About his ability to marshal big egos there can be little doubt, but his camera bobs all over the axis of action like a first -
year film student, and he shows almost no command of tone, reducing the material's vaguely satirical detours into perversion (incest!
Not exact matches
The Houston Press: San Benito Teacher Replaced After Bizarre Classroom Rant About Jesus, Mary Magdalene, UFOs & The Apocalypse A ninth - grade teacher at San Benito's Veterans Memorial High School has been replaced for the remainder of the
year after her lesson plan went badly awry last Tuesday and her 12 - minute rant was
filmed by a
student and uploaded to YouTube.
In the
film, leaders from all sides of the school food debate, including government officials, school foodservice experts, activists, and
students, weigh in on the program and discuss ways to continue nourishing America's children for another 60
years.
Following yesterday's attack on a NYC cab driver by a 21 -
year - old
film student who asked «Are you a Muslim?»
Tom, a 22 -
year - old
student, was re-creating a version of the diet made famous in the
film Supersize Me.
I am crazy enough to decide after many
years of work for the same company that life is about making dreams come true - which led me to becoming a
film school
student at the age of 30; — RRB - This is what I am actually loo..
I'm a lonely 21
year old
film student that goes to a school with less than 15 % girls.
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Here, a 25 -
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It's currently a given that Stanley Kubrick «s «2001: A Space Odyssey» is a classic, and generations of critics and
film students have collectively deduced its storyline over the
years.
Justin Simien's debut
film — a big hit at this
year's Sundance
Film Festival — looks at the state of race relations on the campus of Winchester University through the lives of four black
students.
When Anne (Riva) experiences a moment of lost time one day at the breakfast table across from her husband of over 40
years, Georges (Trintignant), it's fleeting, but it signals the end of the active - senior's life — proudly attending concerts starring world - famous former piano
students, doing the shopping, being generally engaged and mobile in their affluent retirement — we've briefly glimpsed at the beginning of the
film.
Each
year, this select group of
film enthusiasts, filmmakers, professionals, academics and
students of varying ages and backgrounds watches over 250
films and participates in illuminating discussions with directors, actors, producers and screenwriters before announcing their selections for the best work of the
year in early December prior to an annual ceremony in January.
Both
films follow a group of
students (in 1980, Maureen Teefy, Irene Cara, Paul McCrane, and Barry Miller are the stand outs, in 2009, it's Kay Panabaker, Naturi Naughton, Walter Perez, and Paul Iacono) through their four
years at a prestigious New York performance arts school where they learn to act, sing and dance.
The highlights of my
film year were trips to BAFICI 14 in Buenos Aires with a few
students — where one venue was dedicated to showing 16 mm experimental
films!
The
film premiered to wildly positive reviews at Sundance earlier this
year, and stars Miles Teller as a young high school
student who strikes...
Some eighty
years later, Yale graduate
student James Franco decided to make a
film from that novel.
This
year's festival featured a lot of new shorts by SCAD
film students, and the premieres of new features such as Bill Condon's «Kinsey» and «Undertow,» by David Gordon Green, who found many of his crew members at SCAD.
The Directing Award: U.S. Dramatic was presented to: Sara Colangelo, for her
film The Kindergarten Teacher (Director & Screenwriter: Sara Colangelo, Producers: Talia Kleinhendler, Osnat Handelsman - Keren, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Celine Rattray, Trudie Styler)-- When a Staten Island kindergarten teacher discovers what may be a gifted five
year - old
student in her class, she becomes fascinated and obsessed with the child — spiraling downward on a dangerous and desperate path in order to nurture his talent.
The existence of God becomes a major concern for the
film's protagonist, 10 -
year - old Catholic school
student Joshua Beal (newcomer Joseph Cross, in a promising debut) after his beloved grandfather (Robert Loggia) dies of bone marrow cancer.
In the
film, which is already generating Oscar buzz, the 31 -
year - old actor portrays Oliver, a graduate
student who sparks a romantic relationship with Eli, a 17 -
year - old boy who lives at the cliff - side mansion on the Italian Riviera where Oliver is staying.
The cry of the thunder being stolen you hear is from the National Board of Review, the anonymous «select group of
film enthusiasts, filmmakers, professionals, academics and
students» who host a big celebrity awards party each
year.
The set also includes a five - minute excerpt from Tarkovsky's 45 - minute
student film The Steamroller and the Violin, which was released in its entirety on DVD several
years ago by Facets.
Just as these three
films were eye - opening because of how they allow viewers, 50
years later, to witness the emerging
student movement and its rapid radicalisation, so a feature - length fiction
film from the same
year, Tätowierung (Tattoo, Johannes Schaaf, 1967), proved to be a real discovery and, in my view, one of the festival's true gems.
This was a minor disruption compared to the previous
year, when the festival was nearly cancelled due to a political conflict between the city and the festival organisers, relating to the screening of an anti-government documentary in 2014.1 Much has changed in the past
year, most notably the impeachment of right - wing President Park Geun - hye, whose government the documentary had targeted, and the election of the left - liberal party headed by Moon Jae - in.2 While the contentious political atmosphere has not entirely dissipated, as evidenced by the
student protest groups still demanding an apology from the local city government, this
year's festival was an attempt to return to normalcy, despite the untimely death of one of the festival's driving forces, deputy director Kim Ji - seok, a much beloved figure within the community.3 Although the festival had a strong selection of international entries, including some of the best this
year has to offer, such as Ruben Östlund's Palme d'Or winner The Square and Sean Baker's The Florida Project, I have decided to focus my report on the Korean
films.
The 23rd annual Austin
Film Festival is now accepting applications for this
year's
film competition in eight categories including feature - length narrative, short
film, and narrative
student short.
Among the high - profile premieres this
year are «Antz,» the new Dreamworks animated
film; James Ivory's «A Soldier's Daughter Never Cries,» with Kris Kristofferson playing a character inspired by novelist James Jones; «Dancing at Lughnasa,» starring Meryl Streep in the
film of Brian Friel's celebrated play; John Waters» «Pecker,» with Edward Furlong as a fast - food worker whose photos are embraced by the New York art world; Helena Bonham Carter and Kenneth Branagh in «The Theory of Flight,» about a work - release prisoner assigned to a woman with Lou Gehrig's disease; Ben Stiller as a drug - addicted TV writer in «Permanent Midnight»; Christina Ricci in «Desert Blue,» about slim prospects for a teenager in a town of 89 people; «The Imposters,» the new
film by Stanley («Big Night») Tucci, starring Tucci and Oliver Platt as cruise - ship stowaways; «Rushmore,» with Jason Schwartzmann as a prep schooler who is a lousy
student but hyperactive in campus activities; Cameron Diaz in «Very Bad Things,» about a bachelor party that ends in murder; Cate Blanchett as «Elizabeth,» the story of England's 16th century monarch, and «The Judas Kiss,» with FBI agent Emma Thompson on the trail of the kidnapper of a computer genius.
Sarah Tither - Kaplan, a former acting
student at the
film school Franco founded, claims that during a nude orgy scene she
filmed with Franco and several other women three
years ago, the star «removed protective plastic guards covering other actresses» vaginas while simulating oral sex on them».
Replacing Kevin Spacey (because of sexual misconduct allegations) with Oscar winner Christopher Plummer («Beginners»), and having him tap into the psyche of a new, unfamiliar character, and execute it with the sheer ferocity in which he displays, is an achievement that
film students and filmmakers will study for
years to come.
31
years old during
filming, Turner isn't convincing as either a middle - aged mother or a high school
student.
From 2D animation, stop - motion, and live action, a wide variety of short features were exhibited representing the finest
student films made in Canada this past
year.
In the last
film, directed by Italy's Luca Guadagnino, Chalamet stars as a high schooler who falls in love with the dashing 24 -
year - old grad
student (Armie Hammer) studying under his father for a summer.
But this
year's slate also featured several
films centered on relationships between older women and younger men: Hannah Fidel's A Teacher, which concerns an affair between a high school teacher and a
student; Liz W. Garcia's The Lifeguard, in which Kristen Bell takes up with a teenage boy; and Two Mothers, in which Robin Wright and Naomi Watts are friends who each get with the other's teenage son.
The
film follows a 20 -
year old New York University
student who moves to California for a summer of surfing, only to see his strong - willed magazine editor mother following him to the West Coast when she learns of his opportunity - wasting exercise.
Some
years ago, I screened Nicolas Roeg's 1973
film Don't Look Now for a group of international
students who were learning English.
In the
film, 19 -
year - old Andrew Neyman (Miles Teller, «The Spectacular Now»), an ambitious drumming
student enrolled at the prestigious Shaffer Conservatory of Music (fictional) in midtown Manhattan, comes under the tutelage of Terence Fletcher (J.K. Simmons, «Contraband»), a high - ranking instructor who is well - known for pushing his
students to the limits of their endurance and beyond.
He was a skint 23 -
year - old
student who desperately wanted her to star in his short
film.
My personal cultural philosophy mirrors the Native Program's philosophy: For four
years I have been the director of the Sundance - supported Museum of Indian Arts and Culture (MIAC) Native Youth Film Camp, which teaches Native
students ages 14 - to - 18 script - to - screen skills as they make 6 - to - 8 short
films per camp.
Receiving a B.A. in Cinema and Photography at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale with a minor in journalism, he also served as director of the
Student Programming Council's
film schedule his senior
year.
Starring Saoirse Ronan as the eponymous high school
student over her senior
year as she navigates filial, romantic, and platonic relationships in the staid environs of Sacramento, it is one of the sweetest and most deeply felt
films of the
year.
As the most socially relevant genre
film of the
year, The Dirties should be (but won't) essential viewing for every teacher, school administrator and high school
student in the country.
Kyle Patrick Alvarez («C.O.G.») will direct a
film «based on the landmark experiment conducted at Stanford University in the summer of 1971, in which randomly - chosen 19 and 20 -
year - old
students were divided into camps of either prison guards or prisoners.
The
film is based on the strange case of 21
year - old Canadian
student Elisa Lam, who was found dead in the water tanks on the roof of the Cecil, a month after her disappearance in January last
year.
Adriana Floridia is a 4th
year communications
student who has been passionate about
film her whole life.
For instance, last
year we had the fantastic Troll Hunter, a Norwegian fantasy
film directed by Andre Ovredal about a group of
students who get more than they bargained for when they attempt to capture the actions of a supposed bear poacher on camera.
Bianco's short
film «Share» snabbed an award at this
year's Cannes
Film Festival, took home the Jury Award for Best
Student Short
Film at the Provincetown
Film Fest and received Special Jury Recognition at SXSW.
The
film, a heart - wrenching romance adapted from the 2007 novel by André Aciman, follows 17 -
year - old Elio as he falls in love with Oliver (Armie Hammer), the older, taller and blonder American
student living with his family for the summer.
Luca Guadagnino's gorgeous new
film Call Me By Your Name adapts André Aciman's 2007 novel about a precocious 17 -
year - old named Elio (Timothée Chalamet), who falls in lust and love with his father's 24 -
year - old graduate
student, Oliver (Armie Hammer).
Luca Guadagnino's new
film, which adapts André Aciman's 2007 novel about a precocious 17 -
year - old who falls in lust and love with his father's 24 -
year - old graduate
student, is remarkable for how it turns literature into pure cinema, all emotion and image and heady sensation.
At the heart of the
film is an American graduate
student named Oliver (Armie Hammer, wielding dashing nonchalance to utmost charm) on archeological research in Italy and the
student's host professor's 17 -
year - old son, Elio (Timothée Chalamet), a sexually confident teen with the ladies who falls to emotional pieces when he crushes hard on Oliver.