Sentences with phrase «second film version»

Terence Davies» adaptation of the 1952 Terence Rattigan play is the second filmed version of The Deep Blue Sea.

Not exact matches

With the help of a participating mobile service provider, study authors sent two messages to customers: the first version advertised tickets for a new film at a nearby IMAX theater, and the second advertised the tickets with a note saying that part of the proceeds would go to help low income students pay for college.
Indeed, a sex - free, PG - 13 version of «Freed» could be cut without shedding a second of narrative coherence, such as it is; one could ask what the point of that would be, though similar queries might be leveled at the film as it stands.
Married three times, Bloom's first husband was actor Rod Steiger, with whom she co-starred in 3 Into 2 Won't Go (1969) and The Illustrated Man (1969); her second was producer Hillard Elkins, who packaged Bloom's 1973 film version of The Doll's House; and her third was novelist Philip Roth.
During her second year at Northwestern University, Williams got her feature film break when she was cast as protective father Steve Martin's soon - to - be-married daughter Annie in the (slightly) modernized version of the popular 1950s comedy Father of the Bride.
Better known in the last few years for directing episodes of such shows as The Wire, Treme, and the American version of The Killing, Agnieszka Holland returns to her native Poland for another film of hers concerning the plight of people during the Second World War.
One version, which they call Him, showed it from the husband's vantage point, while a second film shown right after, Her, explored it from the perspective of the wife.
Culinary road trip series turned feature film The Trip marks the duo's third collaboration with the filmmaker, and their second instance of playing exaggerated versions of themselves under his watch.
As a further lure, Jackson has even fashioned this CG - heavy film in 3 - D and shot it digitally at 48 frames per second instead of the usual 24 f.p.s. (A 2 - D, 24 - f.p.s. version is also being screened.)
Otto Preminger's 1960 film version of Leon Uris's Exodus - about the founding of the state of Israel after the second world war - wasn't quite the critical hit its makers probably hoped for, but was certainly a commercial one and received a few awards too - including an Oscar for its music, by Ernest Gold.
A production of New Line Cinema and Metro - Goldwyn - Mayer Pictures, this extended cut of the second film in The Hobbit Trilogy includes 25 minutes of extra film footage that extends individual scenes, making this the must - see, definitive version for fans.
It's a picture that has a couple of genuine - seeming moments drawn out like slow taffy until they're rendered a funhouse version of a genuine moment (the best bit of the film might be Drew dancing by himself — it only lasts ten seconds).
My only real issue with the BD treatment of the second and third films is that, similar to Warner's recent Blu - ray version of Forbidden Planet, shots containing multiple VFX elements have been severely noise - reduced to counteract the degenerative effects of optical compositing.
THE DVD Like Disney's other 2 - disc Studio Ghibli releases, Whisper of the Heart arrives on DVD in North America slipcovered in a swing - tray keepcase and equipped with paltry, Amero - centric extras and a second platter consisting solely of a storyboarded version of the film.
The film is the second French - language adaptation of the classic fable following Jean Cocteau's 1946 version.
Peter Jackson's (The Desolation of Smaug, An Unexpected Journey) version should have the secondary title, «Been There, Done That», as he's not only revisiting many of the same tropes that made his original Lord of the Rings trilogy a gargantuan success among films, but also viewers will likely watch these movies once and are content to close out the chapter without giving them any second thought.
The extended version of Peter Jackson's second film in his Hobbit trilogy adds 25 minutes to the running time, bringing the grand total up to 186 minutes.
After all, synergistic space - wasting supplements on it are uncalled for with an entire second version of the film offered.
All disc versions of the Extended Edition include nearly nine hours of new bonus features and will be available just ahead of the December 13 theatrical release of the second film of the trilogy, The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug.
The second disc contains a treasure trove of found gems: the original and the new re-release trailer, a featurette on Tom Waits and the film's music, alternate versions of said music, rehearsal footage, deleted scenes, a featurette on the «new» electronic cinema, and an all - new «making of» documentary.
Before the trailers dropped (both featuring a few seconds of different footage), the official handle also posted a new poster for the film with other versions of it following shortly afterwards.
Shot for $ 1.5 million over 30 days, Laughlin's film, while heavy on extended takes and a few awkward edits, overall looks very nice, and Elite's transfer marks the first time the film's been available with its original, evocative Technicolor - styled cinematography by Louis Horvath (who also photographed «Chandler,» and Laughlin's other directorial efforts); and in its original aspect ratio, which, in previous full screen versions, chopped Condon's second appearance as a «dead kid».
The second movie version of the Ben Hecht play «The Front Page,» the film pits reporter Rosalind Russell and editor Cray Grant against a crooked city and state administration, as politics swirl around the fate of a mild - mannered prisoner about to be hanged.
This new «Version 2» mask is inspired the second of three different versions of the Michael Myers mask used during production of Halloween H20: Twenty Years Later, the seventh film in the Halloween franchise.
Where the first and second films were effectively compressed versions of episodes from the TV show, Evangelion 3.0 is something else entirely.
It's a four - disc offering that includes the film, a second disc of features, a DVD version and a digital copy.
Thanks to the fact that the Alternate version is housed on a second disc, the film wasn't crammed onto this disc, so the issues are minor.
The bulk of the extras are featured on the second disc, which also includes a full - frame version of the film.
Though the 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen transfer of the film (full - frame version sold separately) starts out looking scuffed, the speckles clear up after the opening credits — but then edge - enhancement intrudes, and there's a bizarre lapse in quality during chapter 6, when intermittent shots lose so much definition as to suggest second - generation VHS.
The second disc contains a version of Castle in the Sky reminiscent of the «Work in Progress» Beauty and the Beast, as it's the entire film in sequential storyboard form; a better keepsake than a viewing experience, it plays with the finished soundtrack in Japanese or English.
THE DVD The film's 50th Anniversary Edition DVD implicitly proffers the restored version as the default option, housing it on the first disc with two retrospective docs while relegating the theatrical and preview versions to a second platter.
THE DVD Fox's two - platter, 2006 DVD release of Miracle on 34th Street presents the film colorized on Disc 1, relegating the original black - and - white version to the second disc along with the extras.
The DVD features both the original color theatrical version and the B&W Director's Cut (the latter featuring commentary by director Peter Bognanovich, who likes to talk about his films) on one disc, and comes with the previously released director's cut of The Last Picture Show (with new commentary by Bogdanovich) on a second disc.
The collection also includes a second disc, featuring the DVD version of the film on one side and a plethora of docs, features and behind - the - scenes goodies on the other.
With a second layer, the 16x9 version of the film could have easily been included and it wouldn't have taken much to do more supplementally.
(This export version, which significantly compromises the film, is included in this package on a second disc.)
The work is a 30 second version of McGinleyʼs original film for Icelandic band Sigur Rósʼ track Varúð, which features a magical golden haired girl skipping throughout the streets of New York.
from 8 mm film In the second gallery is the digitally restored version of THREE SCREEN RAY, now titled EVE - RAY - FOREVER.
The piece was based on the idea of playing a 30 second version of McGinleyʼs original film for...
Originally located in the street outside 89 Greene Street (a second version was later installed outside 112 Greene Street), the dumpster held architectural fragments and construction - site detritus and was featured in Matta - Clark's film of the same year, also titled Open House.
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