Sentences with phrase «thinking about making this movie»

DuVernay wasn't thinking about making a movie about Dr. King, but she did feel an urgent need for better images of black people in film and not just «images of black people in hindsight.»
JS: I've been thinking about making a movie about van Gogh.

Not exact matches

«I think it's just such a big disconnect from the way people who make movies think about what we do in Silicon Valley — building stuff.
I remember getting real cross with my little sister when she told me that she went out to see the movie The Exorcism of Emily Rose, but when she started asking me questions about God and all that, I was kind of thinking, «You know Olga, maybe this is a good thing that Hollywood is spending some money on making horror movies
So knowing about the Bible not only makes the movies more fun and enables critique of public policy, but it also paradoxically encourages you to think for yourself.
So as you go about tying fluffy red bows on neatly wrapped packages and compulsively checking to make sure you recorded every holiday movie known to man, relish and rest in the fact that the most beautiful story ever told is so much more beautiful than we ever thought possible.
Hi, I loved the little movie about your new book, and I think the addition of your little boy makes it even more personal.
The movie is profoundly moving and made me start thinking about my past and present.
Hey, what's that movie about the sister who probably has borderline personality disorder and ruins her pretentious sisters rich person wedding and I think maybe Parker Posey was in it but I might be making that part up?
Sandy and Don said they would retire from baseball, and I wrote them that the proper way to go about retiring was to send me letters to that effect, which they never did, and I think there was one brief telephone conversation where Walter O'Malley wished them luck in whatever they did outside of baseball, and they went out and signed to make a movie, etc., etc..
If you didn't make a list, think about it now - maybe it includes things like renting a movie, playing a board game, or just going out and walking around the mall.
But two recent movies have made me think about one aspect of sci - fi — artificial intelligence — in a different light, given my focus in this blog on relationships, love and sex: Her and, now, Ex Machina.
I think it would be fun to make a movie about making dinner.
Among the many things the movie made me think about was this: perhaps if we want to have long - lasting love we have to keep finding new things to love about each other instead of just thinking of our beloved as static — he's this, she's that — which, as Clementine and Joel discover, only leads to frustration, disappointment and, eventually, rejection.
I think about our family videos and the stacks of photo albums without him, and I think about the family movies and photobooks he'll become a part of as we make new memories together.
i think (and hope) that this movie is all about empowering women to make choices that are right for them and their babies.
In thinking about all the upset caused by this week's blizzard that wasn't, especially all the outrage directed at the weathermen for making everybody freak out about «historic» snow totals that got dumped on New England instead of us, I was reminded of the best movie I saw last year: «Nightcrawler.»
But have you ever stopped to think about who makes these movies?
David thought the movie's message about opening yourself to new experiences, even uncomfortable ones, might make science more exciting than it already was.
In fact, I was just talking to my husband about it because you make me want to go see that new movie out (my sick brain can not think of the title right now) with the kids soon.
I always think of the movie «13 Going on 30 ″ where she goes out in her pj's and her friend makes a comment about bringing that trend back.
It's funny to have a horror movie that will make you think twice about things, like Jaws makes you think about going into the ocean, Psycho makes you keep your shower curtain open, The Strangers makes you think twice about going home.
«Sailor Moon» will always make me smile when I think about it or watch it again, and I'm sure a lot of anime fans feel the same way about the movies, shows, or manga they're obsessed with.
Ahmed Mohamed says he made the clock to impress one of his teachers; The 14 - year - old freshman says he is thinking about Search results page for keyword: 18 Year Old, enjoy tube porn movies from Tube8, Xhamster, Hardsextube, Shufuni in one place,
I think when they made the movie they knew the dancing would keep the people interested enough to see the movie.I don't know about you but at my prom night nobody danced like a pro, thats what I liked about the original.
The problem with the whole movie is it makes you think that dogs are all about peeing and making gas.
The movie has something to say about celebrity obsession, although I think (hope) we have not quite got to the point of worshipping a celebrity so much you would pay to be infected with a virus they had or eat meat genetically made from them, as is shown here.
A lot in this movie is stupid or makes no sense when you think about it - like the truth about the Bleeder's face and how that asylum doesn't have any emergency generator -, but it has its moments and Palance, Pleasence and Landau seem to be having crazy fun as sick f *** s.
I was trying to think about how The CW could make a racy - but - weepy soap opera out of either of these movies, and then the answer seemed obvious — you have to combine them.
I don't know how to approach what this has to say about the thought process behind scripting this movie, as the film seems to make no presumptions whatsoever.
I think Heath Ledger benefited (as did the movie) from being about a subject that not many movies had been made about.
What is it about a game that you think can make a more effective horror experience than movies or fiction?
At the film's press day, actor Paul Giamatti, who's also an executive producer on the movie, talked about what drew him to John Dies at the End, his most memorable experience of the shoot, working with such new actors, how he sees the industry now, and that he doesn't think a film like Sideways would even get made today.
If nothing else, it sure makes me wonder what Collyer thinks of Jenny Lumet's script, if not the slew of awards Demme's movie is about to collect.
I think the production tried though I feel that the movie was done on the cheap side without any innovative thought to the film making or script (Which is how I usually feel about Rodriguez films who I still consider a hack).
But I will say that making this movie and kind of what we had to contend with, as actors, in making something like this, all of the pieces that Naomi was talking about had to — you know, having the table moving out and needing to rely on each other the way the company does, I think is incredibly helpful now going into theatre in that way and realizing that you're you know you operate very much as a unit.
Paul and I had talked about making a movie specifically in this process for a long period of time, so the first idea that came in my mind was having him as this Alvin character and then thinking about who would be an interesting counterpart with him.
Ultimately my ballot is a great guide to movies I think deserved to be on the list that didn't make it, so I'll pick a movie from there that I haven't written much about and say Mississippi Grind.
It definitely leaves you wanting more, to the extent that I thought they should have made another movie just about them.
Did making this movie change the way you think about the drug war or the border?
Wow, I didn't think I cared about this movie, but you made me want to see it — especially with the description of the last scene.
On Robert Bresson [New York Times] The great French filmmaker Robert Bresson (1901 - 1999) not only made movies but also gave instructions about how his films might be watched and thought about.
I judged too quickly, thinking him one of those actors who prides himself on making the big bad movies in order to fund the small good ones — a kind of vanity tax upon the audience, whereby the pointless shoot -»em - up is the price we supposedly pay for the chilly little chamber piece about divorce.
Get Out is a great movie, and one of the few I saw this year that made me think for a long while about the story I tell myself about the life I live.
But that doesn't make sense, because in the movie Mom mentions that, when she became pregnant, she thought about returning home to mother.
«Letters From Jackie — The Private Thoughts of Jackie Robinson»: If the movie «42» makes viewers want to learn more about Robinson, this documentary can fill the void.
Which, oddly enough, makes this far more tolerable than any Michael Bay movie, ideal for those who want to watch a bunch of cars blow each other up, without having to, you know, think about it all that much.
This is not the sort of movie that inspires books about how it was made, but I imagine a good book - and even a good movie - could be based on whatever in the world they thought they were doing when they made «The January Man.»
Dark Places may well be an enjoyable movie, but it's not a great sign that the trailer is making me think about other movies.
I'm not Marvel so I can't make it happen, but I can tell you that Marvel is hugely collaborative, I think our even our Thor movie was basically the product of conversations they'd had with Chris and with Mark about what they wanted to do next.
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