Sentences with phrase «films featuring footage»

About Exhibition Frank Bowling: Mappa Mundi / 24 March — 8 July 2018 IMMA Main Galleries, West Wing Showcasing Bowling's work from the 1960s onwards and covering major developments within his practice, this vital exhibition also includes material from the Frank Bowling archive, and several films featuring footage and interviews with the artist.
Also included is selected material from the Frank Bowling archive, and several films featuring footage and interviews with the artist, including a specially created documentary featuring Frank Bowling in conversation about Ireland and Dublin and their influence on his work with Rachael Thomas, Head of Exhibitions, IMMA.
The film features footage of motorcycle racer Leslie Porterfield, who is recovering from a grave injury, zooming along on the Bonneville Salt Flats.

Not exact matches

Footage captured from real Absolut events around the globe sets a dynamic backdrop for the brand «s latest short film and serves as the creative featured in Absolut's new TV advertising, appearing on late - night TV, cinemas and beyond.
Brand is keen on activism, so the film also features the footage from 1913 of Emily Davison stepping in front of King's horse at the Epsom Derby.
It is a screengrab from a BBC film - available online here - which features some delicious archive footage of Balls from his younger days and at his wedding to Yvette Cooper, as well as an interview just conducted by the BBC's Laura Kuenssberg.
The 10 - minute film, which features a mixture of diary camera footage and interviews with Louise, records the exact moment she shoots a wigeon and captures her immediate reaction.
Featuring footage of Earth from the International Space Station (ISS) and narrated by actress Jennifer Lawrence, images of our magnificent blue planet demonstrate the effects humanity has had on it over time in this film captured by the astronauts aboard the ISS.
Composed of field testimonies and hidden camera footage, the film also features interviews with Haiti's Ambassador to the United States, Ambassador Raymond Joseph, the U.S. Department of States» Ambassador John Miller from the Office of Human Trafficking, renowned anthropologist and sugar historian Sidney Mintz, Carol Pier from Human Rights Watch, Public Interest Attorneys Bill Quigley as well as Greg Schell, and a number of activists from the field including human rights lawyer Noemi Mendez, Colette Lespinase of G.A.R.R. Haiti [Organization for Refugees and the Repatriated] and missionaries Pierre Ruquoy and Father Christopher Hartley.
There's an audio commentary by Charlie Chaplin experts Dan Kamin and Hooman Mehran; the documentary The Tramp and the Dictator, which parallels the lives between Chaplin and Hitler; two visual essays; color production footage; the barbershop sequence from Sydney Chaplin's 1921 film King, Queen, Joker; the deleted barbershop sequence from Chaplin's 1919 film Sunnyside; the re-release trailer; and finally, a 30 page - booklet featuring an essay by film critic Michael Wood, Chaplin's 1940 New York Times defense of the film, a reprint from critic Jean Narboni on the film's final speech, and Al Hirschfeld's original press book illustrations.
The film features archival photographs and historical footage with appearances by Allen Ginsberg, Michael McClure, Billy Collins, Dennis Hopper, Robert Scheer, Dave Eggers, and Pulitzer Prize winner Gary Snyder and other movers and shakers from the literary, political and art community.
The two documentaries included as special features are nice enough in an HBO Special Presentation kind of way (and are worth watching for the skinny Hirsch footage alone), but they're relatively lightweight and not nearly enough to satiate those for whom this film has become an obsession.
The choice to feature that authentic footage doubles as a clear gesture of what the film's message and intent is and regardless of repeated references to Holocaust.
But even at a scant 90 minutes, the film manages to cover a lot of ground, hopping around from interviews to live footage, the highlights of which are a live studio take of «Higgs Bossom Blues,» a 9 minute epic whose slithering slow build plays out uninterrupted and the finale, a blistering live performance of «Jubilee Street» featuring a string section and children's choir, intercut with scenes of Cave onstage over the years.
This collection of films, shows and rare footage feature classic sleuthing and forensic logic from our intrepid hero, Sherlock Holmes and his colleague, Dr. John Watson.
Made with the support of the Marley family, the film features rare footage, incredible performances and revelatory interviews with the people that knew him best.
Featuring interviews with the band and never - before seen footage, the film features behind - the - scenes views of historic moments from the perspective of the band, their fans, crew and management throughout their sold - out 40th anniversary tour.
Though the runtime is a bit much, and the film starts to drag near the end, for the most part, Marly features electrifying concert footage, and great interviews.
The film blends archival footage with illuminating interview segments featuring some of Russell's colleagues and most notable collaborators, including poet Allen Ginsberg, composer Philip Glass and indie pop sensation Jens Lekman.
Chronicling the high - octane career of Ayrton Senna, the fast - paced fourth feature from The Warrior, The Return and Far North director appeals to a broad audience and ranks among the best factual efforts of the year, a feat made all the more impressive considering the fact that the film does not include a second of new footage.
With Shirkers, Sandi Tan (also a first - time filmmaker) revisits the long - lost footage from her unfinished narrative feature shot in Tan's native Singapore in 1992, also called Shirkers, and in the process reckons with both why the film was never finished and how several relationships were forever changed in its wake.
Blu - ray Highlight: In addition to an excellent six - part documentary that runs the entire gamut of production — from location shooting in Romania, to Nicolas Cage's (creepy) performance capture of the Ghost Rider, to special effects and more — the Blu - ray also includes a feature similar to Warner Bros.» Maximum Movie Mode where directors Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor dissect the film (sometimes pausing it to discuss certain scenes in more detail) with the help of behind - the - scenes footage.
EXTRAS: In addition to both the theatrical and extended cut of the film (featuring 10 minutes of never - before - seen footage), there's a brand new collection of bonus material, including an audio commentary by director Ridley Scott, writer Drew Goddard and author Andy Weir, a making - of featurette, deleted scenes and more.
This is after all a story featuring teenage characters called Mr Fantastic (special power: stretchy limbs), The Invisible Woman (special power: take a guess) and the villainous Victor von Doom, adapted from a lightweight 1960s comic strip and given a twenty - first century makeover by a guy whose first film, 2011's «Chronicle», was an ugly, noisy found - footage mess.
After shooting, Lanthimos began preparation to shoot The Favourite but then turned back to The Killing of a Sacred Deer after the filmmaking team watched footage and figured the feature could be finished in time for a premiere at Cannes, where the filmmaker's previous films The Lobster and Dogtooth debuted.
Because a feature film was easier to fund than an experimental online interactive, some of this footage went on to become The Forbidden Room, to help enable eventual delivery of the website.
Along with the feature, we also get an audio commentary from Felsher, a second commentary from some of the cast and crew of the film, an additional interview from Creepshow DP Michael Gornick, extended interview clips from Romero, Savini, and Bernie Wrightson, a collection of behind the scenes footage from FX master Tom Savini, a location tour from Horror's Hallowed Grounds, a reproduction of Fangoria's Scream Greats episode on the career of Tom Savini, a news program segment from 1982 on the making of Creepshow, and a collection of behind the scenes stills.
Directed by Dan Trachtenberg (his first feature), announced via a trailer in January, and out less than two months later, it bears scant similarity to the first film — gone is the found - footage shaky - cam device.
As someone that has been waiting for a sequel to Unbreakable since I saw the film so many years ago, I'm happy to report the Glass footage looked fantastic and featured some great stuff between Bruce Willis, James McAvoy and Samuel L. Jackson.
To Ron Magliozzi, associate curator, and Peter Williamson, film conservation manager, of the Museum of Modern Art, for identifying and assembling the earliest surviving footage of what would have been the first feature film to star a black cast, the 1913 «Lime Kiln Field Day» starring Bert Williams.
With more than six minutes of never - before - seen footage woven back into the film and an additional 24 minutes of deleted scenes, alternate endings and a retrospective documentary featuring the cast of the film, Dumb and Dumber: Unrated is a must own for every comedy fan!
The music - driven feature film combines a bold narrative and spectacular live - performance footage of one of the most popular and influential rock bands in history to produce a bracing, raw andvisceral cinematic experience.
The original A Nightmare on Elm Street also gets a Blu - ray debut this week, featuring all the supplements from the earlier DVD «Infinifilm Special Edition» release (two commentary tracks, alternate endings, three documentary featurettes), plus the Blu - ray exclusive interactive «Focus Points» mode, which allows instant access to alternate takes and behind the scenes footage while watching the film.
Extras repeat the U.K. release including a feature length audio commentary track with the Chiodo Brothers, The Making of Killer Klowns: a 20 - minute featurette looking at the film's production, including an interview with the Chiodo Brothers alongside behind - the - scenes footage, Visual Effects with Gene Warren Jr.: an interview with Charles Chiodo and visual effects supervisor Gene Warren Jr., Kreating Klowns: an interview with Charles Chiodo and creature fabricator Dwight Roberts, Bringing Life to These Things - A Tour of Chiodo Bros..
Highlights include footage of various Paramount movies, many of them from the silent era, including the French film Queen Elizabeth (1912), an early feature - length film imported and released by Paramount.
A new edit of the Fox film is pegged for release next summer on Blu - ray and DVD, adding 10 minutes of footage featuring Rogue and other characters.
The upside is that these videos feature a bunch of footage that isn't in the film, not that most people will have a chance to know which is which until after this Friday.
How this will translate to film is yet to be seen, but there was that spectacular test footage which featured a motion - capture Deadpool with the voice of Ryan Reynolds, who played the part in the aforementioned X-Men film.
The trailer for this year's New York Film Festival has gone online, and it features two or three clips from the Thomas Pynchon adaptation, nestled in amongst footage from the rest of the festival's high - profile films.
Blu - ray and DVD, with plenty of supplements: new interviews with Otto Preminger biographer Foster Hirsch and music critic Gary Giddins, a featurette on graphic designer Saul Bass and his long collaborative relationship with Preminger, excerpts from a 1967 episode of «Firing Line» featuring Preminger, newsreel footage from the set, and excerpts from a work - in - progress documentary on the making of the film, plus stills, a trailer and booklet with a new essay and an archival article.
Home Video Notes: The Breakfast Club Release Date: 2 January 2018 Criterion releases The Breakfast Club on home video (Blu - ray) with the following extras: - Audio commentary from 2015 featuring actors Anthony Michael Hall and Judd Nelson - New interviews with actors Molly Ringwald and Ally Sheedy - New video essay featuring director John Hughes's production notes, read by Nelson - Documentary from 2015 featuring interviews with cast and crew - 50 minutes of never - before - seen deleted and extended scenes - Rare promotional and archival interviews and footage - Excerpts from a 1985 American Film Institute seminar with Hughes 1999 radio interview with Hughes - Segment from a 1985 episode of NBC's Today show featuring the film's cast - Audio interview with Molly Ringwald from a 2014 episode of This American Life - Trailer - PLUS: An essay by critic David Kamp
Based on Patrick Jean's spectacular short film Pixels sees aliens invade Earth in the form of classic»80s arcade characters after mistaking a video feed featuring footage of Pac - Man, Donkey Kong and Space Invaders as a declaration of war.
The single - disc director's cut of the movie doesn't have the packaging glitz or the massive amount of bonus material as the original DVD release, but it does feature the intended, R - rated cut of the film with 30 additional minutes of footage.
Along with an unrated cut of the film (with five additional minutes of footage), the DVD also features a lively audio commentary with more than ten different participants (from director David Gordon Green and producer Judd Apatow to stars Seth Rogen and James Franco), a making - of featurette, a handful of deleted scenes, and a gag reel.
The special features are a bit misleading, as they are extremely short and consist mostly of interview snippets mixed with footage from the film.
Among the special features new to our Blu - ray edition of Ingmar Bergman's Wild Strawberries is a remarkable sixteen minutes of silent 16 mm footage filmed by Bergman himself on set.
Cecile Emeke's film features recollections from Ringgold and footage of Harlem, which is key to the artist's work.
Clips of the film featuring Jesse Eisenberg, Kristen Stewart, Steve Carell and Blake Lively are included in the video, as well as footage of the rainy first hours of the Riviera - set festival.
The DVD gets what appears to be an exclusive bonus feature in «War Horse: The Look» (6:29), which serves up behind - the - scenes footage on the various components that comprise the film, from locations to costumes to production design.
The DVD features deleted scenes, about 18 minutes worth of footage, much of with the gods intoning their lines and most of it just as stilted as what's left in the film.
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