Tracey Ullman has been creating characters – and a string of successful shows, including Tracey Takes On… (HBO, 1996-99) and Tracey Ullman's State of the Union (Showtime, 2008-10) – for decades. But it was only recently that she's really embraced impersonating celebrities and politicians. For the second season of Tracey Ullman's Show, which originally aired on the BBC and is now available on HBO, she's back with her impressions of a rascally Dame Judi Dench (and her frenemy Dame Maggie Smith), a sexy singing Angela Merkel, and a version of Jerry Hall that will make you squirm.
- 10/28/2017
- Rollingstone.com
Binging with Babish is back! This time Andrew Rea is taking on The Simpsons and teaching us to make Homer Simpson’s legendary Moon Waffles. While there are a number of recipes to choose from with regard to legendary Simpsons concoctions I think that Rea has got himself off on the right footing with this selection. Here’s the video descripton on Rea’s Youtube channel. Homer Simpson revels in combining food and drink with wild abandon: every liquor in the house set aflame with cough syrup, skittles floating in beer, tomatoes cross-bred with tobacco. Few, however, are as heartbreakingly realistic as the
Learn To Make Homer Simpson’s Patented Space Age Out-Of-This-World Moon Waffles...
Learn To Make Homer Simpson’s Patented Space Age Out-Of-This-World Moon Waffles...
- 5/2/2017
- by Nat Berman
- TVovermind.com
Ryan Lambie Feb 21, 2017
Before he made The Godfather and Apocalypse Now, Francis Ford Coppola got his start by editing monsters into a Soviet sci-fi film...
Everyone loves a good success story, and Hollywood history's full of them. Actors sleeping in their cars until they get their first lucky break. Writers papering the walls of their lodgings with rejection letters until they finally get a script in front of a receptive producer. Filmmakers who've spent years paying their dues before a studio finally comes calling.
See related Robot Wars interview: presenter Angela Scanlon Robot Wars episode 6 review Robot Wars episode 5 review Robot Wars episode 4 review Robot Wars episode 3 review
Director Francis Ford Coppola, before he shot to fame - and, for a time, considerable wealth - with such films as The Godfather, The Conversation and Apocalypse Now, scrabbled around at the lower end of the industry like just about everyone else.
Before he made The Godfather and Apocalypse Now, Francis Ford Coppola got his start by editing monsters into a Soviet sci-fi film...
Everyone loves a good success story, and Hollywood history's full of them. Actors sleeping in their cars until they get their first lucky break. Writers papering the walls of their lodgings with rejection letters until they finally get a script in front of a receptive producer. Filmmakers who've spent years paying their dues before a studio finally comes calling.
See related Robot Wars interview: presenter Angela Scanlon Robot Wars episode 6 review Robot Wars episode 5 review Robot Wars episode 4 review Robot Wars episode 3 review
Director Francis Ford Coppola, before he shot to fame - and, for a time, considerable wealth - with such films as The Godfather, The Conversation and Apocalypse Now, scrabbled around at the lower end of the industry like just about everyone else.
- 2/20/2017
- Den of Geek
Prolific TV director Ernest Dickerson - who’s helming the project - was talking about his upcoming films at Rotterdam.
American filmmaker and cinematographer Ernest Dickerson (Juice, The Wire) has revealed details of some of his upcoming projects.
Dickerson was speaking at International Film Festival Rotterdam, where his latest feature, the Curaçao-set Double Play is to receive its world premiere tonight (Friday) in the presence of the Dutch king, Willem-Alexander.
One new project is an adaptation of cult novel The Coyote Kings of the Space Age Bachelor Pad by African-Canadian sci-fi writer Minister Faust.
Intriguingly, Dickerson has also been at work on behalf of Spike Lee (for whom he shot many films) on the restoration of Spike Lee’s debut feature, She’s Gotta Have It (1986.)
“The last time we worked together in Italy when I did the Miracle At St. Anna as second unit director but recently he (Spike Lee) asked me to take charge of the...
American filmmaker and cinematographer Ernest Dickerson (Juice, The Wire) has revealed details of some of his upcoming projects.
Dickerson was speaking at International Film Festival Rotterdam, where his latest feature, the Curaçao-set Double Play is to receive its world premiere tonight (Friday) in the presence of the Dutch king, Willem-Alexander.
One new project is an adaptation of cult novel The Coyote Kings of the Space Age Bachelor Pad by African-Canadian sci-fi writer Minister Faust.
Intriguingly, Dickerson has also been at work on behalf of Spike Lee (for whom he shot many films) on the restoration of Spike Lee’s debut feature, She’s Gotta Have It (1986.)
“The last time we worked together in Italy when I did the Miracle At St. Anna as second unit director but recently he (Spike Lee) asked me to take charge of the...
- 1/27/2017
- by geoffrey@macnab.demon.co.uk (Geoffrey Macnab)
- ScreenDaily
Prolific TV director Ernest Dickerson - who’s helming the project - was talking about his upcoming films at Rotterdam.
American filmmaker and cinematographer Ernest Dickerson (Juice, The Wire) has revealed details of some of his upcoming projects.
Dickerson was speaking at International Film Festival Rotterdam, where his latest feature, the Curaçao-set Double Play is to receive its world premiere tonight (Friday) in the presence of the Dutch king, Willem-Alexander.
One new project is an adaptation of cult novel The Coyote Kings of the Space Age Bachelor Pad by African-Canadian sci-fi writer Minister Faust.
Intriguingly, Dickerson has also been at work on behalf of Spike Lee (for whom he shot many films) on the restoration of Spike Lee’s debut feature, She’s Gotta Have It (1986.)
“The last time we worked together in Italy when I did the Miracle At St. Anna as second unit director but recently he (Spike Lee) asked me to take charge of the...
American filmmaker and cinematographer Ernest Dickerson (Juice, The Wire) has revealed details of some of his upcoming projects.
Dickerson was speaking at International Film Festival Rotterdam, where his latest feature, the Curaçao-set Double Play is to receive its world premiere tonight (Friday) in the presence of the Dutch king, Willem-Alexander.
One new project is an adaptation of cult novel The Coyote Kings of the Space Age Bachelor Pad by African-Canadian sci-fi writer Minister Faust.
Intriguingly, Dickerson has also been at work on behalf of Spike Lee (for whom he shot many films) on the restoration of Spike Lee’s debut feature, She’s Gotta Have It (1986.)
“The last time we worked together in Italy when I did the Miracle At St. Anna as second unit director but recently he (Spike Lee) asked me to take charge of the...
- 1/27/2017
- by geoffrey@macnab.demon.co.uk (Geoffrey Macnab)
- ScreenDaily
Prolific TV director also revealed plans for Donald Trump-themed horror at Rotterdam.
American filmmaker and cinematographer Ernest Dickerson (Juice, The Wire) has revealed details of some of his upcoming projects.
Dickerson was speaking at International Film Festival Rotterdam, where his latest feature, the Curaçao-set Double Play is to receive its world premiere tonight (Friday) in the presence of the Dutch king, Willem-Alexander.
One new project is an adaptation of cult novel The Coyote Kings of the Space Age Bachelor Pad by African-Canadian sci-fi writer Minister Faust.
Intriguingly, Dickerson has also been at work on behalf of Spike Lee (for whom he shot many films) on the restoration of Spike Lee’s debut feature, She’s Gotta Have It (1986.)
“The last time we worked together in Italy when I did the Miracle At St. Anna as second unit director but recently he (Spike Lee) asked me to take charge of the 4K restoration of She’s Gotta...
American filmmaker and cinematographer Ernest Dickerson (Juice, The Wire) has revealed details of some of his upcoming projects.
Dickerson was speaking at International Film Festival Rotterdam, where his latest feature, the Curaçao-set Double Play is to receive its world premiere tonight (Friday) in the presence of the Dutch king, Willem-Alexander.
One new project is an adaptation of cult novel The Coyote Kings of the Space Age Bachelor Pad by African-Canadian sci-fi writer Minister Faust.
Intriguingly, Dickerson has also been at work on behalf of Spike Lee (for whom he shot many films) on the restoration of Spike Lee’s debut feature, She’s Gotta Have It (1986.)
“The last time we worked together in Italy when I did the Miracle At St. Anna as second unit director but recently he (Spike Lee) asked me to take charge of the 4K restoration of She’s Gotta...
- 1/27/2017
- by geoffrey@macnab.demon.co.uk (Geoffrey Macnab)
- ScreenDaily
If Hollywood is deemed to be out of ideas it’s because they haven’t looked hard enough into the history books. Hidden Figures is living proof that there are still compelling stories to be told—in this case, the story of three remarkable women who made a mark on our Space Program against all odds—and that they should and can be told and told well.
The story follows real-life pals Katherine (Taraji P. Henson), Dorothy (Octavia Spencer), and Mary (Janelle Monáe), three unlikely heroines of the Space Age. These three remarkable women live in the suburbs of Virginia at work at Nasa at the height of the Cold War galactic race against the Soviet Union. Katherine is a mathematician, Dorothy is a “computer” of complex calculations, as humans not machines where then known, and Mary is an aspiring engineer.
Naturally, they face challenges inimical to their race and gender,...
The story follows real-life pals Katherine (Taraji P. Henson), Dorothy (Octavia Spencer), and Mary (Janelle Monáe), three unlikely heroines of the Space Age. These three remarkable women live in the suburbs of Virginia at work at Nasa at the height of the Cold War galactic race against the Soviet Union. Katherine is a mathematician, Dorothy is a “computer” of complex calculations, as humans not machines where then known, and Mary is an aspiring engineer.
Naturally, they face challenges inimical to their race and gender,...
- 12/28/2016
- by J Don Birnam
- LRMonline.com
Headed to Comic-Con 2016 in San Diego this weekend? We're here to help you prepare to tackle it all. From exciting film screenings - like Oliver Stone's Snowden - to movie-centric panels, there's a lot to see and do at the San Diego Convention Center over just four days. Start your week laughing with Seth Rogen about his naughty, animated comedy Sausage Party and finish up by learning how to craft your own, personal R2-D2. Here's a rundown of some of the best film screenings, panels and events to check out at Comic-Con. Thursday, July 2110:00 a.m.: Feed...
- 7/19/2016
- by Lindsay Kimble, @lekimble
- PEOPLE.com
Headed to Comic-Con 2016 in San Diego this weekend? We're here to help you prepare to tackle it all. From exciting film screenings - like Oliver Stone's Snowden - to movie-centric panels, there's a lot to see and do at the San Diego Convention Center over just four days. Start your week laughing with Seth Rogen about his naughty, animated comedy Sausage Party and finish up by learning how to craft your own, personal R2-D2. Here's a rundown of some of the best film screenings, panels and events to check out at Comic-Con. Thursday, July 2110:00 a.m.: Feed...
- 7/19/2016
- by Lindsay Kimble, @lekimble
- PEOPLE.com
There was once an era in which we as a collective society looked up to science, in particular the field of traveling through outer space. With technology growing by leaps and bounds, and the space race in full effect, the 50.s and 60.s were the height of the "Space Age" . where going to the Moon was the ultimate achievement. But, to paraphrase Matthew McConaughey in Interstellar, we stopped looking at the stars, and suddenly space travel fell by the wayside. At least we did, until now. In an era where astrophysicists are popular again, and spacefaring is coming back to the forefront, The Martian is not only the best picture of 2015.s race, it.s also the most important. With its' massive success, both with Andy Weir.s original novel and the Ridley Scott directed film, The Martian is a story that uses hard science fiction to tell a story...
- 2/26/2016
- cinemablend.com
Wikipedia
We’ve always loved predicting what the future might hold, whether we do it by gazing into a crystal ball, or analysing tech trends, we just can’t seem to help imagining a glittering future world.
In the 20th century in particular, people got super into this. Perhaps it was the fact that the futuristic-sounding year 2000 was approaching, but everyone began to imagine what sort of amazingly technological world their children and grandchildren might live in.
Of course, this is always risky. The thing about predicting the future, is that you open yourself up to all kinds of ridicule if you get it wrong. We often like to look back at those “world of tomorrow” pieces, with their predictions of shiny, silver clothes and flying cars, and laugh.
All of that Space Age future stuff is pretty par for the course. However, if you dig around a bit, you...
We’ve always loved predicting what the future might hold, whether we do it by gazing into a crystal ball, or analysing tech trends, we just can’t seem to help imagining a glittering future world.
In the 20th century in particular, people got super into this. Perhaps it was the fact that the futuristic-sounding year 2000 was approaching, but everyone began to imagine what sort of amazingly technological world their children and grandchildren might live in.
Of course, this is always risky. The thing about predicting the future, is that you open yourself up to all kinds of ridicule if you get it wrong. We often like to look back at those “world of tomorrow” pieces, with their predictions of shiny, silver clothes and flying cars, and laugh.
All of that Space Age future stuff is pretty par for the course. However, if you dig around a bit, you...
- 2/5/2016
- by Stevie Shephard
- Obsessed with Film
Building and sustaining a career as a graphic novelist is even harder than the equivalent for a prose writer: comics require at least twice as much work per page (writing and drawing — sometimes inking and coloring and lettering, too) for something that’s read in a fifth of the time. And that turns making comics, especially mid-list comics, into a time-sink which has serious trouble delivering monetarily on a level with the effort required. And yet people keep trying, like any artform: there are always people with stories to tell and images to share, and some of them manage to turn that into a career along the way. (Others fail entirely, or do a couple of stories and then move on to something else.)
Brian Fies is an interesting case along that continuum. His first major graphic story, Mom’s Cancer, was a memoir comic that originally appeared in installments online,...
Brian Fies is an interesting case along that continuum. His first major graphic story, Mom’s Cancer, was a memoir comic that originally appeared in installments online,...
- 12/28/2015
- by Andrew Wheeler
- Comicmix.com
Recounting space missions as recent as 2013, Science Channel’s new series Secret Space Escapes, premiering Tuesday, Nov. 10, at 10pm Et/Pt, tells of the terrifying accidents, fights for survival and stories of close calls and near misses by the astronauts who survived them, and the people in mission control who helped each team avert disaster. Video preview: Press release from Science Channel: Science Channel Premieres Secret Space Escapes On November 10 At 10Pm All-new Series Reveals Inspiring Accounts of Survival and Resourcefulness in the Space Age What’s it like to leave earth to explore the unknown? How does it feel to be … Continue reading →
The post Abort Mission! “Secret Space Escapes” documents close calls above Earth appeared first on Channel Guide Magazine.
The post Abort Mission! “Secret Space Escapes” documents close calls above Earth appeared first on Channel Guide Magazine.
- 11/6/2015
- by Ryan Berenz
- ChannelGuideMag
After dropping a back-to-back double album in 2013, pop sensation Justin Timberlake embarked on the 20/20 Experience World Tour, a 134-date global concert tour spread out over 14 months that took him to five different continents, delivering concerts where he was playing 30 songs some nights. The man is a true performer. But if you […]
The post Jonathan Demme is Working on a “Space Age” Justin Timberlake Concert Documentary appeared first on /Film.
The post Jonathan Demme is Working on a “Space Age” Justin Timberlake Concert Documentary appeared first on /Film.
- 8/30/2015
- by Ethan Anderton
- Slash Film
No one will be searching for Spock, but set phasers to “that’s actually kind of cool” anyway, because the third installment of the rebooted Star Trek series now has an official title: Star Trek Beyond. Lin revealed the name today via Twitter: Let the next Starfleet voyage begin! #StarTrekBeyond #Llap pic.twitter.com/VZh9YvJgqA — Justin Lin (@trailingjohnson) June 29, 2015 That hugely retro patch and Space Age workman uniform is a particularly nice touch; I’d believe…...
- 6/30/2015
- Deadline
From the director of The Iron Giant and The Incredibles comes the sci-fi adventure, Tomorrowland. Here's Ryan's review...
Director Brad Bird has an almost immaculate run of form when it comes to bringing larger-than-life entertainments to the screen. The Iron Giant was one of the most acclaimed animated films of the 1990s. The Incredibles and Ratatouille are among Pixar's best films so far. His live-action debut Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol, while not perfect, was perhaps the most entertaining movie entry since the first.
Bird brings his blue-sky storytelling to bear on Tomorrowland: A World Beyond, a eyed sci-fi fairytale with elements taken straight from classic pulp magazine stories. It’s The Wizard Of Oz retold by Ray Bradbury or Hugo Gernsback, with bits of The Terminator and Buck Rogers thrown in for good measure. It’s an entertaining yet sometimes befuddling bag of intricately moving parts, not all of which fit together too well.
Director Brad Bird has an almost immaculate run of form when it comes to bringing larger-than-life entertainments to the screen. The Iron Giant was one of the most acclaimed animated films of the 1990s. The Incredibles and Ratatouille are among Pixar's best films so far. His live-action debut Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol, while not perfect, was perhaps the most entertaining movie entry since the first.
Bird brings his blue-sky storytelling to bear on Tomorrowland: A World Beyond, a eyed sci-fi fairytale with elements taken straight from classic pulp magazine stories. It’s The Wizard Of Oz retold by Ray Bradbury or Hugo Gernsback, with bits of The Terminator and Buck Rogers thrown in for good measure. It’s an entertaining yet sometimes befuddling bag of intricately moving parts, not all of which fit together too well.
- 5/18/2015
- by ryanlambie
- Den of Geek
Tonight at the MTV Movie Awards, a new 30 second TV spot for Disney’s upcoming Tomorrowland travelled back in time from the future to advertise the film. Featured here, a trip through the City of Tomorrow, as envisioned by people during the height of the Space Age of course. Which means monorails, spaceships, and the dulcet, gravely tones of George Clooney, lulling us into a legitimate sense of complacency. Tomorrowland, inspired by the Disneyland theme park region, stars…...
- 4/13/2015
- Deadline
Richard Wilson has told Digital Spy that the BBC have talked to him about starring in a sitcom.
The actor, who is most famous for roles in Merlin and One Foot in the Grave, said that he wasn't sure whether the project would go ahead.
Wilson told DS: "I wouldn't mind considering another sitcom. The BBC have talked about me coming back to do something, but I don't know whether that will happen.
"The trouble with One Foot in the Grave was it was so well-written by David Renwick, it's very hard to find something as good as that."
Wilson is currently fronting ITV's Richard Wilson's On the Road, in which he tours the UK in his vintage car using Shell Guides that were first published in the 1930s.
Asked if he planned to present more factual television, Wilson replied: "No, no. I can still consider myself an active actor,...
The actor, who is most famous for roles in Merlin and One Foot in the Grave, said that he wasn't sure whether the project would go ahead.
Wilson told DS: "I wouldn't mind considering another sitcom. The BBC have talked about me coming back to do something, but I don't know whether that will happen.
"The trouble with One Foot in the Grave was it was so well-written by David Renwick, it's very hard to find something as good as that."
Wilson is currently fronting ITV's Richard Wilson's On the Road, in which he tours the UK in his vintage car using Shell Guides that were first published in the 1930s.
Asked if he planned to present more factual television, Wilson replied: "No, no. I can still consider myself an active actor,...
- 1/25/2015
- Digital Spy
Thanks to Christopher Nolan‘s new film, Interstellar, two Oscar winners are making the leap into space. Both Matthew McConaughey and Anne Hathaway are following their golden roles by tackling sci-fi. And they’re not the first A-List actors to dip their toes into the genre.
Many performers have taken the sci-fi jump, to varying degrees of success. For some, it’s a flat performance that gets lost in the stars, and for others, it’s brought on even more accolades. Because the world of sci-fi is so deep and so vast, we’re focusing on roles that involve some sort of space travel — whether it be to the Moon or through a wormhole. Find out how Ben Affleck, Jodie Foster, and other Oscar winners did at traveling through space.
Alec Guinness
Oscar-winning Role: The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957)
Space Age Role: Star Wars (1977)
As Obi-Wan Kenobi, Guinness became...
Many performers have taken the sci-fi jump, to varying degrees of success. For some, it’s a flat performance that gets lost in the stars, and for others, it’s brought on even more accolades. Because the world of sci-fi is so deep and so vast, we’re focusing on roles that involve some sort of space travel — whether it be to the Moon or through a wormhole. Find out how Ben Affleck, Jodie Foster, and other Oscar winners did at traveling through space.
Alec Guinness
Oscar-winning Role: The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957)
Space Age Role: Star Wars (1977)
As Obi-Wan Kenobi, Guinness became...
- 11/6/2014
- by Stacy Lambe
- TheFabLife - Movies
Thanks to Christopher Nolan‘s new film, Interstellar, two Oscar winners are making the leap into space. Both Matthew McConaughey and Anne Hathaway are following their golden roles by tackling sci-fi. And they’re not the first A-List actors to dip their toes into the genre.
Many performers have taken the sci-fi jump, to varying degrees of success. For some, it’s a flat performance that gets lost in the stars, and for others, it’s brought on even more accolades. Because the world of sci-fi is so deep and so vast, we’re focusing on roles that involve some sort of space travel — whether it be to the Moon or through a wormhole. Find out how Ben Affleck, Jodie Foster, and other Oscar winners did at traveling through space.
Alec Guinness
Oscar-winning Role: The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957)
Space Age Role: Star Wars (1977)
As Obi-Wan Kenobi, Guinness became...
Many performers have taken the sci-fi jump, to varying degrees of success. For some, it’s a flat performance that gets lost in the stars, and for others, it’s brought on even more accolades. Because the world of sci-fi is so deep and so vast, we’re focusing on roles that involve some sort of space travel — whether it be to the Moon or through a wormhole. Find out how Ben Affleck, Jodie Foster, and other Oscar winners did at traveling through space.
Alec Guinness
Oscar-winning Role: The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957)
Space Age Role: Star Wars (1977)
As Obi-Wan Kenobi, Guinness became...
- 11/6/2014
- by Stacy Lambe
- VH1.com
Telluride — With all the reindeer games going on in the fall festival world, a lot of the drama and mystery surrounding Telluride's perennially on-the-lowdown program began to seep out like a steadily deflating balloon this year. Toronto, Venice and New York notations of "World Premiere," "Canada Premiere," "New York Premiere" or "International Premiere" and the like made it all rather obvious which films were heading to the San Juans for the 41st edition of the tiny mining village's cinephile gathering, and which were not. But the fact is, if you're in it just for the surprises — or certainly, for the awards-baiting heavies — you're never going to be fully satisfied by the Telluride experience. That having been said, this year's program might just be the most exciting one in my six years of attending. Starting with all of the stuff we were expecting, indeed, Cannes players "Foxcatcher," "Mr. Turner" and "Leviathan...
- 8/28/2014
- by Kristopher Tapley
- Hitfix
The hype has begun for the more serious entries into the cinematic canon that we have come to expect from fall movie season. Many intriguing films will be hitting cinemas this fall, but few so intriguing – or already so divisive – as Christopher Nolan’s Interstellar, the film that has had no real plot details to speak of.
Here’s what we do know about Interstellar: the film features Matthew McConaughey as a man who goes to outer space to “save mankind” as the Earth runs out of food. He joins a group of explorers who are trying to use a wormhole to exceed the limits of interstellar travel. The film also stars Jessica Chastain, Anne Hathaway, and John Lithgow. The latest pics to surface online from Entertainment Weekly’s fall preview (via The Playlist) do not give us many more plot details. Anne Hathaway is looking good and McConaughey is looking Space Age,...
Here’s what we do know about Interstellar: the film features Matthew McConaughey as a man who goes to outer space to “save mankind” as the Earth runs out of food. He joins a group of explorers who are trying to use a wormhole to exceed the limits of interstellar travel. The film also stars Jessica Chastain, Anne Hathaway, and John Lithgow. The latest pics to surface online from Entertainment Weekly’s fall preview (via The Playlist) do not give us many more plot details. Anne Hathaway is looking good and McConaughey is looking Space Age,...
- 8/15/2014
- by Lauren Humphries-Brooks
- We Got This Covered
Gordon and Donna were right about one thing: A convention is a party, if you're doing it right. Like the Scottish boat-burning ritual for which it was named – and that little shindig in San Diego you may have heard about this weekend, making this some pretty inspired piggybacking – tonight's excellent episode of Halt and Catch Fire, "Up Helly Aa," was a celebration. For a while, anyway.
Summer Cable Smackdown: Our Complete 2014 Watch List
It had a killer party playlist, a selection of New Wave hits — "Psycho Killer," "Blister in the Sun,...
Summer Cable Smackdown: Our Complete 2014 Watch List
It had a killer party playlist, a selection of New Wave hits — "Psycho Killer," "Blister in the Sun,...
- 7/28/2014
- Rollingstone.com
Back in 1969, when Sundance was just a gleam in Robert Redford’s eye, members of the Zambia Space Academy also had a dream -- beating America to the moon (really). Cut to 2014 Sundance -- Ghanaian director Frances Bodomo is telling Park City all about Zambia’s misbegotten lunar mission in her short film “Afronauts.” Cut to 2016 Sundance – why not? this is the Space Age after all – and Bodomo is back with the feature version of her Afrological adventure -- because the Sloan Foundation, always looking to mainstream science, has found a project worth supporting in Bodomo’s wacky yarn. This is the 12th year that the Sloan Foundation has partnered with Sundance, and will again be giving out its coveted Sloan Award (and the $20,000 that goes with it) to the film that best represents science, or makes technological concepts accessible to mainstream audiences. On Tuesday, the “Cosmic Crossroads” panel takes...
- 1/20/2014
- by John Anderson
- Thompson on Hollywood
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