Sentences with phrase «other features commentary»

Not exact matches

In addition, every issue of the ABF Journal includes timely cover stories and articles authored by industry specialists, plus our regular features encompassing briefs of the top industry related news stories, exclusive interviews with industry leaders, notable ABL transaction summaries and commentary from our team of contributing writers on turnaround management, legal topics and case studies and other relevant insights from ABL industry practitioners.
The analysts and affiliates behind the indicators, strategies, columns, articles, commentary and all other features provided herein, including, without limitation, any attachments or exhibits hereto (collectively, the «INFORMATION») may hold positions in the securities or industries discussed herein.
Two other astute online commentaries are those by Elizabeth Carr of Amherst College, Massachusetts, who writes that that the «overarching issue» is the soul's gifted relationality which roots human fraternity in God, and Francois Lacoste Lareymonde in his «Les quatre «fils rouges» de Tencyclique» in a feature on «The Anthropology of Gift» in Liberte Politique, Autumn 2009.
Others such as Connotea store reference information online, allowing access while scientists travel, and include commentary features such as social bookmarking, which allows a scientist's contacts to read his or her comments in a dedicated feed.
You know, we have featured this shoe a zillion times over the years in posts for The Hunt and as commentary in other posts, but we've never featured it in a dedicated post.
I've written 4,000 blog posts featuring leading - edge insight and commentary on all aspects of the business of online dating, ranging from industry news, site reviews, emerging trends, analysis of dating site features, discussion about safety, finance and other high - impact issues facing the online dating industry.
About Blog NekoPOP features reviews, interviews, and commentary for J - Pop, idols, dance, and other cool things from Japanese pop culture.
Screen formats: Widescreen Anamorphic 1.85:1 Subtitles: English; French; Spanish Language and Sound: English: Dolby Digital 5.1; English: Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo; French: Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo; Spanish: Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo Other Features: Color; interactive menus; scene access; trailers; making - of featurettes; commentary; games.
Screen Formats: 1.85:1 Subtitles: English; French; Spanish Language and Sound: English: English: Dolby Digital 5.1; French: Dolby Digital 5.1; Spanish: Dolby Digital 5.1 Other Features: Color; interactive menus; scene access; audio commentary; additional scenes; interactive games.
The laugh out loud feature length commentary with Director / Actor James Franco, Actor Dave Franco, Actor Tommy Wiseau, Actor Greg Sestero, and others is absolutely hilarious!
Features two commentary tracks (one by Gervais and Merchant, the other by stars Christian Cooke, Tom Hughes and Jack Doolan), bonus interviews with the creators and stars, deleted scenes and a blooper reel.
The final bonus feature is an audio commentary by film historians Travis Crawford and Bill Ackerman, who prepared a discussion that covers the movie from its origin to its release, with plenty of information about Marvin, Mifune, Boorman, and others.
NY, NY has just been released on Blu - ray with the director's commentary and other special features.
The generic extras start with two audio commentaries with one starring director Harlin and the other featuring the voices of Cena and writer Daniel Kunka; both are quite irritating as Harlin and Cena independently seem to be under the impression that they achieved something revolutionary with 12 Rounds.
Watch Film Extras: Play the added special features of most DVDs, including audio commentary, the original theatrical trailer or teaser, deleted scenes, and other related material.
«Léon Morin, Priest,» on the other hand, is a Criterion Collection transfer of a 1961 Jean - Pierre Melville film featuring film commentary, deleted scenes, and a TV interview with its director and star.
Everything you'd want to know about one of Fincher's movies can be learned in one of his commentary tracks, which are usually joined by other excellent and informative bonus features, including a highly reccomended Panic Room commentary featuring screenwriter William Goldman.
Bonus features come by way of a feature - length audio commentary track with director Amiel, a special making - of documentary, and around 10 other separate featurettes which include a wide array of cast, crew and academic - leaning interviews, as well as a tour of Darwin's home, which has been turned into a museum.
Features both the American and British versions of the film, commentary track by creator / actor Richard O'Brien and co-star Patricia Quinn, an audience participation picture - in - picture track with a live version of the show and a «callback» subtitle track that cues viewers to classic audience responses, featurettes, two deleted musical scenes, outtakes, alternate opening and ending, and other celebrations of the culture of «Rocky Horror.»
Two Audio Commentaries, One Featuring Haskell Wexler, Editorial Consultant Paul Golding, and Actor Marianna Hill, and the Other Featuring Historian Paul Cronin
The disc's only other extra of note is a feature - length commentary by Tennant that's less antennae - raising than his monologues elsewhere — instructive, even.
Extras include two fan - friendly commentaries featuring Williamson and producer Paul Stupin — one for the pilot, the other the season - ender.
The centerpiece is a «director's notebook» that includes pop - up video with commentary by Ridley Scott, which includes an interactive feature that allows you to pause, view other extras, and then resume.
After seeing the film a second time, it made me want to revisit a few movies set in Los Angeles, including Boogie Nights, The Graduate, Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, and a few others, which all feature some commentary tracks worth listening to.
Two audio commentaries: one featuring coscreenwriter Jean Gruault, longtime François Truffaut collaborator Suzanne Schiffman, editor Claudine Bouché, and film scholar Annette Insdorf; the other featuring actor Jeanne Moreau and Truffaut biographer Serge Toubiana
Director Todd Louiso, screenwriter Gordy Hoffman, and star Philip Seymour Hoffman play nicely off each other in a feature - length commentary in which the film seems to reveal itself anew to the self - effacing trio, who revel in psychoanalyzing Love Liza's characters and, when you get down to it, defending them.
Blu - ray Highlight: There are a number of great extras to choose from (including one of the funnier blooper reels and a cool feature called Disney Intermission where the Muppets perform short gags and tease other bonus material whenever you pause the movie), but the commentary with director James Bobin and co-writers Jason Segel and Nicholas Stoller is too much fun to ignore.
PLUS: A booklet featuring an essay by critic Geoffrey O'Brien and a selection of commentary from young writers, along with a map of New Penzance Island and other ephemera
Masterfully restored, this set includes favorites such as The Hound of the Baskervilles, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, and others, complete with six audio commentaries and many other great features.
The Paramount Blu - ray release includes both the theatrical release and a completely restored version of the film, plus an audio commentary and several other features.
Any Blu - ray selling for $ 5 ought to be a no - brainer for someone who likes the movie it holds, but fans of The Hoax may very well be dismayed to see it lose subtitles, an audio commentary, and other bonus features in the jump to high definition.
Extras: Audio commentary with film producer and historian Bruce Block; new appreciation of the film and select scene commentary by film historian Philip Kemp; «The Flawed Couple,» a new video essay by filmmaker David Cairns on the collaborations between Billy Wilder and Jack Lemmon; «Billy Wilder ABC,» an overview by David Cairns on the life and career of the filmmaker, covering his films, collaborators and more; new interview with actress Hope Holiday; «Inside the Apartment,» a half - hour «making - of» featurette from 2007 including interviews with Shirley MacLaine, executive producer Walter Mirisch, and others; «Magic Time: The Art of Jack Lemmon,» an archive profile of the actor from 2007; original screenplay by Billy Wilder and I.A.L. Diamond (BD - ROM content); theatrical trailer; special collector's packaging featuring newly commissioned artwork by Ignatius Fitzpatrick; collector's 150 - page hardcover book featuring new writing by Neil Sinyard, Kat Ellinger, Travis Crawford and Heather Hyche, generously illustrated with rare stills and behind - the - scenes imagery.
Extras: Two audio commentaries from 2003, one featuring director Ken Russell and the other screenwriter and producer Larry Kramer; segments from a 2007 interview with Russell for the BAFTA Los Angeles Heritage Archive; «A British Picture: Portrait of an Enfant Terrible,» Russell's 1989 biopic on his own life and career; interview from 1976 with actor Glenda Jackson; interviews with Kramer and actors Alan Bates and Jennie Linden from the set; new interviews with director of photography Billy Williams and editor Michael Bradsell; «Second Best,» a 1972 short film based on a D. H. Lawrence story, produced by and starring Bates; trailer; an essay by scholar Linda Ruth Williams.
Good features found on the previous DVD, including a commentary track and the storyboard of a lost scene, get ported over to the new edition, where they're joined by a mix of features targeted squarely at kids (A «Bear - E-Oke» sing - along) and designed to promote other Disney ventures, like the Animal Kingdom park.
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.
DVD Details: The 2007 DVD, distributed by the Weinsteins and IFC, includes an audio commentary track by Dahla and the two writers, a behind - the - scenes featurette (10 minutes), and an interesting before - and - after visual effects comparison, and a trailer for this and other features.
Instead of featuring audio commentaries from the filmmakers on each short, the dozen films are preceded (unless you manually select the «Off» option) by brief introductions by the directors, producers, and sometimes other crew members who were involved in their respective creations.
The film's other listening option is a dry and humourless feature - length, screen - specific commentary by director Kathryn Bigelow and Cronenweth.
Key features: Outtakes, interviews, and selected episode commentary by Shandling, Zweibel, and some of the other writers and cast members.
Special Features «Insurgent» Unlocked: The Ultimate Behind - the - Scenes Access (a feature - length, in - depth look at all aspects of the movie - for the ultimate fan) From «Divergent» to «Insurgent» Diverging: Adapting «Insurgent» to the Screen The Others: Cast and Characters The Train Fight Unlocked The Peter Hayes Story Marketing Gallery Audio Commentary with Producers
Skip the two commentaries — one from producer Jon Avnet (quite the portrait of arrogance for a man whose filmmaking expertise resulted in Red Corner and Up Close and Personal), the other a group yakker featuring writer - director Kerry Conran, production designer Kevin Conran, animation supervisor Steve Yamamoto, and Visual Effects Supervisor Darin Hollings (their frequent gaps in conversation throwing the comparatively loquacious Avnet's Hollywood gasbaggery into relief)-- and head straight for their digest version, a two - part making - of from Sparkhill called «Brave New World» (49 mins.
The audio commentary is well worth spending time listening to and features the writer - director John De Bello covering various aspects about the film and the other Tomato's pictures and cartoon series.
More significant are the other two extras: the featurette «A Family Affair» (8:40) with Rance and Clint Howard and a feature - length audio commentary with Ron Howard and Roger Corman.
They are a commentary track by co - writers / co-directors Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg (somewhat funny), a short featurette, «Directing Your Friends,» and a collection of short ads, plus various trailers for other Sony features.
The audio commentaries — which featured Jay Chandrasekhar and Erik Stolhanske on the first track and Kevin Heffernan, Steve Lem me and Paul Soter on the other track — were actually pretty good, so it's nice to see that they've been included on the single - disc Blu - ray release.
Presented in a widescreen video transfer and Dolby Digital 5.1 audio soundtrack, the «Man on Fire» DVD includes two full - length audio commentary tracks (the first by director Tony Scott, and the other with producer Lucas Foster, screenwriter Brian Helgeland and star Dakota Fanning), as well as deleted scenes and an alternate ending (also featuring optional director commentary).
Disc One features an unrated version of the movie (it's only three minutes longer than the theatrical cut), an audio commentary by the director, Jonah Hill, Russell Brand, Rose Byrne and a couple others, and three in - depth featurettes, including one on the making of the movie and one on the music written for the movie (that one's a can't miss).
The highlights are a pair of commentaries, one featuring a number of production crew members and another with director Lee Unkrich and producer Darla Anderson that's part of a CineExplore feature that also provides lots of illustrative artwork and photos via PiP with other behind - the - scenes material.
On Blu - ray and DVD with two commentary tracks (one from director Paul Feig and co-writer Katie Dippold, the other featuring editor Brent White, producer Jessie Henderson, production designer Jeff Sage, visual effects supervisor Pete Travers, and special effects supervisor Mark Hawker), the featurettes «Meet the Team,» «Visual Effects: 30 Years Later,» and «Slime Time,» and «Jokes a Plenty: Free For All,» and a collection of alternate improvisational takes (what was called «Line - o-rama» in Judd Apatow disc releases).
Brand new 2K restoration from original film materials High Definition (1080p) Presentation Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard - of - hearing Audio commentary by director Brian Trenchard - Smith The Stuntmen, Trenchard Smith's classic television documentary on Grant Page (Mad Max, Road Games) and other Australian stunt performers Hospitals Don't Burn Down, Trenchard - Smith's 1978 public information film told in pure Ozploitation fashion Behind the scenes gallery by graffiti artist Vladimir Cherepanoff Theatrical trailer Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Chris Malbon
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