The third annual Glas Animation Festival (Global Animation Syndicate) in Berkeley got a major boost last weekend with the appearance of Phil Lord and Chris Miller (“The Lego Movie”). The duo discussed success, failure, and how they’re pushing boundaries with “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” (December 21), which they are producing. They also announced that they are taking executive producer credit on “Solo: A Star Wars Story” (May 25), which they noisily departed as directors last year after being replaced by director Ron Howard.
Although they credited their successful partnership with being “horrifically relentless and willing to change things to continually improve the project,” Lord and Miller ran into irreconcilable differences over the particular production demands of the “Star Wars” franchise.
“We are very proud of our many contributions to the film. In light of the creative differences on ‘Solo: A Star Wars Story,’ we have elected to take an executive producer credit on the film,...
Although they credited their successful partnership with being “horrifically relentless and willing to change things to continually improve the project,” Lord and Miller ran into irreconcilable differences over the particular production demands of the “Star Wars” franchise.
“We are very proud of our many contributions to the film. In light of the creative differences on ‘Solo: A Star Wars Story,’ we have elected to take an executive producer credit on the film,...
- 3/26/2018
- by Bill Desowitz
- Indiewire
Another week, another entry in our artist spotlight series The Devil’s Muse! This week, we want to highlight Los Angeles-by-way-of-Iceland artist Einar Baldvin, whose work is a fantastic mixture of scratches, splotches, harsh lines and folklore-ish illustrations that make brilliant… Continue Reading →
The post DC’s The Devil’s Muse: Artist Spotlight – Einar Baldvin appeared first on Dread Central.
The post DC’s The Devil’s Muse: Artist Spotlight – Einar Baldvin appeared first on Dread Central.
- 8/28/2017
- by Jonathan Barkan
- DreadCentral.com
If you tally up the time it took him to hand-draw thousands of pages, stain those pages to make them look like old journals and then edit the result into the nine-minute short “The Pride of Strathmoor,” it took Einar Baldvin about two years to put together the disturbing and spooky blend of Edgar Allan Poe, H.P. Lovecraft, “Raging Bull” and even a touch of Walt Disney. But if you factor in the time it took him to learn to box, to train as a boxer and then to actually fight for three years, the short film that’s now a.
- 8/4/2015
- by Steve Pond
- The Wrap
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