Not exact matches
But it's Double Indemnity that gets name - checked most explicitly: The surname of the cheating wife and her unlucky husband in Cain's novel was Nirdlinger, the name of the
department store in the Coens»
film; in Billy Wilder's 1944 screen adaptation of the
book, that surname was changed to Dietrichson, supplying the name of the medical examiner in The Man Who Wasn't There.
At various points in his fantastically varied and storied career he wrote position papers on the need of support for a moribund Australian
film industry, wrote and directed numerous episodes of such seminal TV shows as Homicide and Division 4 for Crawford Productions, was central in establishing
film courses and
departments in places such as Canberra and Brisbane (Griffith University), wrote plays and performed poems at Melbourne University and La Mama in the 1960s, directed feature
films in the early 1980s (most memorably Ginger Meggs in 1982), made documentaries for the ABC and SBS (The Myth Makers, Images of Australia, The Legend of Fred Paterson, and numerous others), wrote and edited such
books as Screenwriting: A Manual and Queensland Images in
Film and Television, helmed commercials for a vast array of companies and government bodies, contributed
film reviews to ABC radio (and more occasionally TV) across various states (for almost 40 years), wrote for numerous publications including Overland, The Canberra Times, Metro, The Concise Encyclopedia of Documentary
Film, The Hobart Mercury, and so much more.
Per the
film's publicity
department, Everest is totally not based on Jon Krakauer's
book, Into Thin Air, even though they use his version of events and basic characterizations of the people involved.
You can have individual attention from your literary agent and also have the resources a top literary agency can provide, including full service, in house
departments dedicated to accounting, business practices, and to selling the rights of your
books to
film, television, and in translation.
Today, in the
Department of Things You Could Have Seen From a Million Miles Away, Jeff Koons has designed the cover for
film producer Brian Grazer's
book, A Curious Mind: The Secret to a Bigger Life.
Assistant Curator of Prints and Illustrated
Books; Sarah Meister, curator,
department of photography; Michelle Elligott, museum archivist; Anne Morra, associate curator, and Sally Berger, assistant curator,
department of
film; and Paulina Pobocha, curatorial assistant,
department of painting and sculpture.