Caroline Breder - Watts, midday anchor on WLRN and host of «Cinematically Speaking» on Arts Radio Network, has been involved with
local film series for more than 20 years.
Not exact matches
In partnership with Our State Magazine, we present you with «Unearthed,» a short
film series that brings
local farms and family businesses to life.
A few months ago I learned of a
local company who were allowed to save and caringly salvage the remains of the factory and actually are being
filmed as part of a new
series on the History Channel called «Abandoned».
A regular contributor on Fox 5 and San Diego Living, Sara has extensive on - camera experience — appearing on
local San Diego morning news stations for over 6 years, Sara has also
filmed videos for eHow, and a Gaiam TV kids yoga
series.
Variety reports that Hugh Grant and Brendan Gleeson have joined the
film, which will see «the beloved bear, happily settled with the Brown family and a popular member of the
local community, embark upon a
series of odd jobs to buy the perfect present for his Aunt Lucy's 100th birthday, only for the gift to be stolen.»
LIVING JAWS: A
series of lively and engaging discussions with cast, families, crew and
locals on the making of JAWS, including how the
film has impacted lives and families in the 1970's and beyond.
Shot in a stark black and white, with the actors repeatedly isolated in their own frames, some really creepy images of crazy nuns (the long early sequence wherein the nuns are interrogated and exorcised is a miniature masterpiece) and a
series of subjective tracking shots implicating the audience in the chaos, the
film reaches a high point when the priest consults the
local rabbi (also played by Voit) in a
series of head - on medium shots.
But it's immediately clear from the outset that Zama's wait will be in vain, and that as he wearily seeks a
series of favors — from a
local minister or a teasing noblewoman (Lola Dueñas, a regular of Pedro Almodóvar, one of the
film's co-producers)-- we will observe the stagnation and rot of the colonialist experiment firsthand.
If Ted Turner had gotten wind of him, this charmingly garrulous gentleman might have been auditioned as a host on TCM, but instead, Kuntz has remained a
local phenomenon seen in recent years running the classic
film series at the Charles Allis Museum.
Guardian Australia's new monthly column Stream lover highlights
films and
series that are fresh to your
local on - demand services
Centering on McDormand's Mildred — a woman whose daughter has been brutally killed — the
film takes its title from a
series of billboards that Mildred erects to shame the
local police chief (Woody Harrelson), who, months after the crime, has made no progress in the case.
In the
film, based on a true story, Morgan plays a detective transplanted from New York who teams with a
local investigator (Sam Worthington) to work on a
series of unsolved murders in industrial wastelands surrounding Gulf Coast refineries, where as many as 70 bodies turned up over the past two decades.
The lumber industry has always driven the
local economy but tourism has spurred the
local economy because of the wildly popular Twilight book
series and
films that are set in the city.
Influences from television, Internet, character design, animation
film, music, fashion, and of course games, collide in their seminal action figure
series Tofu Family reflecting the current frictions between an omnipresent global and a diversified
local imagery, as well as presenting the weirdest universe you can possibly think of.
Other highlights this weekend include Bushwick Basel, in which 11 mainstays of Bushwick's gallery scene will be curating their own show within Starr Space; the Buswhack
series of performance and
film at the Bushwick Starr; «Sculpture Garden» at the Historic Onderdonk House, a group show of sculpture co-curated by Deborah Brown of Storefront Bushwick and one of our favorite
local artists, whose latest
series of paintings, «Freewheeling,» opens at the Active Space during the festival.
DMV International Film Festival (all weekend) The DMV International Festival at the Brentwood Arts Exchange will show a
series of Arthouse
films by international and
local producers.
The DMV International Festival at the Brentwood Arts Exchange will show a
series of Arthouse
films by international and
local producers.
Now in its fifth year, the annual Bushwhack
Series is a «diverse mix of theater, dance,
film, and sports,» featuring new work in development from mostly
local artists The Maya Project, William Burke, Rafael Gallegos / Nueva Bohemia (a Bushwhack veteran, in his last Brooklyn hurrah before moving to New Mexico), Engine Company No. 11, and Modesto «Flako» Jimenez.
The photographs in the
series were taken with a medium - format camera in the
film production centers of Enugu and Asaba in southern Nigeria, using
local actors to recreate scenes and characters inspired by typical Nollywood
films.
In combination with a
film series, and live and artist - driven programming, Field Guide introduces the framework through which Remai Modern enters into dialogue with its
local, national and international audiences.
Savannah Urban Garden Alliance (SUGA) will host an art show and four - night
film series in August introducing the community to urban gardening concepts and providing information on opportunities for community involvement in
local gardens.
UAG / ROOM Gallery further promotes an active dialogue between UCI residents and the
local and international art communities through colloquia, conferences, visiting artist lectures and theme - based
films series, all of which are open to the public.
In 2012 she presented THE MIRACLE METHODS
SERIES: Distance Readers,
film episodes transmitted on
local council and BBC information screens for b - side festival, Weymouth and which toured to cinemas and galleries including Nottingham Contemporary, FACT Liverpool, CCA Glasgow, and the Whitechapel, London, as part of Selected III, curated by FLAMIN with Jarman Award nominees.
The
film presents a
series of mini-dramas, recalling past community events described in archived issues of Roundabout, and provides an insight into issues prevalent at the time, such as continuity of
local life, community and togetherness.
In conjunction with their current exhibition Cinematic, the CUAC in Salt Lake City is presenting three free
film series featuring work by
local filmmakers.
Tiny Park, a new exhibition
series and art space located in central Austin, will present contemporary art exhibitions, readings, and
film screenings by
local and national artists.
Happening every Thursday evening at the Gallery, Scratch Nights are a
series of events by emerging
local and national practitioners working in music / sound,
film, expanded cinema, performance and spoken word.
The lumber industry has always driven the
local economy but tourism has spurred the
local economy because of the wildly popular Twilight book
series and
films that are set in the city.