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Awards Season Video Interviews

1 hour ago

Starting at Cannes, I’ve been sitting down with awards contenders for exclusive video interviews. Check out the Oscar contenders below.

Into The Inferno’: How Werner Herzog Learned to Love and Fear Volcanoes (Exclusive Video)

Moonlight’ and ‘Luke Cage’ Breakout Mahershala Ali on the Power of Diverse Roles

Lupita Nyong’o Finds Her Strength in ‘Queen of Katwe’ (Video)

Joel Edgerton Reveals How ‘Loving’ Can Change the Conversation About Racism in America (Video)

Amy Adams: Queen of Fall Festivals and Heading for Oscars (Exclusive Tiff Video)

How Meryl Streep Embraced Being Awful in ‘Florence Foster Jenkins’ – Video

Related stories13 Lessons From Making a Film Festival Breakout: AFI Fest Directors Share Their Tips'Jackie' Official Trailer: Natalie Portman's Jaw-Dropping Performance Will Go Down as One of Her Very Best'Patriots Day' Trailer: Mark Wahlberg's Boston Marathon Bombing Drama Looks Heart-Pounding »


- Anne Thompson

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‘The Joneses’ Exclusive Clip: New Documentary Follows a Lively 74-Year-Old Transgender Divorcee and Her Family

2 hours ago

Moby Longinotto’s documentary “The Joneses” explores the story of Jheri Jones, a lively 74-year-old transgender divorcee and her family who live in Bible Belt Mississippi. Though she’s reconciled with the family after years of estrangement, and now lives with two of her sons in a trailer park home, Jheri embarks on a new journey to reveal her identity to her grandchildren, resolve old resentments and reconcile thorny questions from the past. Watch an exclusive clip from the film below.

Read More: ‘Weiner,’ Yes; ‘The Eagle Huntress,’ No: The 15 Documentaries on the Doc NYC Short List

This is Longinotto’s first feature-length documentary. He has previously directed short documentary films that have won numerous awards and have aired around the world. Some of his films include “Bad Boy” for the BBC, which followed a young man released from prison who attempts to reenter society, and “Smalltown Boy” for Channel 4, »


- Vikram Murthi

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‘The Martian’ Gets Vr Treatment With New Interactive Experience From Ridley Scott and Fox

3 hours ago

If there was one thing missing from Ridley Scott’s “The Martian,” it was the true, visceral experience of being right there on the red planet as Matt Damon’s Mark Watney struggled to make his way home to Earth. Thanks to the magic of virtual reality, that’s no longer a concern. Now you too can can trapped on a distant planet with little — if any! — hope of returning to only other world you’ve ever known.

Fox has today announced the creation of “The Martian: Vr Experience,” a new interactive experience that allows its viewers to participate “from astronaut Mark Watney’s perspective, performing tasks that will facilitate his chances for survival. Viewers can fly onto the surface of Mars, steer at zero gravity through space, drive a rover navigating over craters and experience key scenes from the hit film in a 360-degree virtual reality environment.” Executive »


- Kate Erbland

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How Filmmakers And Film Critics Need To Adapt In the Age Of President Trump — IndieWire Critics Survey

3 hours ago

Every week, IndieWire asks a select handful of film and TV critics two questions and publishes the results on Monday morning. (The answer to the second, “What is the best film in theaters right now?”, can be found at the end of this post.)

This week’s question: In the wake of the election, Filmmaker Magazine published a piece about the intrinsically political nature of movies, in which the writer argued: “For the next four years (and long afterwards), every time someone leaves a movie theater feeling contented, feeling set in their values, feeling numbed and entertained and nothing else, that’s a problem.”

How does filmmaking — and film criticism — need to adapt in the age of Trump?

Richard Brody (@tnyfrontrow), The New Yorker

Filmmakers need to make films and film critics need to write about them. None of them need instruction; the hardest thing in good and bad times »


- David Ehrlich

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‘Spirited Away’ Returns To Theaters This December For Two-Night Event

3 hours ago

In the fifteen years since its initial release, Hayao Miyazaki’s animated film “Spirited Away,” about a 10-year-old girl who enters a mysterious spirit world to free herself and her parents, has been cemented as a modern classic. It was universally acclaimed upon release, became the most successful film in Japanese history and won the Oscar for Best Animated Feature. This past August, the film was voted as the fourth best film of the 21st century so far by over 177 film critics from around the world.

Read More: The 100 Greatest Films of the 21st Century: BBC Polls Critics From Around The Globe

Now, in honor of its 15th anniversary, “Spirited Away” will return to over 400 theaters nationwide for a two-night event this December, courtesy of Gkids and Fathom Events. On Sunday, December 4, the film will screen at 12 p.m. dubbed in English, while on Monday, December 5, it will screen at 7 p. »


- Vikram Murthi

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Comedian Brett Gelman Severs Ties With Adult Swim Over Lack of Female Representation

3 hours ago

Comedian Brett Gelman has taken to Twitter to announce that he has “severed ties” with comedy network Adult Swim in the wake of the recent controversy surrounding their lack of female creators.

Splitsider reports that the “Dinner in America” star and creator will no longer work in tandem with the network, specifically pointing to Evp/creative director Mike Lazzo’s recent Reddit post that attempted to explain away the channel’s lack of female creators — as was reported earlier this year, they currently have zero projects from women currently in the works — by announcing that  “women don’t tend to like conflict” when it comes time to write and produce comedy.

Adult Swim’s Mike Lazzo Takes to Reddit to Defend Lack of Female Creators https://t.co/fjxE8FYx7z This Is The Reason I Have Severed Ties

Brett Gelman (@brettgelman) November 14, 2016

Gelman also noted that his decision stemmed »


- Kate Erbland

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Colin Farrell Says Next Yorgos Lanthimos Film Made Him Nauseous And Is Even Bleaker Than ‘The Lobster’

4 hours ago

With just a couple weeks left before film critics start listing the best movies of 2016, it’s safe to assume Yorgos Lanthimos’ “The Lobster” will be included on many of them. A darling of the 2015 festival circuit, the dark romance satire arrived in theaters this summer to critical acclaim, most of which singled out the never-better Colin Farrell in the lead role. No wonder expectations are sky high for the duo’s next collaboration, “The Killing of a Sacred Deer,” which co-stars Nicole Kidman and Alicia Silverstone.

Read More: Why Colin Farrell’s Gut in ‘The Lobster’ Deserves a Best Supporting Actor Nomination

In a new interview with Business Insider, Farrell couldn’t help but tease the project, which is currently in production. The story, which has been described as a “psychological thriller with supernatural elements,” finds the actor playing a surgeon who takes a teenager under his wing and »


- Zack Sharf

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‘Doctor Strange’: How VFX Tapped ‘Inception’ for a New Marvel Dimension

4 hours ago

With “Doctor Strange,” Marvel entered the supernatural realm for the first time, requiring a new set of VFX tricks for Benedict Cumberbatch’s arrogant wizard. They not only found inspiration in “Doctor Strange” comic book artist Steve Ditko’s psychedelic tropes but also Christopher Nolan’s Oscar-winning “Inception” effect of bending and folding buildings.

“It was about creating new worlds and magic, going from simple ring shields to portals opening to other dimensions to entire cities being bent to time going backwards,” VFX production supervisor Stephane Ceretti told IndieWire.

There are three major dimensional worlds — Mirror Dimension, Dark Dimension and Astral Realm — each requiring different looks. And Strange’s introduction was called “Magical Mystery Tour” (with VFX created by Method), a film-within-the-film psychedelic journey, leveraging Ditko’s artwork, for starters, where Strange gets pushed out of his body into worm holes and various kaleidoscopic shapes.

Charles Wood, the production designer, »


- Bill Desowitz

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Mondo Bringing ‘Fight Club’ Original Score Back to Vinyl for First Time in 15 Years

5 hours ago

Here’s an epic cinephile gift being released just in time for the 2016 holiday season. Mondo has announced it is bringing the Dust Brothers’ “Fight Club” original score back to vinyl for the first time in 15 years. The release, which includes two LPs pressed on 180-gram “Pink Soap” vinyl, will be available for purchase starting this Wednesday, November 16.

Read More; ‘Fight Club’: Meat Loaf Reveals How He Helped David Fincher Pick Key Takes During the Directing Process

Released in 1999, “Fight Club” has emerged as one of the most popular cult films over the last decade. It singlehandedly turned David Fincher into an auteur filmmaker even fanboys could love, and that epic twist still registers disbelief even 17 years later. To this day, the psycho-thriller is the only film score the Dust Brothers have ever made, and they were approached personally by Fincher to make the music since he preferred hiring »


- Zack Sharf

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Jason Momoa Goes to Bloody Battle in New Images From Netflix Period Drama ‘Frontier’

5 hours ago

Though 2016 is far from over, the streaming service Netflix is already prepping for the new year with a diverse lineup of new shows, including an adaptation of “A Series of Unfortunate Events,” a show based on the Justin Simien film “Dear White People” and another sequel to “Wet Hot American Summer.” Today, Netflix has announced a premiere date for a new period drama entitled “Frontier,” starring Jason Momoa (“Game of Thrones”), about the North American fur trade in the 1700s and the warring factions vying for control in a ruthless game of wealth and power. Check out new images from the series above and below.

Read More: New Netflix Series ‘Frontier’ Features Jason Momoa Fighting Over Fur

Momoa stars as Declan Harp, a ruthless fur trader driven by lust and revenge. The series co-stars Landon Liboiron (“Hemlock Grove”), Alun Armstrong (“Braveheart”), Allan Hawco (“Republic of Doyle”), Jessica Matten (“Blackstone”), Shawn Doyle »


- Vikram Murthi

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13 Lessons From Making a Film Festival Breakout: AFI Fest Directors Share Their Tips

5 hours ago

For many people, filmmaking is a process of ongoing education.  The filmmakers who succeed are often the ones willing to learn from their mistakes and taking advice. IndieWire recently checked in with the up-and-coming indie directors behind the exciting films playing in the “New Auteurs” and “American Independent” categories at this year’s AFI Fest to find out what they learned while making their festival breakout.

Read More: AFI Fest 2016 – What Cameras Were Used to Shoot This Year’s Films

Kris Avedisian, “Donald Cried”:  There was a time while shooting that I got lost in the process. I started to see the movie take shape but it was in a very deformed state. There are times when you have to make decisions, changes and adjust because of what you’re seeing. But it could be hard to know sometimes if I was only reacting to seeing scenes out of order, »


- Chris O'Falt

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Alec Baldwin Says NBC Execs Won’t Allow ‘SNL’ to ‘Tell People Who to Vote For’

7 hours ago

The long-running sketch series “Saturday Night Live” has come under much criticism over the past year for allowing president-elect Donald Trump to host the show last year and thus normalizing and/or softening his bigoted rhetoric. The criticism heightened this past weekend when cast member Kate McKinnon as Hillary Clinton opened the show by singing “Hallelujah” as a tribute to Leonard Cohen’s passing and Clinton’s loss. Suffice it to say, it was a divisive performance. Some found it to be a moving acknowledgement of our precarious times, others found it to be tone-deaf given the show’s track record over the past year. Now in response to criticism of the show, actor Alec Baldwin, who played Trump on the show during this past year, has come out and said that NBC execs “kill” attempts for “SNL” to tell people who to vote for.

Read More: ‘Saturday Night Live »


- Vikram Murthi

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Jon Stewart’s Animated Cable News Parody Expected to Launch This Winter on HBO

7 hours ago

Jon Stewart’s new animated project could finally premiere in the first quarter of 2017.

That’s the word from HBO programming president Casey Bloys, who says Stewart’s series of animated shows, set inside the world of cable news, might be ready “maybe by February or March but that’s a little bit up in the air. He’s building an entire animation studio. It’s a giant undertaking. Once it’s up and running it’s going to be a great platform for him.”

Bloys talked to IndieWire today about HBO’s Season 2 renewals of “Westworld,” “Divorce” and “Insecure,” but also addressed a few other nuggets about the channel – including the long-gestating Stewart project.

Read More: Jon Stewart’s New HBO Animated Project will Parody Cable News

Stewart is creating an animation studio to regularly produce animated shorts online throughout the day, almost immediately after news arises. There will also be a text component, »


- Michael Schneider

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‘Westworld,’ ‘Insecure,’ ‘Divorce’ Renewed For Second Seasons by HBO

7 hours ago

Westworld,” “Insecure” and “Divorce” will all be back for a sophomore season on HBO.

HBO announced on Monday that all three shows had been renewed. HBO programming president Casey Bloys told IndieWire that all three shows will be back with 10 episodes each, but it’s unclear whether Season 2 of “Westworld” will be ready to return by next fall.

“‘Westworld’ is such a big and ambitious show I’m not sure it will be fall 2017, it could go into 2018,” Bloys said. “We’ll have to see when we get it up and running.”

The pickup comes after creatively solid freshman frames for all three Sunday night series, which received generally strong reviews. “Westworld” is also a solid ratings performer, as its most recent episode attracted 2.7 million viewers in the Live+3 (which includes three days of DVR and VOD usage) ratings.

Bring yourself back online. #Westworld is renewed for Season 2. pic.twitter. »


- Michael Schneider

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‘Jackie’ Official Trailer: Natalie Portman’s Jaw-Dropping Performance Will Go Down as One of Her Very Best

7 hours ago

There are performances, and then there is what Natalie Portman achieves in Pablo Larraín’s “Jackie.” In what is easily some of the most powerful work of the Oscar winner’s career, “Jackie” finds Portman burrowing into the soul of Jacqueline Kennedy like never before and forcing the viewer to see her subject in a new, more complex light.

Read More:  ‘Jackie’: Natalie Portman Explains How She Looked Past Her Own ‘Common Perceptions’ for Her Lauded Role

Framed around Jackie’s interview with Life magazine reporter Theodore H. White, which took place just a week after her husband’s assassination, the film is a dive into her subconscious as she comes to terms with her husband’s death and rises to the challenge of preserving his legacy in American history. Peter Sarsgaard, Greta Gerwig, John Hurt and Max Casella co-star.

In an A- review out of the Venice Film Festival, »


- Zack Sharf

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Shia Labeouf Says He Regrets Criticizing Steven Spielberg

8 hours ago

Shia Labeouf wishes he could have a do over on some of his previous comments about legendary director Steven Spielberg. Shortly after completing Spielberg’s “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull,” Labeouf told the Los Angeles Times that Spielberg had “done so much great work that there’s no need for him to feel vulnerable about one film, but when you drop the ball you drop the ball.”

Man Down’ Trailer: Shia Labeouf Saw Some Things in the War That You Just Wouldn’t Understand, Man

Labeouf later told Variety that Spielberg was “less a director than he is a f---ing company.” Now, Labeouf says he feels he was too harsh on Spielberg. “I f--- up sometimes, you know,” Labeouf told SiriusXM’s “Sway In The Morning” show. “I probably could’ve gone lighter on Spielberg, that was probably something I should’ve backed off of.” Labeouf »


- Graham Winfrey

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‘The Incomparable Rose Hartman’ Exclusive Trailer: A Portrait of a Renowned Fashion Photographer

9 hours ago

At almost 80 years old, renowned photographer Rose Hartman remains one of the most vital New York artists living today. A fixture at Studio 54 for many years, Hartman reveled in stealthily documenting stars in candid shots, like Mick and Bianca Jagger, Andy Warhol and more. She was the first to move behind the curtains of Fashion Week catwalks to shoot models and designers at work, making quick fans of Donna Karan and Carolina Herrera. Though some describe her as brash and rude, many believe she has defined the  New York City social scene for decades. Øtis Mass’ new documentary “The Incomparable Rose Hartman” paints a portrait of the indelible figure and examines the “Tasmanian Devil of photography.” Watch an exclusive trailer for the film below.

Read More: Doc NYC 2016: 13 Movies We Can’t Wait to See at the Festival

This film is Mass’ first feature-length documentary. He began his career »


- Vikram Murthi

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Governors Awards: Inside Hollywood’s Attempt to Clear Post-Election Fog and Kickstart Oscar Race

9 hours ago

In its own way, the Governors Awards is the most important film event of the year. On the surface, it’s the Academy Awards rendered in miniature as the Academy Board of Governors presents honorary Oscars to veteran film artists. But in reality, this is the Oscar starting gun wrapped in tuxedos and Louboutins: There’s never greater proximity to Academy voters.

Launched in 2009 to present career awards while not extending the already-long Oscarcast, the Governors Awards are meant to evoke the more-intimate feel of early Academy Award ceremonies. However, Oscar consultants quickly saw the event as an odyssey in its own right, since it provides an opportunity for intimate, grade-a campaigning just at the start of Phase 1 — the period that defines the Oscar season up until nominations are announced.

It’s a moment that won’t be matched for the rest of the season, but it also makes for »


- Anne Thompson

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What Are The Best Movies In The Criterion Collection? — IndieWire Readers Survey

9 hours ago

(Editor’s Note: This survey is presented in partnership with FilmStruck. Developed and managed by Turner Classic Movies (TCM) in collaboration with the Criterion Collection, FilmStruck features the largest streaming library of contemporary and classic arthouse, indie, foreign and cult films as well as extensive bonus content, filmmaker interviews and rare footage. Learn more here.)

It’s quite the time to be alive for The Criterion Collection. The company has officially moved its massive library from Hulu to its new online home at FilmStruck, making it the exclusive streaming platform for the largest collection of contemporary and classic arthouse, indie, foreign and cult films. For $10.99 a month, cinephiles can gain access to the entire FilmStruck and Criterion streaming libraries, plus original programming like filmmaker profiles, master classes, and curated series by celebrated guests from the film world and beyond.

Read More: FilmStruck is Here! Five Great Films To Watch on »

- Zack Sharf

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Attention, Filmmakers: Here’s Your Chance to Go to Cuba to Make a Movie with Werner Herzog

9 hours ago

Ever dream of making a short film with an icon of cinema like Werner Herzog? Well here’s your chance to do just that, in Cuba no less. Black Factory Cinema is now accepting applications for its fourth practical worship, “Filming in Cuba With Werner Herzog.” The company partnered with Abbas Kiarostami over the past three years for similar workshops in cities such as Barcelona and Colombia, and in the wake of his passing earlier this year, Herzog is taking over mentor duties for the fourth installment.

Read More: Here’s What It’s Like to Make A Short Film with Abbas Kiarostami in 10 Days

Now through December 20, filmmakers can apply for one of 50 spots in the workshop. Each artist will get the opportunity to develop a project led under the guidance and supervision of Werner Herzog during the 10-day workshop. Visit the Black Factory Cinema website for an official registration form, »


- Zack Sharf

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