For true change to happen
we need film schools to see women and people of color leading classes.
Not exact matches
According to the
film's thudding logic, the fact that Ren's a «Yankee» means he doesn't
need schooling on race and racism.
Since «George Washington» (2000) opens with a teenage girl's dreamy, wise - beyond - her - years narration as the camera floats in slow - motion through waving fields of grass and glides along railroad tracks, you probably don't
need to be told that first - time feature director David Gordon Green, then just twenty five and fresh out of
film school, was a big Terrence Malick fan.
That is, until the final moments of the
film, when Larry hears that he
needs to have more medical tests done, followed by a shot of a tornado bearing down on his son in front of his
school.
Guy Ritchie's momentum and speed - ramping flourishes distract from the rickety mystery, but I'm not convinced that the old -
school detective stories
need to be turned into a spectacle - laden action
film.
After bringing you a look at lead Aaron Paul preparing for his role in a «driving
school» featurette yesterday, we've an official look at the feature
film adaptation of video game,
NEED FOR SPEED in another mini video.
The Tribe / Ukraine (Director and screenwriter: Myroslav Slaboshpytskiy)-- Set at a Ukrainian boarding
school for the deaf, the
film's narrative unfolds purely through sign language without the
need for employing subtitles or voiceover, resulting in a unique, never - before - seen cinematic experience that engages the audience on a new level.
Certainly, it can be seen as a critique of home -
schooling and as championing the
need for social interaction for all children (a more recent
film, Captain Fantastic [2016], broaches the same topic, albeit without the pitch - black humour).
What's interesting is that both these
films tell stories that
needed to be told, in my opinion, because you never learn anything in
school or during Black History month about the Buffalo Soldiers or the African - American military campaign during World War II.
What You
Need to Know: Writer - director Rian Johnson has already put an inspired spin on both
film noir with the high
school - set «Brick» and the con - man caper with «The Brothers Bloom.»
In the
film's opening minutes, we learn everything we
need to know about the family: Kinsey, with her ripped Ramones T - shirt and love of cigarettes, is a nebulously rebellious teen who's about to be sent off to boarding
school, much to her family's consternation.
«I wanted to direct for a long time, but I believed I
needed a lot of experience on
film sets, and I didn't go to
film school, so the way I got that was through acting and co-writing and producing.
The Scottish
film - maker Lynne Ramsay will write and direct the
film adaptation of We
Need to Talk About Kevin, Lionel Shriver's Orange Prize - winning novel set in the aftermath of a high
school massacre.
Lucas believes that when the public «sees» how successful classrooms function, through documentary
films and other media, there will be greater consensus on the changes
needed in our
schools.
This student - produced
film offers much -
needed insight into how and why students leave
school, and what might motivate them to stay.
AnimalKind lesson plan 10 (from a set of 23) View / order the accompanying resources and AnimalKind
film at: www.AnimalKind.org.uk Objectives: • To understand that the local environment (
school grounds) affords a variety of habitats that meet the basic
needs of a range of animals and plants, which depend on each other in an interconnected way called an ecosystem.
Deborah and I were inspired to make this
film for different reasons at first, but as time went on we realized that the inspiration came down to the
need for hope for the future of public
schools.
Whether consent is required or not,
schools need to consider if there any other reasons why
filming may be inappropriate.
For example, a child may
need to be protected from someone, the
filming may bring the
school into disrepute or there may be other safeguarding issues, such as
filming a PE lesson where children may be dressed in clothes that may not be appropriate for viewing on the internet.
This intimate
film proves you don't
need an inner city
school as the setting for an inspirational tale of a teacher and his students.
The
film talks about the kinds of real reform — inside
schools and in society as a whole — that we urgently
need to genuinely transform education in this country.
Guggenheim's
film would have audiences believe that free - market competition, standardized tests, destroying teacher unions, and above all, the proliferation of charter
schools are just what this country
needs to create great
schools.
The RFC website is full of tips for how to launch the Real Food Movement on your campus, including
film nights, resources, FAQs, and anything else you might
need to get the student government and the
school board to see it your way.
«A town
needs a river just like it
needs a mosque or a
school,» villager Süleyman Bilgi says in the
film.
The video does not
need to be an action
film, it could simply be an applicant talking about why they want to go to law
school, or describing a meaningful experience that will make them a good lawyer.