A week after dropping a cryptic first teaser for “Impeachment: American Crime Story“, FX released a new promo on Wednesday with actual footage of Beanie Feldstein and Sarah Paulson facing off as Monica Lewinsky and Linda Tripp, respectively.
22.07.2021 - 23:59 / variety.com
Jessica Kiang The unforgettable final shot of Tatiana Huezo’s last film, the songlike documentary “Tempestad,” is the silhouette of a figure swimming in blue water – an amputee, missing one of her legs from the knee down. Combining grace and trauma, the image is also striking because of its perspective: She’s floating but, seen from below, from down in the soundless depths just where the water starts to get murky, it looks like she’s flying.
A week after dropping a cryptic first teaser for “Impeachment: American Crime Story“, FX released a new promo on Wednesday with actual footage of Beanie Feldstein and Sarah Paulson facing off as Monica Lewinsky and Linda Tripp, respectively.
dropping a cryptic first teaser for , FX released a new promo on Wednesday with actual footage of Beanie Feldstein and Sarah Paulson facing off as Monica Lewinsky and Linda Tripp, respectively.The third installment in the anthology franchise, which premieres Sept.
Elsa Keslassy International CorrespondentNetflix has acquired Tatiana Huezo’s “Prayers for the Stolen” (Noche de la Fuego), a critically acclaimed Mexican drama which world premiered at Cannes in the Un Certain Regard section and won a special mention. The streamer has picked up the film for most European territories outside of France, Italy and the U.K.
Gene Maddaus Senior Media WriterA judge ruled on Monday that former prosecutor Linda Fairstein has a plausible claim that she was defamed by “When They See Us,” the Netflix series from Ava DuVernay about the Central Park Five case.Fairstein sued Netflix, DuVernay and writer Attica Locke in March 2020, alleging that the four-part series portrayed her as a “racist, unethical villain” who framed five young men for a brutal rape and beating.Netflix had argued that the show was protected by the
Patrick Frater Asia Bureau ChiefProducer Lynda Obst (“Interstellar,” “Hope Floats”) and Miky Lee (executive producer of “Parasite”) have joined forces to tap into the Korean music wave. They will produce “K-Pop: Lost in America,” a feature-length road movie to be released in 2023.The CJ ENM production has tapped JK Youn, director of two of the biggest Korean movies of all time, to helm the project.
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Gerard Butler and Frank Grillo cause all sorts of mayhem in Open Road Films’ new trailer for “Copshop”.
Though Christoph Waltz is a household name amongst film fans in 2021, back before 2009’s “Inglourious Basterds” was released, not many Americans knew who he was. That said, after watching that Quentin Tarantino film and seeing Waltz steal every scene he was in, Waltz became a sensation and won a Best Actor Academy Award for his efforts.
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Delroy Lindo will star in Amazon’s upcoming limited series adaptation of Neil Gaiman’s “Anansi Boys.” Based on Gaiman’s novel of the same name, “Anansi Boys” follows Charlie Nancy, a young man who is used to being embarrassed by his estranged father. But when his father dies, Charlie discovers that his father was Anansi: trickster god of stories.
The Good Fight star Delroy Lindo has been set as a lead in Amazon’s adaptation of Anansi Boys.
Joe Otterson TV ReporterDelroy Lindo has been cast in a lead role of the upcoming Amazon series adaptation of the Neil Gaiman novel “Anansi Boys,” Variety has learned.“Anansi Boys” follows Charlie Nancy, a young man who is used to being embarrassed by his estranged father, Mr. Nancy.
In his latest film, Val Kilmer gets an unusual screen credit for a bona fide Hollywood movie star: cinematographer.That's because the documentary “Val” is built on thousands of hours Kilmer filmed since he was a boy — growing up, on movie sets, in cars, in hospitals. This is a lifetime-in-the-making cinematographer’s credit.Thanks to Kilmer's relentless drive to document things, “Val” is a remarkably intimate film and a moving one, too.
Tatiana Huezo’s eye for lyrical truth has materialized in documentaries like “Tempestad” or “The Tinniest Place,” works that penetrate some of the most tenebrous corners in recent Latin American history with shimmering compassion. Her stance as an acute observer of the people that survive and persevere through tumultuous sociopolitical and economically disadvantaged contexts produces thought-provoking filmic meditations.
EXCLUSIVE: Indie distributor and SVOD service MUBI is continuing its remarkable buying spree at Cannes 2021. The growing player has now taken rights from The Match Factory to Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s Cannes Competition drama Memoria for Germany, Italy, Latin America (excluding Mexico, Colombia, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador) and India.