John Lennon moved into The Dakota in 1973 and, according to those who have seen his ghost lingering outside, never left. The historic New York City apartment building reportedly has its fair share of ghosts, with Lennon amongst them. Visitors to the building have reported seeing Lennon’s ghost more than most of the building’s other spirits.
Guests to John Lennon’s apartment have seen his ghost
Lennon and Yoko Ono moved into the famed New York apartment building The Dakota seven years before his death. They raised their son, Sean Lennon, there, and Ono remained in the building for decades.
In 1980, Mark David Chapman shot Lennon outside The Dakota. Lennon and Ono were walking home from a recording session when Chapman attacked Lennon. Police officers rushed Lennon to the hospital, where doctors pronounced him dead on arrival.
The Dakota | Fpg/Getty Images
Even weeks after Lennon’s death, psychics...
Guests to John Lennon’s apartment have seen his ghost
Lennon and Yoko Ono moved into the famed New York apartment building The Dakota seven years before his death. They raised their son, Sean Lennon, there, and Ono remained in the building for decades.
In 1980, Mark David Chapman shot Lennon outside The Dakota. Lennon and Ono were walking home from a recording session when Chapman attacked Lennon. Police officers rushed Lennon to the hospital, where doctors pronounced him dead on arrival.
The Dakota | Fpg/Getty Images
Even weeks after Lennon’s death, psychics...
- 10/29/2023
- by Emma McKee
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
In October 2021, much of the world heard about the tragic fate of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins, who was killed when actor and producer Alec Baldwin discharged a firearm on the set of the movie “Rust” in New Mexico.
However, that project was not the only undertaking that the 42-year-old Ukrainian Dp had been working on at the time of her death. In September 2020, Hutchins joined director Dennis Hauck in Ireland for the production of a still-untitled 19th century period piece. Now, Hauck is trying to finish the work they started together.
“She was definitely one of those DPs that lived and breathed filmmaking,” Hauck said in a phone interview with IndieWire. “She had no ego. She just wanted to talk to everybody and learn everything she could.”
Hauck, who previously directed John Hawkes in the 2015 detective drama “Too Late,” serves as the sole producer of his second feature but described Hutchins as a key collaborator.
However, that project was not the only undertaking that the 42-year-old Ukrainian Dp had been working on at the time of her death. In September 2020, Hutchins joined director Dennis Hauck in Ireland for the production of a still-untitled 19th century period piece. Now, Hauck is trying to finish the work they started together.
“She was definitely one of those DPs that lived and breathed filmmaking,” Hauck said in a phone interview with IndieWire. “She had no ego. She just wanted to talk to everybody and learn everything she could.”
Hauck, who previously directed John Hawkes in the 2015 detective drama “Too Late,” serves as the sole producer of his second feature but described Hutchins as a key collaborator.
- 6/29/2022
- by Eric Kohn
- Indiewire
Adding even more firepower to its international sales slate ahead of Cannes, Content Media announced today that it has acquired international sales rights to “Pistorius” – a documentary feature about the inspiring, Olympic hero turned convicted murderer, Oscar Pistorius.
Content’s President of Film Jamie Carmichael and Head of Sales, Harry White will begin introducing the film to distributors in Cannes next week.
Vaughan Sivell (“Mr. Calzaghe”) is directing the film, which is currently in production, and is producing with Sean Richard with Western Edge Pictures and the Gennaker Group.
“Pistorius” is “Making a Murderer” meets “Senna” – a riveting true-crime story about a beloved sports icon.
At the 2012 Olympics, South Africa’s Oscar Pistorius (aka ‘The Blade Runner’) made history by becoming the first double-amputee sprinter to compete in the Olympics. He was one of the world’s most successful sportsmen, and an inspiration to millions.
Not even a year later,...
Content’s President of Film Jamie Carmichael and Head of Sales, Harry White will begin introducing the film to distributors in Cannes next week.
Vaughan Sivell (“Mr. Calzaghe”) is directing the film, which is currently in production, and is producing with Sean Richard with Western Edge Pictures and the Gennaker Group.
“Pistorius” is “Making a Murderer” meets “Senna” – a riveting true-crime story about a beloved sports icon.
At the 2012 Olympics, South Africa’s Oscar Pistorius (aka ‘The Blade Runner’) made history by becoming the first double-amputee sprinter to compete in the Olympics. He was one of the world’s most successful sportsmen, and an inspiration to millions.
Not even a year later,...
- 5/5/2016
- by Melissa Thompson
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
It’s hard to shake the influences behind writer/director Dennis Hauck’s feature debut Too Late.
Heavily inspired by the ’80s-’90s works from Martin Scorsese, Paul Thomas Anderson, Robert Altman and Quentin Tarantino, it’s one of those imitation films that always runs the risk of jeopardizing its own potential by basking in the shadows of its predecessors. And it is, indeed, perhaps just a little too reminiscent of those films — from Jackie Brown to Boogie Nights to Goodfellas — to really stand out on its own, or to become more than an elusive, moody wannabe at times.
But shot and projected entirely in 35mm film, and in a series of five single-shot acts, it’s nevertheless a beauty to behold. Impressive, if quite showy, in its presentation and bleeding with pulp, suave and sophistication, it’s a copycat for sure, but a damn good one — a crisp neo-noir...
Heavily inspired by the ’80s-’90s works from Martin Scorsese, Paul Thomas Anderson, Robert Altman and Quentin Tarantino, it’s one of those imitation films that always runs the risk of jeopardizing its own potential by basking in the shadows of its predecessors. And it is, indeed, perhaps just a little too reminiscent of those films — from Jackie Brown to Boogie Nights to Goodfellas — to really stand out on its own, or to become more than an elusive, moody wannabe at times.
But shot and projected entirely in 35mm film, and in a series of five single-shot acts, it’s nevertheless a beauty to behold. Impressive, if quite showy, in its presentation and bleeding with pulp, suave and sophistication, it’s a copycat for sure, but a damn good one — a crisp neo-noir...
- 4/27/2016
- by Will Ashton
- We Got This Covered
Following a list of some of the best recent American independent films, Girish Shambu offers notes on the work of Josephine Decker, Gina Telaroli, Khalik Allah, Jenni Olson, Amanda Rose Wilder, Joanna Arnow, Bingham Bryant and Kyle Molzan, Joe Swanberg, Kentucker Audley, Stephen Cone and Nathan Silver. Also in today's roundup: Jim Hemphill on Joe Dante's The Second Civil War, Jonathan Rosenbaum on Wong Kar-wai's Days of Being Wild and Edward Yang's A Brighter Summer Day, an interview with Steven Soderbergh, Lodge Kerrigan and Amy Seimetz, Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward on All the President's Men, Simon Callow on Orson Welles and a podcast featuring Dennis Hauck (Too Late), Joachim Trier (Louder Than Bombs) and Gabriel Mascaro (Neon Bull). » - David Hudson...
- 4/9/2016
- Keyframe
Following a list of some of the best recent American independent films, Girish Shambu offers notes on the work of Josephine Decker, Gina Telaroli, Khalik Allah, Jenni Olson, Amanda Rose Wilder, Joanna Arnow, Bingham Bryant and Kyle Molzan, Joe Swanberg, Kentucker Audley, Stephen Cone and Nathan Silver. Also in today's roundup: Jim Hemphill on Joe Dante's The Second Civil War, Jonathan Rosenbaum on Wong Kar-wai's Days of Being Wild and Edward Yang's A Brighter Summer Day, an interview with Steven Soderbergh, Lodge Kerrigan and Amy Seimetz, Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward on All the President's Men, Simon Callow on Orson Welles and a podcast featuring Dennis Hauck (Too Late), Joachim Trier (Louder Than Bombs) and Gabriel Mascaro (Neon Bull). » - David Hudson...
- 4/9/2016
- Fandor: Keyframe
There is a classic Hollywood feel that prevails throughout Dennis Hauck's debut feature Too Late. Namely this is due to the fact that it's shot on good old 35Mm film -- a feat almost never attempted in today's world of low budget indie features. Add that to the private eye storyline and La-soaked scenery (not to mention the "classic" treatment of the female characters) and you have a film that is aged well beyond its years. All of that works well for Hauck who should be hailed for a very stylish and assured debut. Note: If you're the kind of person who likes to go into a film completely blind, you may find some of the information in this review revealing. While there are no...
[Read the whole post on twitchfilm.com...]...
[Read the whole post on twitchfilm.com...]...
- 3/17/2016
- Screen Anarchy
A delayed title card is a bold cinematic move, a deliberate tactic usually used to punctuate a powerhouse setpiece full of invention and intrigue (see: “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,” “127 Hours”). It jumps in as a provocation, as though to say, “You thought that was cool? We haven’t even shown you the opening credits yet, so strap in.” In “Too Late,” after a 15-minute single take involving a fedora-wearing Rider Strong and Dash Mihok as hiking drug dealers talking movie tropes, a stripper who drops the word “sanguine” in conversation with a gangster-turned-park ranger, and sloppily executed, Altman-esque zooms across the skyline of downtown Los Angeles, instead, my only thought was simply, “Jesus, no.” What first-time director Dennis Hauck establishes here is a bizarro La that’s just picked up from where “Pulp Fiction” left off, and yet where “The Boondock Saints” hasn’t happened yet — it’s...
- 3/16/2016
- by Charlie Schmidlin
- The Playlist
A grizzled private eye, the underbelly of Los Angeles and elaborately long takes in grainy Techniscope 35mm form the aesthetic backbone of “Too Late,” writer-director Dennis Hauck’s extended cinematic wink for movie-movie lovers. This small, committed indie, simultaneously reverent toward and eager to one-up the likes of Tarantino, Scorsese and De Palma, has its share of ill-conceived moments and amateurish filmmaking, but as a swing-for-the-fences effort with a smattering of genre charm, it fully earns its inevitable destiny as a midnight movie curio. Wiry, hard-edged character actor John Hawkes stars as Mel Sampson, an investigator tracking the whereabouts of a.
- 3/16/2016
- by Robert Abele
- The Wrap
I’m not going to suggest that writer-director Dennis Hauck’s neo-noir Too Late is particularly throwing shade at 2015 Oscar-winner Birdman, but it’s impossible not to compare the two films. Where Birdman used studio trickery to simulate one long uninterrupted take, Too Late is the real deal. Comprised of 5 acts, each a single, 20-minute long take, the story follows a world-weary detective (John Hawkes) as he insinuates himself into the underbelly of Los Angeles as he…...
- 3/9/2016
- Deadline
In Dennis Hauck’s Too Late, the always great John Hawkes stars as a private investigator looking into the death of a young woman. The movie was shot in terrific 35mm and each scene is an uncut and runs the length of one reel (about twenty minutes). The trailer makes it look that much more amazing with its performances of course; this is another movie to watch out for this year.
Here’s the official synopsis:
Private investigator Mel Sampson (Academy Award nominee John Hawkes) is tasked with tracking down the whereabouts of a missing woman from his own past. With this familiar setup, Too Late takes the spine of the classic private eye genre and tears it to pieces, weaving it back together into a tapestry of southern California and the menagerie of eccentric personalities and lost souls who inhabit it. From the desolate, overgrown Radio Hill to the...
Here’s the official synopsis:
Private investigator Mel Sampson (Academy Award nominee John Hawkes) is tasked with tracking down the whereabouts of a missing woman from his own past. With this familiar setup, Too Late takes the spine of the classic private eye genre and tears it to pieces, weaving it back together into a tapestry of southern California and the menagerie of eccentric personalities and lost souls who inhabit it. From the desolate, overgrown Radio Hill to the...
- 2/25/2016
- by Graham McMorrow
- City of Films
A movie about a missing woman... and a lost man. This looks quite good. Vanishing Angle has debuted an official trailer for Dennis Hauck's indie drama Too Late, starring John Hawkes as a private investigator searching for a missing woman. This crime noir follows him around various seedy parts of Los Angeles, encountering many interesting people. The full cast includes Crystal Reed, Dash Mihok, Rider Strong, Vail Bloom, Jeff Fahey, Robert Forster, Sydney Tamiia Poitier, Dichen Lachman, Sally Jaye, Natalie Zea, and Joanna Cassidy. The film will be released exclusively on 35mm in theaters across North America in Spring 2016, according to the website. If you're curious, definitely check out the trailer below. Here's the first official trailer (+ poster) for Dennis Hauck's Too Late, found via The Film Stage: Private investigator Mel Sampson (Academy Award nominee John Hawkes) is tasked with tracking down the whereabouts of a missing woman from his own past.
- 2/24/2016
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
The debut feature film from Dennis Hauck, "Too Late," brings with it an interesting concept: The filmmaker shot the movie on 35mm in a series of single Steadicam takes that last right up until the reel runs out. It adds an interesting element to the throwback-'90s crime flick that will arrive in limited release this spring at a theater near you in 35mm. Read More: Laff Review: Crime Drama 'Too Late' Starring John Hawkes, Robert Forster, Crystal Reed, And Natalie Zea Starring John Hawkes, Vail Bloom, Joanna Cassidy, Jeff Fahey, Robert Forster, Brett Jacobsen, Dichen Lachman, Dash Mihok, Sydney Tamiia Poitier, Crystal Reed, Rider Strong, and Natalie Zea, the non-linear story, with shades of "Pulp Fiction," follows a private detective tasked with finding a missing woman. Here's the synopsis: From desolate, overgrown Radio Hill to the ritzy penthouse of The Beverly Hilton, Too Late offers remarkable views...
- 2/24/2016
- by Kevin Jagernauth
- The Playlist
A stand-out in virtually every project he’s part of, we’re always ready for another performance from John Hawkes. His latest film, Too Late, finds him as a private investigator in Los Angeles hunting down a missing woman. However, it likely won’t be the story that gets talked about most (at least initially) when it comes to Dennis Hauck’s feature, but rather the structure and exhibition. It’s composed of five acts, each a single, uncut 20-minute-plus shot (roughly the length of an entire projected film reel), and it’s being released in the now-rare, 35mm-exclusive format starting next month.
We said in our review, “A bit reminiscent of John Herzfeld’s Two Days in the Valley, the tale is woven from several different perspectives of an ensemble cast that all come nicely together at the end to complete a compelling puzzle. While there is a definite fetishization of Tarantino-style dialogue,...
We said in our review, “A bit reminiscent of John Herzfeld’s Two Days in the Valley, the tale is woven from several different perspectives of an ensemble cast that all come nicely together at the end to complete a compelling puzzle. While there is a definite fetishization of Tarantino-style dialogue,...
- 2/24/2016
- by Jordan Raup
- The Film Stage
Recent films as disparate as The End of the Tour and Spectre were shot in 35mm. But Too Late, which stars John Hawkes as a troubled private investigator tasked with finding a missing woman, takes the 35mm trend one step further. Shot in the 35mm Techniscope format, the film will get a special 35mm-only theatrical release in spring 2016. Written and directed by Dennis Hauck in his feature film debut, Too Late unfolds in five chapters. “We made this movie to be seen on the big screen, with an audience, and yes, on 35mm,” said Hauck in a statement. “Home video, streaming, and VOD are all great, but […]...
- 12/17/2015
- by Paula Bernstein
- Filmmaker Magazine - Blog
Recent films as disparate as The End of the Tour and Spectre were shot in 35mm. But Too Late, which stars John Hawkes as a troubled private investigator tasked with finding a missing woman, takes the 35mm trend one step further. Shot in the 35mm Techniscope format, the film will get a special 35mm-only theatrical release in spring 2016. Written and directed by Dennis Hauck in his feature film debut, Too Late unfolds in five chapters. “We made this movie to be seen on the big screen, with an audience, and yes, on 35mm,” said Hauck in a statement. “Home video, streaming, and VOD are all great, but […]...
- 12/17/2015
- by Paula Bernstein
- Filmmaker Magazine-Director Interviews
Read More: John Hawkes is a Lost Man in Exclusive 'Too Late' Poster Debut Chalk this one up as a victory for film! Dennis Hauck's feature directorial debut "Too Late," starring Academy Award nominee John Hawkes, is set to be released in theaters this spring exclusively on 35mm. The crime drama sees Hawkes as a troubled private eye who gets entangled with a missing woman he is hired to find. Filmed in the 35mm Techniscope format, "Too Late" takes place over five acts, each filmed with a single 20-minute uncut shot. In a time when straight-to-vod and digital theatrical exhibition reigns supreme, the defiant filmmakers and distributors of "Too Late" have partnered with Michael Tuckman's mTuckman Media and Alamo Drafthouse cinemas to ensure that the film be seen as intended. "We made this movie to be seen on the big screen, with an audience, and yes, on 35mm,...
- 12/17/2015
- by Tarek Shoukri
- Indiewire
Matt Miller’s Vanishing Angle is teaming up with writer-director Dennis Hauck’s Foe Killer Films for the North American release of Hauck’s feature directorial debut “Too Late” starring Oscar-nominated actor John Hawkes. In an age where straight-to-vod and token day-and-date theatrical has become the norm, “Too Late” will receive a nationwide theatrical release this spring, exclusively on 35mm. There will be no Dcp bookings. The filmmakers have partnered with Michael Tuckman’s mTuckman Media for the release, which will begin on March 18th in Los Angeles and March 25th in New York before expanding to other markets across the country.
- 12/17/2015
- by Jeff Sneider
- The Wrap
Plus: Top Gun, Ghostbusters make it on to National Film Registry; The Club, Jauja among Cinema Tropical nominees; and more…The Austin Film Critics Association has nominated Carol for seven awards including best picture, best director for Todd Haynes and best actress for Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara. Winners are announced on December 29.The Club, Jauja, Los Hongos, The Princess Of France and White Out, Black In are nominated for best film in the 6th Annual Cinema Tropical Awards. Winner will be announced in New York on January 20, 2016. For the complete list of nominees click here.Top Gun and Ghostbusters are among the 25 films named to the National Film Registry of the Library Of Congress. Other new entries on the 675-strong roster of America’s cinematic heritage include The Shawshank Redemption, Being There and the 1931 Spanish-language version of Dracula. For the full list click here.Chadwick Boseman will star as attorney Thurgood Marshall in courtroom thriller Marshall...
- 12/16/2015
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
The sales company is gearing up to introduce buyers next week to Defy Media and Lorenzo di Bonaventura’s sci-fi.
Content will show first footage from Higher Power, which is described as X-Men meets Chronicle and centres on an everyman who develops powers after he risks his life to save his daughter.
Ron Eldard stars alongside Colm Feore, Jordan Hinson Austin Stowell and Jade Tailor.
Content film president Jamie Carmichael and head of sales Harry White will debut footage. CAA co-represents Us rights with Content.
Content financed the project with Defy Media, a leading content creator targeting the 12-34 demographic.
Matthew Santoro, an effects artist on X-Men: Wolverine among others, directs from a screenplay by Julia Fair
Di Bonaventura producers with Greg Siegel, Evan Cholfin and Ross M Dinerstein of Campfire. Carmichael serves as executive producer.
Content Media’s slate includes Dennis Hauck’s neo-noir detective thriller Too Late starring John Hawkes; Joel David Moore’s [link...
Content will show first footage from Higher Power, which is described as X-Men meets Chronicle and centres on an everyman who develops powers after he risks his life to save his daughter.
Ron Eldard stars alongside Colm Feore, Jordan Hinson Austin Stowell and Jade Tailor.
Content film president Jamie Carmichael and head of sales Harry White will debut footage. CAA co-represents Us rights with Content.
Content financed the project with Defy Media, a leading content creator targeting the 12-34 demographic.
Matthew Santoro, an effects artist on X-Men: Wolverine among others, directs from a screenplay by Julia Fair
Di Bonaventura producers with Greg Siegel, Evan Cholfin and Ross M Dinerstein of Campfire. Carmichael serves as executive producer.
Content Media’s slate includes Dennis Hauck’s neo-noir detective thriller Too Late starring John Hawkes; Joel David Moore’s [link...
- 10/29/2015
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
A seedy Los Angeles-set crime caper filtered through an Elmore Leonard novel is where you might find Dennis Hauck’s debut feature film Too Late. Presented out of sequence as five unbroken twenty minute shots, the film has an undeniable theatrical quality, with each scene feeling like an act of a play being performed out of order. And it’s all shot on 35mm film, giving it that unique grainy texture, all while giving credence to the fact that Hauck is paying tribute to the vintage era of cinema. A bit reminiscent of John Herzfeld’s Two Days in the Valley, the tale is woven from several different perspectives of an ensemble cast that all come nicely together at the end to complete a compelling puzzle. While there is a definite fetishization of Tarantino-style dialogue, characters and even plotting, Too Late does an admirable job of paying homage to this...
- 10/10/2015
- by Raffi Asdourian
- The Film Stage
Dennis Hauck's twisty noir "Too Late" takes the classic logline of a "a woman in trouble" to Los Angeles, and to dizzying cinematic heights in beautiful 35mm in five scenes, each of which is one long 20-minute take. John Hawkes plays your archetypal hardboiled gumshoe, a lost man who trails a missing person through the seedy wilds of the city, and into the night. Writer/director Hauck's use of 35mm shapes the film's lived-in texture, transporting us to a Los Angeles that feels family but also like a dream place that could only exist in the movies. "That's all I've ever shot on," said Hauck in a phone interview. He and his cinematographer Bill Fernandez, who also lensed his previous shorts on film, were "probably among the last film school generations to learn on film," before the Red and the Alexa became industry standards. The film's occasionally desultory, episodic...
- 9/25/2015
- by Ryan Lattanzio
- Thompson on Hollywood
Bruce Campbell and Edgar Wright will be on hand for a groovy 35mm double bill of The Evil Dead and Evil Dead II at this October's Beyond Fest, held in Los Angeles and presented by Shudder. Other screening highlights include the Kurt Russell-starring Bone Tomahawk, Karyn Kusama's The Invitation, the Henry Rollins-starring He Never Died, and much more.
Press Release: Los Angeles, CA - Thursday, September 3, 2015- Beyond Fest, the highest attended genre film festival in the Us, is excited to announce its full slate of 2015 programming featuring 25 events of mind-bending, movie madness. Presented by Shudder, Beyond Fest returns to Hollywood's famed Egyptian Theatre for 11 days of movies, music and mayhem spanning Thursday, October 1st - Monday, October 12th to generate funds for co-presenter, the nonprofit American Cinematheque.
With a diverse slate that includes films from all corners of the globe Beyond Fest is proud to present...
Press Release: Los Angeles, CA - Thursday, September 3, 2015- Beyond Fest, the highest attended genre film festival in the Us, is excited to announce its full slate of 2015 programming featuring 25 events of mind-bending, movie madness. Presented by Shudder, Beyond Fest returns to Hollywood's famed Egyptian Theatre for 11 days of movies, music and mayhem spanning Thursday, October 1st - Monday, October 12th to generate funds for co-presenter, the nonprofit American Cinematheque.
With a diverse slate that includes films from all corners of the globe Beyond Fest is proud to present...
- 9/3/2015
- by Derek Anderson
- DailyDead
Us actress best known for roles in Blade Runner and Who Framed Roger Rabbit.
The 22nd Oldenburg International Film Festival (Sept 16-20) will this year honour actress Joanna Cassidy.
Cassidy will attend with her latest film Too Late, a neo-noir thriller from first-time director Dennis Hauck. The film will have its international premiere at the festival.
Screen SubscribersINTERVIEW: Torsten Neumann, Oldenburg festival director
There will also be screenings of Cassidy’s most famous films, Blade Runner, Under Fire and Who Framed Roger Rabbit; each film will be preceded by an introduction from the actress.
Cassidy began her career on the small screen in the 1970s with cameo roles in Mission: Impossible and Starsky & Hutch, before her breakthrough as the replicant Zhora in Ridley Scott’s classic sci-fi Blade Runner.
She went on to act on screen alongside Bob Hoskins, Gene Hackman and Nick Nolte among others.
The festival will open with a screening of Elisabeth Scharang’s Jack...
The 22nd Oldenburg International Film Festival (Sept 16-20) will this year honour actress Joanna Cassidy.
Cassidy will attend with her latest film Too Late, a neo-noir thriller from first-time director Dennis Hauck. The film will have its international premiere at the festival.
Screen SubscribersINTERVIEW: Torsten Neumann, Oldenburg festival director
There will also be screenings of Cassidy’s most famous films, Blade Runner, Under Fire and Who Framed Roger Rabbit; each film will be preceded by an introduction from the actress.
Cassidy began her career on the small screen in the 1970s with cameo roles in Mission: Impossible and Starsky & Hutch, before her breakthrough as the replicant Zhora in Ridley Scott’s classic sci-fi Blade Runner.
She went on to act on screen alongside Bob Hoskins, Gene Hackman and Nick Nolte among others.
The festival will open with a screening of Elisabeth Scharang’s Jack...
- 9/2/2015
- ScreenDaily
President of film Jamie Carmichael and head of sales Harry White will debut footage from the road trip comedy in Toronto after coming on to handle international sales.
Youth In Oregon stars Frank Langella, Billy Crudup, Christina Applegate, Josh Lucas, Nicola Peltz and Alex Shaffer in the story of a man who must help his embittered father-in-law rekindle his will to live.
Paradigm handles Us sales for the film, which is in post-production.
Joel David Moore directed from a screenplay by Andrew Eisen and the producers are Stefan Nowicki, Morgan White and Joey Carey of Sundial Pictures. Ross M Dinerstein of Campfire serves as executive producer.
“Youth in Oregon reminds us of the importance of family, free-will, and forgiveness – with incredible performances from its stellar cast – that will have audiences laughing through their tears,” said Carmichael.
Content Media’s slate includes Dennis Hauck’s neo-noir Too Late starring John Hawkes; Venice and Toronto selection Janis: Little Girl Blue from Amy Berg...
Youth In Oregon stars Frank Langella, Billy Crudup, Christina Applegate, Josh Lucas, Nicola Peltz and Alex Shaffer in the story of a man who must help his embittered father-in-law rekindle his will to live.
Paradigm handles Us sales for the film, which is in post-production.
Joel David Moore directed from a screenplay by Andrew Eisen and the producers are Stefan Nowicki, Morgan White and Joey Carey of Sundial Pictures. Ross M Dinerstein of Campfire serves as executive producer.
“Youth in Oregon reminds us of the importance of family, free-will, and forgiveness – with incredible performances from its stellar cast – that will have audiences laughing through their tears,” said Carmichael.
Content Media’s slate includes Dennis Hauck’s neo-noir Too Late starring John Hawkes; Venice and Toronto selection Janis: Little Girl Blue from Amy Berg...
- 9/1/2015
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
President of film Jamie Carmichael and head of sales Harry White will debut footage from the road trip comedy in Toronto after coming on to handle international sales.
Frank Langella, Billy Crudup, Christina Applegate, Josh Lucas, Nicola Peltz and Alex Shaffer star in the story of a man who must help his embittered father-in-law rekindle his will to live.
Paradigm handles Us sales for Youth In Oregon, which is in post-production.
Joel David Moore directed from a screenplay by Andrew Eisen and the producers are Stefan Nowicki, Morgan White and Joey Carey of Sundial Pictures. Ross M Dinerstein of Campfire serves as executive producer.
“Youth in Oregon reminds us of the importance of family, free-will, and forgiveness – with incredible performances from its stellar cast – that will have audiences laughing through their tears,” said Carmichael.
Content Media’s slate includes Dennis Hauck’s neo-noir Too Late starring John Hawkes; Venice and Toronto selection Janis: Little Girl Blue from Amy Berg...
Frank Langella, Billy Crudup, Christina Applegate, Josh Lucas, Nicola Peltz and Alex Shaffer star in the story of a man who must help his embittered father-in-law rekindle his will to live.
Paradigm handles Us sales for Youth In Oregon, which is in post-production.
Joel David Moore directed from a screenplay by Andrew Eisen and the producers are Stefan Nowicki, Morgan White and Joey Carey of Sundial Pictures. Ross M Dinerstein of Campfire serves as executive producer.
“Youth in Oregon reminds us of the importance of family, free-will, and forgiveness – with incredible performances from its stellar cast – that will have audiences laughing through their tears,” said Carmichael.
Content Media’s slate includes Dennis Hauck’s neo-noir Too Late starring John Hawkes; Venice and Toronto selection Janis: Little Girl Blue from Amy Berg...
- 9/1/2015
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
It is time for me to make my peace with the fact that I will not be at Fantastic Fest this year. Last year's fest was one of my favorites ever, fitting for a tenth anniversary, and I would love to go this year. It's just not in the cards, though. It guts me, too. The event continues to grow and change and evolve, and it features one of the greatest programming teams in the business right now. There are films playing at the festival that I'll see in Toronto, and I'm sure I'll catch up with others, but that's not the point. Fantastic Fest is an experience, and an amazing one. If you want to go, you still can. "Daytime Only Badges, Fan Badges, and 2Nd Half Badges for Fantastic Fest 2015 are available for purchase here," today's press release urged. If you can go for the second half, you'll...
- 8/27/2015
- by Drew McWeeny
- Hitfix
One of the greatest genre film festivals in the world (some say the best) has just announced its second wave of titles, including a few titles so anticipated you’ll wish you’re in Austin next month. Below are 35 more films to add to the 23 already announced in the first wave. They include Ridley Scott’s The Martian, Yorgos Lanthimos’ The Lobster, Ben Wheatley’s adaptation of J.G. Ballard’s High-Rise and Jeremy Saulnier’s follow up to Blue Ruin, The Green Room. In addition to the films, Fantastic Fest is also delivering something special this year with a performance from Itchy-o – “a blazing, 32-member aural assault from the darkest depths of Colorado.” Fantastic Fest will also host the World Premiere of Lazer Team, the first feature film from web series gods Rooster Teeth. “This is a big year for genre cinema. We’re exceptionally proud to honor incredible filmmakers...
- 8/27/2015
- by Ricky
- SoundOnSight
It’s hard to believe that we are a month away from what is possibly the best genre film festival in North America! After announcing a Kurt Russell included first wave, we get a wave that probably includes all the films I have the most interest in. The French remake of what I consider is one of Mario Bava’s best films, Rabid Dogs is included. Along with Jeremy Saulnier’s follow up from Blue Ruin, Green Room where Patrick Stewart plays a Neo-Nazi club owner, Ridley Scott’s The Martian, Ben Wheatley’s adaptation of High-Rise and the horror film that has some chilling buzz, The Witch, are all included. Check out the full listing below and wait with anticipation for our coverage of the festival!
Fantastic Fest is excited to announce the second wave of programming featuring the Us Premiere of Yorgos Lanthimos’ The Lobster as the opening night film.
Fantastic Fest is excited to announce the second wave of programming featuring the Us Premiere of Yorgos Lanthimos’ The Lobster as the opening night film.
- 8/26/2015
- by Andy Triefenbach
- Destroy the Brain
Austin, TX – Wednesday, August 26, 2015 — Fantastic Fest is excited to announce the second wave of programming featuring the Us Premiere of Yorgos Lanthimos’ The Lobster as the opening night film. Lanthimos will be in attendance to share his wonderfully surreal examination of human connections. Joining The Lobster is a dazzling array of the year’s most anticipated genre films from heavyweight directors including Ridley Scott’s sci-fi epic The Martian, Ben Wheatley’s High-rise and Jeremy Saulnier’s Green Room. Fantastic Fest will also host the World Premiere of Lazer Team, the first feature film from web series gods Rooster Teeth. Lazer Team director Matt Hullum and cast members Burnie Burns, Alan Ritchson, Colton Dunn, Michael Jones, and Gavin Free will be in attendance to celebrate the highly anticipated sci-fi comedy and join Fantastic Fest’s official opening night party, presented by Rooster Teeth. “This is a big year for genre cinema.
- 8/26/2015
- by Jeff Bayer
- The Scorecard Review
Cannibalistic skyscraper tribes, a punk band forced to fight for survival, and 17th century-set supernatural happenings will grace the big screen this fall at Fantastic Fest 2015, as High-Rise, Green Room (co-starring Patrick Stewart), and The Witch are among the films announced in the festival's second wave of programming.
Taking place September 24th–October 1st at the Alamo Drafthouse South Lamar theater in Austin, TX, Fantastic Fest 2015 celebrates an abundance of titles spanning multiple genres (as well as those that don't fit into one specific genre). Stay tuned to Daily Dead for the upcoming final wave of Fantastic Fest 2015 programming, and to read about the first wave of the festival's programming, visit:
http://dailydead.com/fantastic-fest-2015-first-wave-includes-bone-tomahawk-the-invitation/
Press Release: Austin, TX - Wednesday, August 26, 2015 - Fantastic Fest is excited to announce the second wave of programming featuring the Us Premiere of Yorgos Lanthimos' The Lobster as the opening night film.
Taking place September 24th–October 1st at the Alamo Drafthouse South Lamar theater in Austin, TX, Fantastic Fest 2015 celebrates an abundance of titles spanning multiple genres (as well as those that don't fit into one specific genre). Stay tuned to Daily Dead for the upcoming final wave of Fantastic Fest 2015 programming, and to read about the first wave of the festival's programming, visit:
http://dailydead.com/fantastic-fest-2015-first-wave-includes-bone-tomahawk-the-invitation/
Press Release: Austin, TX - Wednesday, August 26, 2015 - Fantastic Fest is excited to announce the second wave of programming featuring the Us Premiere of Yorgos Lanthimos' The Lobster as the opening night film.
- 8/26/2015
- by Derek Anderson
- DailyDead
The pick-ups ahead of Venice and Toronto are gathering pace. Content Media has acquired international sales rights to Dennis Hauck's neo-noir detective thriller Too Late, starring John Hawkes (Everest), Crystal Reed (Crazy, Stupid, Love), Dichen Lachman (Neighbors), Natalie Zea (The Following), Jeff Fahey (The Lawnmower Man) and Robert Forster (Jackie Brown). Described as being in the vein of Pulp Fiction and Short Cuts, Too Late is set in L.A. and unfolds in non-linear…...
- 8/26/2015
- Deadline
Content Media has acquired international sales to Dennis Hauck’s neo-noir detective thriller and will host a private buyers screening in Toronto.
John Hawkes stars alongside Crystal Reed, Dichen Lachman, Natalie Zea, Jeff Fahey and Robert Forster in the non-linear story in the vein of Pulp Fiction, Short Cuts and Memento about a private eye on a perilous missing persons case.
Too Late premiered at the Los Angeles Film Festival earlier in the summer.
“Too Late is a cinephile gold dream, with stunning 35mm cinematography, white hot dialogue and a masterful performance from Academy Award nominee John Hawkes,” said Content’s president of film Jamie Carmichael.
“Add to that the smoky clubs, glamorous mansions, scenic vistas and retro-cool drive-in theatres that make Los Angeles iconic and you have a unique, ultra-hip noir thriller to die for.”
Feature debutant Dennis Hauck directed from his screenplay and produced with Alexandra Barreto and John Taylor Feltner.
Content Media’s sales...
John Hawkes stars alongside Crystal Reed, Dichen Lachman, Natalie Zea, Jeff Fahey and Robert Forster in the non-linear story in the vein of Pulp Fiction, Short Cuts and Memento about a private eye on a perilous missing persons case.
Too Late premiered at the Los Angeles Film Festival earlier in the summer.
“Too Late is a cinephile gold dream, with stunning 35mm cinematography, white hot dialogue and a masterful performance from Academy Award nominee John Hawkes,” said Content’s president of film Jamie Carmichael.
“Add to that the smoky clubs, glamorous mansions, scenic vistas and retro-cool drive-in theatres that make Los Angeles iconic and you have a unique, ultra-hip noir thriller to die for.”
Feature debutant Dennis Hauck directed from his screenplay and produced with Alexandra Barreto and John Taylor Feltner.
Content Media’s sales...
- 8/26/2015
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
Exclusive: Germany’s Oldenburg International Film Festival is to play host to the nomination committee for the European Film Awards’ European Discovery - Prix Fipresci for the first time this year.
An international jury will convene in the North German town of Oldenburg on Sept 19 for their deliberations and announce the five nominated films for the award - dedicated to first features by European directors - at the festival’s closing ceremony on Sept 20.
The jury will comprise German producer Dagmar Jacobsen; Transilvania Iff’s artistic director Mihai Chirilov; Polish critic/actor Krzysztof Kwiatkowski; UK producer Lynda Myles; Italian journalist/festival programmer Marco Spagnoli; Rotterdam Iff programmer Gerwin Tamsma; and UK critic/festival programmer Neil Young
Festival director Torsten Neumann told ScreenDaily: “It’s a great sign of recognition for us as it shows that the Efa regards Oldenburg as the right place for its jury, with its reputation as the European festival of discoveries.”
Last year’s...
An international jury will convene in the North German town of Oldenburg on Sept 19 for their deliberations and announce the five nominated films for the award - dedicated to first features by European directors - at the festival’s closing ceremony on Sept 20.
The jury will comprise German producer Dagmar Jacobsen; Transilvania Iff’s artistic director Mihai Chirilov; Polish critic/actor Krzysztof Kwiatkowski; UK producer Lynda Myles; Italian journalist/festival programmer Marco Spagnoli; Rotterdam Iff programmer Gerwin Tamsma; and UK critic/festival programmer Neil Young
Festival director Torsten Neumann told ScreenDaily: “It’s a great sign of recognition for us as it shows that the Efa regards Oldenburg as the right place for its jury, with its reputation as the European festival of discoveries.”
Last year’s...
- 8/11/2015
- by screen.berlin@googlemail.com (Martin Blaney)
- ScreenDaily
The Bonds of Bonding: Martin’s Debut a Choppy Crime Caper
Sustained by a likeable cast of notable character actors, screenwriter Michael C. Martin’s directorial debut 10 Cent Pistol sports similarities with his previous credit Brooklyn’s Finest (2009), which was directed by Antoine Fuqua. Multiple perspectives converge and crisscross over pulpy crime thriller tropes as cheaply manufactured as its titular toy would indicate, though its overly convoluted patch of twists, turns, and other maneuvers eventually belies a threadbare narrative by the time we get to the unveiling of the film’s ultra-mastermind. Taking place over familiar and commonly utilized Los Angeles terrain, this sun dappled rhinestone ultimately feels like another mean spirited, empty headed bauble, one whose ultimate moments of entertainment are dictated by the quality of the character in focus at any given moment.
A pair of Lapd officers show up to investigate a tripped security system at a private residence,...
Sustained by a likeable cast of notable character actors, screenwriter Michael C. Martin’s directorial debut 10 Cent Pistol sports similarities with his previous credit Brooklyn’s Finest (2009), which was directed by Antoine Fuqua. Multiple perspectives converge and crisscross over pulpy crime thriller tropes as cheaply manufactured as its titular toy would indicate, though its overly convoluted patch of twists, turns, and other maneuvers eventually belies a threadbare narrative by the time we get to the unveiling of the film’s ultra-mastermind. Taking place over familiar and commonly utilized Los Angeles terrain, this sun dappled rhinestone ultimately feels like another mean spirited, empty headed bauble, one whose ultimate moments of entertainment are dictated by the quality of the character in focus at any given moment.
A pair of Lapd officers show up to investigate a tripped security system at a private residence,...
- 7/22/2015
- by Nicholas Bell
- IONCINEMA.com
There is a classic Hollywood feel that prevails throughout Dennis Hauck's debut feature Too Late. Namely this is due to the fact that it's shot on good old 35Mm film -- a feat almost never attempted in today's world of low budget indie features. Add that to the private eye storyline and La-soaked scenery (not to mention the "classic" treatment of the female characters) and you have a film that is aged well beyond its years. All of that works well for Hauck who should be hailed for a very stylish and assured debut. Note: If you're the kind of person who likes to go into a film completely blind, you may find some of the information in this review revealing. While there are no...
[Read the whole post on twitchfilm.com...]...
[Read the whole post on twitchfilm.com...]...
- 6/19/2015
- Screen Anarchy
A delayed title card is a bold cinematic move, a deliberate tactic usually used to punctuate a powerhouse setpiece full of invention and intrigue (see: “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,” “127 Hours”). It jumps in as a provocation, as though to say, “You thought that was cool? We haven’t even shown you the opening credits yet, so strap in.” In “Too Late,” after a 15-minute single take involving a fedora-wearing Rider Strong and Dash Mihok as hiking drug dealers talking movie tropes, a stripper who drops the word “sanguine” in conversation with a gangster-turned-park ranger, and sloppily executed, Altman-esque zooms across the skyline of downtown Los Angeles, my only thought instead to it all was simply “Jesus, no.” Read More: 12 Great & Not-So-Great Debuts From Screenwriters-Turned-Directors What first-time director Dennis Hauck establishes here is a bizarro La that’s just picked up from where “Pulp Fiction” left off, and yet...
- 6/12/2015
- by Charlie Schmidlin
- The Playlist
Read More: Why You Shouldn't Say Hi to John Hawkes on the Street Academy Award nominee John Hawkes continues to take on complex indie characters with his latest drama, "Too Late." Written and directed by Dennis Hauck, the film follows a private investigator (Hawkes) who is trying to track down the whereabouts of a missing woman in Los Angeles. Joanna Cassidy, Crystal Reed, Vail Bloom and Rider Strong co-star. Indiewire is excited to debut the exclusive poster for the film below. The image captures the haze of the film's La setting and the grainy film look of the medium on which it was shot. Enticingly, the film was shot on 35mm and will only be shown in that format. "We shot every frame of 'Too Late' on film, including the opening and closing credits," said Hauck. "I just went down to the copy shop, printed out some transparencies,...
- 6/5/2015
- by Zack Sharf
- Indiewire
Best known as a writer and director (and Orson Welles' great mate), Peter Bogdanovich also likes to indulge his thespian side. This year he's already been in front of the camera for Max Rose, The Healer, and The Tell-Tale Heart, and Bogdanovich is now set to add Too Late to that list. He'll be appearing alongside John Hawkes.Too Late is the feature debut of Dennis Hauck, whose short films have made him something of a festival darling in recent years. At its simplest, the story involves a private investigator and his relationship with the woman he's been hired to find. We're promised a non-linear narrative though, which suggests that Hauck - who also wrote the screenplay - is aiming to complicate that well-worn trope.Bogdanovich's role hasn't been revealed so far, but Hawkes will be the detective, following his stand-out roles in Winter's Bone and Martha Marcy May Marlene.
- 5/8/2012
- EmpireOnline
Oscar nominated actor John Hawkes and certified legend Peter Bogdanovich are set to the lead the ensemble of the indie drama "Too Late." The "Martha Marcy May Marlene" star will play the part of a private investigator who is hired to find a missing woman with whom he has a troubled relationship.
Dennis Hauck, director of festival-acclaimed short "Sunday Punch," will be making his feature debut with the project, which he also wrote, and will be challenging himself with a non-linear narrative with which to spin the tale. Natalie Zea ("Justified"), Dichen Lachman ("Dollhouse") and Rider Strong ("Cabin Fever") round out the cast.
"Too Late" will start production in late May in Los Angeles, after which Hawkes will shoot "Switch," the prequel to Quentin Tarantino’s "Jackie Brown," also based on a novel by Elmore Leonard. [THR]...
Dennis Hauck, director of festival-acclaimed short "Sunday Punch," will be making his feature debut with the project, which he also wrote, and will be challenging himself with a non-linear narrative with which to spin the tale. Natalie Zea ("Justified"), Dichen Lachman ("Dollhouse") and Rider Strong ("Cabin Fever") round out the cast.
"Too Late" will start production in late May in Los Angeles, after which Hawkes will shoot "Switch," the prequel to Quentin Tarantino’s "Jackie Brown," also based on a novel by Elmore Leonard. [THR]...
- 5/7/2012
- by Marta Corato
- The Playlist
Since he dazzled critics and audiences alike with his Oscar-nominated portrayal of Teardrop, the growling defender of Jennifer Lawrence's heroine in Winter's Bone, character actor John Hawkes has been reason enough for many of us to seek out even his most obscure indie efforts. Since then he has drawn praise for his creation of the nicknaming cult leader in the dreamy and devastating drama Martha Marcy May Marlene, his complex portrayal of a virgin in an iron lung in the Sundance selected biopic The Surrogate and as a cuckolded husband in the heartbreaking Tribeca Film Festival offering The Playroom. Whatever the subject matter, whatever the role, Hawkes is guaranteed to make any movie he is attached to something worth watching. So it's great news for first-time feature film director Dennis Hauck that Hawkes has just signed on to front his upcoming thriller Too Late. THR reveals Hawkes will play...
- 5/7/2012
- cinemablend.com
John Hawkes is set to star in Dennis Hauck's indie drama "Too Late" which unfolds in a non-linear fashion says The Hollywood Reporter.
The story follows the tangled relationship between a troubled private investigator (Hawkes) and the missing woman he's hired to help find. Rider Strong, Natalie Zea, Dichen Lachman, Brett Jacobsen and Peter Bogdanovich also star.
Alexandra Barreto and Taylor Feltner are producing while shooting kicks off in late May in Los Angeles. Hawkes will likely shoot the Elmore Leonard adaptation "Switch" immediately after.
The story follows the tangled relationship between a troubled private investigator (Hawkes) and the missing woman he's hired to help find. Rider Strong, Natalie Zea, Dichen Lachman, Brett Jacobsen and Peter Bogdanovich also star.
Alexandra Barreto and Taylor Feltner are producing while shooting kicks off in late May in Los Angeles. Hawkes will likely shoot the Elmore Leonard adaptation "Switch" immediately after.
- 5/5/2012
- by Garth Franklin
- Dark Horizons
John Hawkes is one-of-a-kind. This is a guy who can take roles in an HBO series (Eastbound & Down) and do some work for Steven Spielberg (Lincoln) or Steven Soderbergh (Contagion) on the side, but holds virtually no aversion to the smaller stuff, either. (He had a role in my favorite movie of this year’s Tribeca, The Playroom, for example.) More on that latter side of things comes a story from THR, who inform us Hawkes will be starring in Too Late, the feature debut of writer-director Dennis Hauck.
Here, the Oscar nominee plays a private investigator tasked with finding a woman he ends up bonding with. Standard stuff on the surface, but Too Late gets a tad more interesting when you learn it’s told in a non-linear fashion — not entirely unlike his critical smash from last year, Martha Marcy May Marlene. (There will probably be less singing, though.
Here, the Oscar nominee plays a private investigator tasked with finding a woman he ends up bonding with. Standard stuff on the surface, but Too Late gets a tad more interesting when you learn it’s told in a non-linear fashion — not entirely unlike his critical smash from last year, Martha Marcy May Marlene. (There will probably be less singing, though.
- 5/5/2012
- by jpraup@gmail.com (thefilmstage.com)
- The Film Stage
John Hawkes is set to star in Too Late, an indie drama that is serving as the feature directorial debut of Dennis Hauck, the helmer behind such festival circuit shorts as Sunday Punch. The script, also by Hauck, reveals in non-linear fashion the tangled relationship between a troubled private investigator (Hawkes) and the missing woman he's hired to help find.
Rider Strong (Cabin Fever), Natalie Zea (Justified), Dichen Lachman (Dollhouse), Brett Jacobsen (Myth of the American Sleepover) and Academy Award-nominated director and occasional actor Peter Bogdanovich are also
read more...
Rider Strong (Cabin Fever), Natalie Zea (Justified), Dichen Lachman (Dollhouse), Brett Jacobsen (Myth of the American Sleepover) and Academy Award-nominated director and occasional actor Peter Bogdanovich are also
read more...
- 5/4/2012
- by Borys Kit
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The 7th annual Atlanta Underground Film Festival is like having four different fests crammed into an exhaustive three days on Aug. 27-29. It’s an outrageous underground fest, an animation festival, a documentary fest and a horror movie festival: The culmination of a month of fests run by Atlanta’s Festival League. There’s tons of short films, documentaries, features and more.
There’s lots of great stuff to recommend, too. On the last night of the fest, there will be a screening of Chris Hansen‘s second feature film, Endings, which tells the touching story of three people spending their last day on Earth together. The film was reviewed on Bad Lit a few months ago. On the short film front, there’s Loretta Hintz‘s wild lesbian bestiality (sort of) tale, The Sheep and the Ranch Hand and two films by the perpetually awesome Neil Ira Needleman, Meeskit...
There’s lots of great stuff to recommend, too. On the last night of the fest, there will be a screening of Chris Hansen‘s second feature film, Endings, which tells the touching story of three people spending their last day on Earth together. The film was reviewed on Bad Lit a few months ago. On the short film front, there’s Loretta Hintz‘s wild lesbian bestiality (sort of) tale, The Sheep and the Ranch Hand and two films by the perpetually awesome Neil Ira Needleman, Meeskit...
- 8/18/2010
- by Mike Everleth
- Underground Film Journal
Nestled in the foothills of northern California, the Nevada City Film Festival has evolved from a locals-only fest into a four-day international smorgasbord of short films, plus a couple of features thrown in for good measure. There’s also filmmaking panels, award ceremonies, a live comedy show and some very special guests.
This year, Ncff welcomes Tim Heidecker and Eric Wareheim of the Adult Swim hit Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job! On the 21st, they’ll be screening a very special selection of shorts and music videos from the show.
The features they’re screening are Brett Haley’s The New Year, which stars indie breakout actress Trieste Kelly Dunn (Vacation!); Stuck! by underground bad boy director Steve Balderson; and the innovative animated film Mars, directed by Geoff Marslett, who way back in the day (1999) directed the underground music video Monkey vs. Robot for James Kolchaka.
Ncff is...
This year, Ncff welcomes Tim Heidecker and Eric Wareheim of the Adult Swim hit Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job! On the 21st, they’ll be screening a very special selection of shorts and music videos from the show.
The features they’re screening are Brett Haley’s The New Year, which stars indie breakout actress Trieste Kelly Dunn (Vacation!); Stuck! by underground bad boy director Steve Balderson; and the innovative animated film Mars, directed by Geoff Marslett, who way back in the day (1999) directed the underground music video Monkey vs. Robot for James Kolchaka.
Ncff is...
- 8/10/2010
- by Mike Everleth
- Underground Film Journal
Dragon Con SymbolThe Dragon Con Independent Film Festival has announced a full list of short and features films for the event. One of the largest film festivals in America, Dragon Con takes place in Atlanta, Georgia beginning September 3rd. This years feature highlights involve a zombie apocalypse taking place at a prom in As Good As Dead, two students trying to save the world from terrorists in Horrible Turn, and a prequel to J.R.R. Tolkien's story The Lord of the Rings in Born of Hope. This is only a brief intro' and fans of independent film and creativity can check out the schedule for the film festival below, or at the Dragon Con website.
The full synopsis for Born of Hope:
"A scattered people, the descendants of storied sea kings of the ancient West, struggle to survive in a lonely wilderness as a dark force relentlessly bends its will toward their destruction.
The full synopsis for Born of Hope:
"A scattered people, the descendants of storied sea kings of the ancient West, struggle to survive in a lonely wilderness as a dark force relentlessly bends its will toward their destruction.
- 7/29/2010
- by 28DaysLaterAnalysis@gmail.com (Michael Ross Allen)
- 28 Days Later Analysis
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