essay by critic Amy Taubin along with, in the Blu - ray edition, a new introduction by Foster; an account of the origins of the character Hannibal Lecter by author Thomas Harris; and a 1991 interview with Demme.
Extras: «Night of Anubis,» a never - before - presented work - print edit of the film; new program featuring filmmakers Frank Darabont, Guillermo del Toro, and Robert Rodriguez; never - before - seen 16 mm dailies reel; new piece featuring Russo about the commercial and industrial - film production company where key «Night of the Living Dead» filmmakers got their start; audio commentaries from 1994, featuring Romero, Russo, producer Karl Hardman, actor Judith O'Dea, and more; archival interviews with Romero and actors Duane Jones and Judith Ridley; new programs about the editing, the score, and directing ghouls; new interviews with Gary R. Streiner and Russel W. Streiner; trailer, radio spots, and TV spots; an essay by critic Stuart Klawans.
Extras: Two optional English narrations, including one by actor Roy Scheider; audio commentary from 2008 featuring Schrader and producer Alan Poul; interviews from 2007 and 2008 with Bailey, producers Tom Luddy and Mata Yamamoto, composer Philip Glass, and production designer Eiko Ishioka; interviews from 2008 with Mishima biographer John Nathan and friend Donald Richie; audio interview from 2008 with co-screenwriter Chieko Schrader; interview excerpt from 1966 featuring Mishima talking about writing; «The Strange Case of Yukio Mishima,» a 55 - minute documentary from 1985 about the author; trailer; a booklet featuring an essay by critic Kevin Jackson, a piece on the film's censorship in Japan, and photographs of Ishioka's sets.
Director Lisa Cholodenko talks extensively about her collaboration with Memento's «guyish, techie» cinematographer Wally Pfister on the film in a supplemental 21 - minute interview that tidily sums up her also - included feature - length commentary.
Other highlights in this section include: the European Premiere of Choi Dong - hoon's colourful period bullet opera, ASSASSINATION; the European Premiere of Daniel Junge's thrill - a-minute BEING EVEL about the legendary daredevil Robert Craig «Evel» Knievel; the European Premiere of David Farr's crafty and suspenseful study in paranoia, THE ONES BELOW starring David Morrissey and Clémence Poésy; Atom Egoyan's latest drama REMEMBER, offering a provocative study of the nature of evil as well as serving as a stark reminder of the atrocities of 20th century history, starring Christopher Plummer and Martin Landau; Gabriel Clarke and John McKenna's gripping documentary STEVE MCQUEEN: THE MAN & LE MANS, featuring unseen archive footage, contemporary interviews and previously unheard commentary from McQueen himself; Stephen Fingleton's thrilling, post-apocalyptic debut THE SURVIVALIST; Sebastian Schipper's exhilarating one - shot sensation, VICTORIA; and THE WAVE, Roar Uthaug's high - octane and nerve - shredding portrayal of a potential catastrophe.
Extras: New audio commentary featuring critic Tony Rayns; new video essay on the film's symbols and references, featuring scholar James Steffen; new interview with Steffen detailing the production of the film; «Sergei Parajanov: The Rebel,» a 2003 documentary about the filmmaker, featuring him and actor Sofiko Chiaureli; «The Life of Sayat - Nova,» a 1977 documentary about the Armenian poet who inspired «The Color of Pomegranates»; an essay by film scholar Ian Christie.
The Dolby Surround soundmix is sharp and workmanlike — like the movie that it decorates, nothing remarkable, nothing jarring — while a feature - length commentary provided by Hackford and screenwriter Thomas Rickman is difficult to sit through, not for the fact of any dead spots (there aren't any), but for the way that Hackford likes to talk about how race was an issue in the Old South as though everyone else is an idiot.
Special Features: • Brand new 2K transfer from the original camera negative • High Definition Blu - ray (1080p) and Standard Definition DVD presentations • Optional English SDH subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing • Audio commentary with co-writer and producer Mardi Rustam, make - up artist Craig Reardon and stars Roberta Collins, William Finley and Kyle Richards • New introduction to the film by director Tobe Hooper • Brand new interview with Hooper • My Name is Buck: Star Robert Englund discusses his acting career • The Butcher of Elmendorf: The Legend of Joe Ball — The story of the South Texas bar owner on whom Eaten Alive is loosely based • 5ive Minutes with Marilyn Burns — The star of The Texas Chain Saw Massacre talks about working on Eaten Alive • The Gator Creator: archival interview with Hooper • Original theatrical trailers for the film under its various titles Eaten Alive, Death Trap, Starlight Slaughter and Horror Hotel • US TV and Radio Spots • Alternate credits sequence • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Gary Pullin • Collector's booklet featuring new writing on the film, illustrated with original archive stills and posters
Director Chris Koch and actors Jason Lee, Julia Stiles, Selma Blair, and Thomas Lennon fight for oxygen in a feature - length commentary that's good as far as excuses to reunite go, although its appeal is limited in the way of someone reminiscing about a party you didn't attend.
Some but not all of the extras are ported over from that 2005 platter — the disc, for instance, drops director Chris Wedge's commentary but retains the group yakker, which seems to feature just about every member of the Blue Sky team except Wedge.
HONORABLE MENTIONS: ANIMATION «Kubo and the Two Strings» — Laika's most daring, innovative film yet «My Life as a Zucchini» — About little kids but not for little kids; a bold, 70 - minute feature from Switzerland «Sing» — Delightful and triumphant, with terrific voice performances and song renditions «Trolls» — I can't stop the positive feelings I've had about this DreamWorks musical since I saw it 3 months ago «Zootopia» — Disney's live - action crime drama / social commentary disguised in animated form has one of the year's best screenAbout little kids but not for little kids; a bold, 70 - minute feature from Switzerland «Sing» — Delightful and triumphant, with terrific voice performances and song renditions «Trolls» — I can't stop the positive feelings I've had about this DreamWorks musical since I saw it 3 months ago «Zootopia» — Disney's live - action crime drama / social commentary disguised in animated form has one of the year's best screenabout this DreamWorks musical since I saw it 3 months ago «Zootopia» — Disney's live - action crime drama / social commentary disguised in animated form has one of the year's best screenplays
A sticker on the cover touts «over 2 hours of high octane special features» and it's closer to about seven hours if you're counting audio commentaries.
The Signs DVD features about five minutes of deleted scenes (no more spooky alien critters, alas), a lengthy making - of documentary with commentaries, and another stellar film from Night's youth — wherein a robot wearing a Halloween mask slowly chases Night through his living room.
Japanese cinema expert Donald Richie also offers insightful audio commentary, and Kurosawa's comments about the difficulties of making this film are noted in a booklet that also features the stories that inspired him to make «Rashomon.»
The audio commentary is well worth spending time listening to and features the writer - director John De Bello covering various aspects about the film and the other Tomato's pictures and cartoon series.
An older title brought back into circulation is All Day's expanded DVD release of Ganja and Hess (1983), which features an overly appreciative commentary with the director, co-star, cinematographer, and the film's composer, Sam Waymon, bubbling about a seminal work by independent black filmmakers that's either a lost masterpiece, or an indulgent, narrative mess to some.
Included is an excellent new audio commentary by the always informative film historian / author Troy Howarth; an additional audio commentary by director Peter Duffell and author Jonathan Rigsby; a new 10 - minute interview with second assistant director Mike Higgins; A-Rated Horror Film, a 17 - minute vintage featurette about the film featuring interviews with director Peter Duffell and actors Geoffrey Bayldon, Ingrid Pitt, and Chloe Franks; the English and Spanish theatrical trailers for the film, both in HD; 4 radio spots; an animated image gallery with 68 stills containing on - set photos, promotional materials, and advertisements; and a collection of Amicus radio spots and still galleries for Asylum, At the Earth's Core, From Beyond the Grave, Madhouse, Scream and Scream Again, Tales from the Crypt, The Beast Must Die, The Land That Time Forgot, The Mind of Mr. Soames, The People That Time Forgot, and Vault of Horror.
With extras listed over four pages, Evan Almighty would appear to be extremely stacked in the bonus features department, but it all adds up to about 75 minutes of content, or less than what a commentary would run, had we not been gratefully spared that.
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