To the Wonder plays like
a nature documentary featuring famous actors who wander into the shot from time to time.
Not exact matches
The productions of the electronic media, by their
nature, evade such distinctions as those between
documentary and
feature films.
Written by Being John Malkovich scribe Charlie Kaufman, Human
Nature was the
feature debut from acclaimed music - video director Michel Gondry and
featured Arquette as a woman cursed with a coat of fur covering her body.As the decade progressed, audiences could see Arquette in projects ranging from the star - studded
documentary Searching for Debra Winger to the sleeper family film Holes.
Su Rynard's
feature, with its episodic overview of various interconnected issues around the globe, lacks the unifying emotional and narrative involvement of the best
nature documentaries.
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.
The film's first third
features a ton of asynchronous editing that likens the events happening within the plot to
nature documentaries and other parallel events, which gives Lucy an experimental feel.
Fans of the iconic oceanographer's pioneering work would likely do best seeking out his excellent
nature and ecological
documentary features and TV specials, as this is essentially an elongated, CG - powered Wikipedia entry with the odd melodramatic insert.
, a
feature - length
documentary on the entire series (from the memorable Second Sight Films release of the film); In Search of the Hotel Broslin, a 2001 featurette with Henenlotter and rapper R.A. «The Rugged Man» Thornburn; a six - minute outtakes reel in HD from a 2K scan of a 16 mm print; The Frisson of Fission: Basket Case, Conjoined Twins, and «Freaks» in Cinema, a new video essay by Travis Crawford discussing the history of films
featuring «freaks of
nature»; a set of image galleries (promotional stills, behind the scenes, ephemera, advertisements, home video releases); a promo gallery
featuring 3 theatrical trailers (all in HD from 4K sources), a TV spot (also in HD from a 4K source), and 2 radio spots; The Slash of the Knife, a rarely seen short film made by Henenlotter prior to Basket Case; an audio commentary on The Slash of the Knife by Henenlotter and Mike Bencivenga; outtakes and an image gallery from The Slash of the Knife; Belial's Dream, an animated short story by filmmaker Robert Morgan; and last but not least, a 28 - page insert booklet
featuring the essay «Case History» by Michael Gingold, «Cham - pain in the Park!»
This dive spot first gained world recognition when it was
featured in a
nature documentary by the world - renowned oceanographer, Jacques Cousteau.
The Amazon Villa itself
features a very comfortable king - sized large bed, a place to use your laptop, WiFi, electricity in the rainforest, and a 40 inch flat screen television to watch
nature videos and
documentaries.
Featuring over 60 exhibitions and over 100 FotoFocus events at Participating Venues, the 2016 Biennial included eight major exhibitions curated by FotoFocus Artistic Director and Curator Kevin Moore exploring the
documentary nature of photography, including solo exhibitions of Roe Ethridge, Zanele Muholi, and Jackie Nickerson.
Art,
nature, and technology meet in the
documentary When Björk Met Attenborough and the concert film Biophilia Live, which
features the singer and her band performing every song on her Biophilia album.