Bill Butler, the British-born film editor who received an Oscar nomination for his work on Stanley Kubrick's 1971 classic A Clockwork Orange, has died. He was 83.
Butler died June 4 at a hospital in Sherman Oaks, his son Stephen Butler told The Hollywood Reporter.
Butler earned his first film editor credit when he collaborated with Melvin Frank on the romantic comedy Buona Sera, Mrs. Campbell (1968), starring Gina Lollobrigida, and he also edited A Touch of Class (1973), The Duchess and the Dirtwater Fox (1976) and Lost and Found (1979) — all three starring George Segal — for the...
Butler died June 4 at a hospital in Sherman Oaks, his son Stephen Butler told The Hollywood Reporter.
Butler earned his first film editor credit when he collaborated with Melvin Frank on the romantic comedy Buona Sera, Mrs. Campbell (1968), starring Gina Lollobrigida, and he also edited A Touch of Class (1973), The Duchess and the Dirtwater Fox (1976) and Lost and Found (1979) — all three starring George Segal — for the...
- 6/16/2017
- by Mike Barnes
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Brand makes TV debut with campaign claimed to be 'David Lynch meets Desperate Housewives'
The pudding brand Gü has drawn inspiration from David Lynch's cult 1990s series Twin Peaks in an unsettling ad campaign that marks the brand's debut on TV.
The TV campaign, described by ad agency Mother as also having a touch of the ABC hit series Desperate Housewives, features a well-dressed middle-aged woman "drawn into a dark world of sensual abandon", and can be seen for the first time here.
The woman is drawn into a room of a house where a stranger seems to be entertaining a number of woman with the promise of food and the bizarre question "Gü you Ganache?", which has echoes of the backward speaking dwarf in a red suit from Twin Peaks.
However it is not a delicious slice of cherry pie, the favourite of Kyle McLachlan's special...
The pudding brand Gü has drawn inspiration from David Lynch's cult 1990s series Twin Peaks in an unsettling ad campaign that marks the brand's debut on TV.
The TV campaign, described by ad agency Mother as also having a touch of the ABC hit series Desperate Housewives, features a well-dressed middle-aged woman "drawn into a dark world of sensual abandon", and can be seen for the first time here.
The woman is drawn into a room of a house where a stranger seems to be entertaining a number of woman with the promise of food and the bizarre question "Gü you Ganache?", which has echoes of the backward speaking dwarf in a red suit from Twin Peaks.
However it is not a delicious slice of cherry pie, the favourite of Kyle McLachlan's special...
- 3/8/2010
- by Mark Sweney
- The Guardian - Film News
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