Monday, January 5, 2015

Producers Guild's Film Nominees Go Indie


The Producers Guild of America on Monday announced its nominees for best film, a list that was heavy on indie features like "Boyhood" and "Whiplash" along with a couple of studio entries like "American Sniper" and "Gone Girl" joining the mix.

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'Grand Budapest Hotel,' 'Into The Woods' Among Art Directors Guild Nominees


"Interstellar" also among the nominees for the Art Directors Guild's 19th annual Excellence in Production Design Awards, which will be handed out Jan. 31 at the Beverly Hilton.

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Film Critics Are "Celebrity-Worshipping Awards-Givers"


At last year's New York Film Critics Circle awards dinner, critic Armond White was reported to have heckled Steve McQueen, who was accepting a best director award for 12 Years a Slave, by calling out, "You're an embarrassing doorman and garbage man."

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Oscars: 4 Animated Movies That Could Make History


Though no animated feature ever has been nominated for the best production design Oscar, there's nothing in the rule book to prevent that from happening. Animation filmmakers argue it's time that their production design teams get their due. After all, everything they create is built entirely from scratch.

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Sunday, January 4, 2015

DreamWorks Animation: Bonnie Arnold, Mireille Soria Co-Presidents of Feature Animation


"Mireille and Bonnie are two of the most accomplished and prolific filmmakers working in feature animation today," Katzenberg said in a statement. "I am confident in their ability to marshal the extensive creative resources available at our studio and lead DreamWorks' vast ranks of artists and filmmakers as they produce the highest quality entertainment."

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Thursday, September 4, 2014

Joan Rivers, Legendary Comedienne, Dies at 81


The breakthrough standup comic, writer, actress, fashion critic, red-carpet doyenne, gossip and businesswoman died Thursday at 1:17 p.m. local time at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York, her daughter Melissa announced.

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Cinematic Cuts Exploit How Your Brain Edits What You See


It’s amazing that film editing works, because it’s so disruptive to the visual information coming into the brain, says Jeffrey Zacks, a neuroscientist at Washington University in St. Louis. On the other hand, Zacks says, our brains do quite a bit of editing of their own—and we’re every bit as oblivious to that as we are to the film editor’s cuts.

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