© Artiga Photo/Corbis
Even if you’re not fully aware of it, there’s a very good chance that you know somebody who does CrossFit. They’re an army, they’re growing, and there’s no reason why you shouldn’t give up and join them immediately. Because if you do know more than one addict, it’s probably all they ever talk about.
It’s just that good.
Founded in 2000, it is only recently that CrossFit has really taken off, especially in the UK where it is growing steadily. For a lot of people, it’s not just exercise, it’s a way of life. And inevitably it comes with it own very specific problems…
13. Say Goodbye To Soft Hands Pinterest
Who needs them anyway?...
Even if you’re not fully aware of it, there’s a very good chance that you know somebody who does CrossFit. They’re an army, they’re growing, and there’s no reason why you shouldn’t give up and join them immediately. Because if you do know more than one addict, it’s probably all they ever talk about.
It’s just that good.
Founded in 2000, it is only recently that CrossFit has really taken off, especially in the UK where it is growing steadily. For a lot of people, it’s not just exercise, it’s a way of life. And inevitably it comes with it own very specific problems…
13. Say Goodbye To Soft Hands Pinterest
Who needs them anyway?...
- 11/21/2015
- by Laura Holmes
- Obsessed with Film
Lebanese icon Sabah has died at the age of 87.
The singer and actress was one of the Arab world's most well-known entertainers, first rising to fame in the 1950s in a run of Egyptian films.
Sabah - real name Jeanette Gergis al-Feghali - released over 50 albums and appeared in 98 films during her six-decade-long career.
She passed away at her Beirut home from an unspecified illness, Lebanon's National News Agency stated.
During her career, Sabah became the first Arab singer to perform at Olympia in Paris, Carnegie Hall in New York, Piccadilly Theatre in London and the Sydney Opera House.
Her biggest films include Soft Hands (1964), Ataba Square (1959) and The Second Man (1960).
She continued to perform into her 80s, and married nine times, including to Egyptian actor Roshdi Abaza and Lebanese author-director Wassim Tabbara.
She is survived by her two children, Dr Sabah Shammas and actress Howayda Mansy.
The singer and actress was one of the Arab world's most well-known entertainers, first rising to fame in the 1950s in a run of Egyptian films.
Sabah - real name Jeanette Gergis al-Feghali - released over 50 albums and appeared in 98 films during her six-decade-long career.
She passed away at her Beirut home from an unspecified illness, Lebanon's National News Agency stated.
During her career, Sabah became the first Arab singer to perform at Olympia in Paris, Carnegie Hall in New York, Piccadilly Theatre in London and the Sydney Opera House.
Her biggest films include Soft Hands (1964), Ataba Square (1959) and The Second Man (1960).
She continued to perform into her 80s, and married nine times, including to Egyptian actor Roshdi Abaza and Lebanese author-director Wassim Tabbara.
She is survived by her two children, Dr Sabah Shammas and actress Howayda Mansy.
- 11/26/2014
- Digital Spy
Paul Harrill’s Something, Anything, which co-premiered recently at the Wisconsin Film Festival and the Sarasota Film Festival, is a portrait of a young woman in crisis. Peggy [Ashley Shelton] has already achieved her “stereotypically Southern” (as she’s described in the press kit) ambitions: a successful career in realty, a husband, a house in the suburbs, and a baby on the way. In the opening moments of the film, however, she’s forced to confront her dissatisfaction with it all. A family tragedy sends Peggy on a sojourn that leads her to the Abbey of Gethsemani in Kentucky and, eventually, to a simpler life in a small apartment overlooking the Tennessee River.
Harrill first gained recognition in 2001 when his short film, Gina, An Actress, Age 29, won the top prize at Sundance and enjoyed an impressive run of screenings at international festivals. Starring Amy Hubbard and Frankie Faison (Burrell from The Wire...
Harrill first gained recognition in 2001 when his short film, Gina, An Actress, Age 29, won the top prize at Sundance and enjoyed an impressive run of screenings at international festivals. Starring Amy Hubbard and Frankie Faison (Burrell from The Wire...
- 4/14/2014
- by Darren Hughes
- MUBI
While not all films mentioned below are necessarily guaranteed future place among the Sundance Film Festival elite, it’s certainly a step in the right direction for the filmmakers and more importantly the producers backing the future of independent film. Among the eleven project participants below selected for the annual Creative Producing Labs and Creative Producing Summit (July 30 – August 3) in the Feature Film category we find such names as future superstars in Summer Shelton (she worked with Ramin Bahrani) and receives the first ever Bingham Ray Creative Producing Fellow, Tory Lenosky (worked as an assistant to Jay Van Hoy and Lars Knudsen) and Lucas Joaquin (second unit producer for Beasts of the Southern Wild). Here is the full press release below.
Feature Film Creative Producing Lab
The Feature Film Creative Producing Lab is a five-day Lab where narrative feature film producers work with an accomplished group of Creative Advisors to develop their creative instincts,...
Feature Film Creative Producing Lab
The Feature Film Creative Producing Lab is a five-day Lab where narrative feature film producers work with an accomplished group of Creative Advisors to develop their creative instincts,...
- 7/18/2012
- by Eric Lavallee
- IONCINEMA.com
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