There’s an inherent visual tension in the look of Barry Jenkin’s “Moonlight.” Set in the harsh realities of Liberty City, an impoverished section of Miami where Jenkins and co-writer Tarell McCraney grew up, the sun-drenched neighborhood is filled with bright pastel colors and lush, tropical green trees and grass.
“Tarell calls Miami a ‘beautiful nightmare’ and I think what we’ve done is paint this nightmare in beautiful tones,” Jenkins told IndieWire in a recent podcast. “We wanted to embrace the tension of that beauty, juxtaposed with the very dark things that are happening to the characters in the story.”
Read More: Filmmaker Toolkit Podcast: ‘Moonlight’ Director Barry Jenkins Reveals the Unconventional Way He Cast His Three Leads (Episode 10)
Right from the start, Jenkins and cinematographer James Laxton discussed wanting to move away from a documentary, or realist look, that has come to be expected of American indies tackling social issues like “Moonlight.
“Tarell calls Miami a ‘beautiful nightmare’ and I think what we’ve done is paint this nightmare in beautiful tones,” Jenkins told IndieWire in a recent podcast. “We wanted to embrace the tension of that beauty, juxtaposed with the very dark things that are happening to the characters in the story.”
Read More: Filmmaker Toolkit Podcast: ‘Moonlight’ Director Barry Jenkins Reveals the Unconventional Way He Cast His Three Leads (Episode 10)
Right from the start, Jenkins and cinematographer James Laxton discussed wanting to move away from a documentary, or realist look, that has come to be expected of American indies tackling social issues like “Moonlight.
- 10/26/2016
- by Chris O'Falt
- Indiewire
Fast National ratings for Thursday, September 18, 2014. Testing the limits of America's insatiable appetite for NFL action, a dismally one-sided Thursday Night Football game between the Falcons and Buccaneers fell hard from last week's telecast, though CBS still dominated primetime in all measures. The game, which was essentially over by the end of the first quarter, was off by 40 percent from the Fast Nationals for last week's Thursday Night Football premiere. Thursday's only other original programming was NBC's "The Biggest Loser," which was down nearly 20 percent from last week's premiere. Some numbers will, of course, change due to the live nature of the football. On to the numbers... Among adults 18-49, CBS averaged a 3.2 rating for Thursday night, tops in the key demographic. CBS beat the combined totals for NBC (1.2 key demo), ABC (0.7 key demo), Fox (0.5 key demo) and The CW (0.2 key demo). Overall, CBS averaged an estimated 9.02 million viewers and a 5.8 rating/10 share for Thursday,...
- 9/19/2014
- by Daniel Fienberg
- Hitfix
If you have not heard of Streb Extreme Action Company and have not heard the name Elizabeth Streb, you'll wonder why after seeing the documentary Born to Fly by director Catherine Gund, which made its world premiere at SXSW 2014.
Streb was the recipient of the 1997 MacArthur Foundation Genius Award and is a member of the NYC Mayor's Cultural Affairs Advisory Commission. In 1985, she founded a unique dance company performing her own very physical style of choreography called Pop Action. Testing the limits of human motion, Streb dancers forcefully slam into walls, dive and crash into the padded floor, and dodge flying steel girders or launch themselves high into the air, taking flight as they play with industrial-looking sets populated with heavy machinery.
Not much of Streb's personal life is explored in Born to Fly, but that may likely be because her life is so interwound with her work. Streb has...
Streb was the recipient of the 1997 MacArthur Foundation Genius Award and is a member of the NYC Mayor's Cultural Affairs Advisory Commission. In 1985, she founded a unique dance company performing her own very physical style of choreography called Pop Action. Testing the limits of human motion, Streb dancers forcefully slam into walls, dive and crash into the padded floor, and dodge flying steel girders or launch themselves high into the air, taking flight as they play with industrial-looking sets populated with heavy machinery.
Not much of Streb's personal life is explored in Born to Fly, but that may likely be because her life is so interwound with her work. Streb has...
- 3/17/2014
- by Mike Saulters
- Slackerwood
For today's Tuesday's Top Ten we're using Forbes numbers for discussion lift-off We recently discussed their list of the top paid actors from the past twelve months and came to the conclusion that they don't challenge themselves much at all. The women are a slightly different story. While it's true that no one would mistake this for a list of 'The Best Actresses Working' or 'The Actresses Who Are Currently Testing The Limits of Their Range,' this list does have slightly more variety in filmography though far less in terms of beauty and age as is always the case with the men and the women of Hollywood
01 Angelina Jolie $33
Tops the list by way of signing on to Maleficent for Disney. The Sleeping Beauty prequel is a surefire hit, both because it's presold -- branding being everything -- and because it's Jolie who rarely falters at the box office.
01 Angelina Jolie $33
Tops the list by way of signing on to Maleficent for Disney. The Sleeping Beauty prequel is a surefire hit, both because it's presold -- branding being everything -- and because it's Jolie who rarely falters at the box office.
- 7/30/2013
- by NATHANIEL R
- FilmExperience
As Ryan mentioned in his excellent summary of recent Criterion-related blogging activity, I’ve spent considerable time over the past couple months watching and learning about the films of Mikio Naruse. Last week, on my Criterion Reflections blog, I summarized those impressions in my review of Naruse’s 1960 masterpiece When a Woman Ascends the Stairs. One thing I didn’t mention there that I discovered though was that Naruse’s films, aimed primarily at a female audience, were typically shown as the first feature on a double-bill, paired with another film intended to be mainly of interest to men in the interest of maximizing attendance at the theater. Though I doubt that Naruse films were ever shown in conjunction with any of the titles included in Eclipse Series 17: Nikkatsu Noir (different studios, mainly), I got my own version of that melodrama/action flick combo when 1960′s Take Aim At The Police Van...
- 8/17/2011
- by David Blakeslee
- CriterionCast
By Daniel Frankel
Testing the limits of 3D exhibition capacity in the U.S. and Canada, Warner’s “Clash of the Titans” grossed $61.4 million this weekend, according to studio estimates, about what was expected for a 3D-converted remake with excellent pre-release tracking.
With $2.7 million tallied in a limited number of Thursday-night runs, "Titans" -- co-produced and co-financed by Legendary Pictures at a cost of around $125 million, which included late-game 3D conversion -- has now grossed $64.1 million in North America.
Amid an overall domestic box office that was ...
Testing the limits of 3D exhibition capacity in the U.S. and Canada, Warner’s “Clash of the Titans” grossed $61.4 million this weekend, according to studio estimates, about what was expected for a 3D-converted remake with excellent pre-release tracking.
With $2.7 million tallied in a limited number of Thursday-night runs, "Titans" -- co-produced and co-financed by Legendary Pictures at a cost of around $125 million, which included late-game 3D conversion -- has now grossed $64.1 million in North America.
Amid an overall domestic box office that was ...
- 4/4/2010
- by Daniel Frankel
- The Wrap
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