If you’re a hardcore Star Trek fan and you’re going to San Diego Comic-Con, there’s going to be a lot for you to see and experience! This is going to be an awesome year for Star Trek fans! If you plan on attending, maybe we’ll see you there!
CBS All Access and CBS Television Studios invite the fans “to experience the ultimate Star Trek universe celebration with the first-ever Star Trek block of panel programming beaming into Hall H.” That panel will feature Star Trek: Discovery, Star Trek: Picard, and the upcoming animated series, Star Trek: Lower Decks.
Here are all the details that have been revealed for the panels and events from a press release that we were sent:
“Enter The Star Trek Universe” Panel
Saturday, July 20, 11:30 Am -1:00 Pm, Hall H
Over 50 years ago, the world was first introduced to what would...
CBS All Access and CBS Television Studios invite the fans “to experience the ultimate Star Trek universe celebration with the first-ever Star Trek block of panel programming beaming into Hall H.” That panel will feature Star Trek: Discovery, Star Trek: Picard, and the upcoming animated series, Star Trek: Lower Decks.
Here are all the details that have been revealed for the panels and events from a press release that we were sent:
“Enter The Star Trek Universe” Panel
Saturday, July 20, 11:30 Am -1:00 Pm, Hall H
Over 50 years ago, the world was first introduced to what would...
- 7/2/2019
- by Joey Paur
- GeekTyrant
An inaugural showcase in Mexico of Canadian cinema involving Telefilm Canada, Nueva Era Films and Cinépolis has kicked off in Mexico City.
An inaugural showcase in Mexico of Canadian cinema involving Telefilm Canada, Nueva Era Films and Cinépolis has kicked off in Mexico City.
Over the course of the event seven films are screening in 14 cities and 27 theatres in the Semana de Cine Canadiense (Canadian Film Week). All are Mexican premieres.
The selections are: Cardinals by Grayson Moore and Aidan Shipley; Clara by Akash Sherman; The Fireflies Are Gone (Disparition Des Lucioles) by Sébastien Pilote; Giant Little Ones by Keith Behrman...
An inaugural showcase in Mexico of Canadian cinema involving Telefilm Canada, Nueva Era Films and Cinépolis has kicked off in Mexico City.
Over the course of the event seven films are screening in 14 cities and 27 theatres in the Semana de Cine Canadiense (Canadian Film Week). All are Mexican premieres.
The selections are: Cardinals by Grayson Moore and Aidan Shipley; Clara by Akash Sherman; The Fireflies Are Gone (Disparition Des Lucioles) by Sébastien Pilote; Giant Little Ones by Keith Behrman...
- 3/31/2019
- by Jeremy Kay
- ScreenDaily
Star Trek is boldly going on a new mission where only men have gone before. Hanelle Culpepper will direct the first two episodes of the upcoming untitled Star Trek Jean-Luc Picard series, making her the first woman to direct a pilot or debut episode of a Starfleet series in the franchise’s 53-year history. All 13 feature films in the Trek universe have also been directed by men.
Culpepper has directed two episodes of Star Trek Discovery on CBS All-Access. She helmed the episode titled Vaulting Ambition in Season One as well as an upcoming episode in Season Two, now underway on the subscription streaming site.
The as-yet-untitled Star Trek series features Patrick Stewart reprising his iconic role as Jean-Luc Picard, which he played for seven seasons on Star Trek: Next Generation. The new series will follow the iconic character into the next chapter of his life and will air...
Culpepper has directed two episodes of Star Trek Discovery on CBS All-Access. She helmed the episode titled Vaulting Ambition in Season One as well as an upcoming episode in Season Two, now underway on the subscription streaming site.
The as-yet-untitled Star Trek series features Patrick Stewart reprising his iconic role as Jean-Luc Picard, which he played for seven seasons on Star Trek: Next Generation. The new series will follow the iconic character into the next chapter of his life and will air...
- 3/1/2019
- by Geoff Boucher
- Deadline Film + TV
Director Sebastien Pilote’s ongoing study of Quebec lives running out of options continues apace with “The Fireflies Are Gone.” This third feature (his first in five years) is, like its predecessors “The Salesman” and “The Auction,” a neatly observed character portrait in a well-detailed small-town setting. But in contrast to the middle-aged protagonists of his prior films, whose lives were already winding down after decades of toil, the heroine here is just at the start of adulthood. And as she obstinately keeps reminding more responsible types, she has no plans for what she’ll do with the rest of it. This is a satisfying, slightly mournful seriocomedy that’s equal parts cynical, hopeful, and ambivalent. It’s also, in Pilote’s now-established style, writ so small and low-key that it may not travel far beyond the festival circuit and standard Canadian distribution outlets.
First impressions aren’t all that...
First impressions aren’t all that...
- 9/27/2018
- by Dennis Harvey
- Variety Film + TV
While you can debate the success of politically motivated events like 1970’s October Crisis in Quebec, Canada, you can’t question their danger removed from the cause. The media reports the carnage whether terrorist bombings or kidnappings and murder. They provide an objective account of what’s happening—in this case the Front de libération du Québec (Flq) wreaking havoc to force secession from the country and become an autonomous nation—and leave it to their viewers to understand the context. Adults can handle this because many already have an opinion one way or the other. But children don’t. Children only see their parents’ reactions and the aftermath. If they’re led to understand violence can achieve one’s goals, they might follow suit when their own backs are against the wall.
This is an interesting wrinkle many forget with rebellion proving much more palatable. Artists generally gravitate to...
This is an interesting wrinkle many forget with rebellion proving much more palatable. Artists generally gravitate to...
- 2/20/2018
- by Jared Mobarak
- The Film Stage
Luc Picard isn’t the first Canadian director to make a dark cinematic portrait of Quebec’s 1970 October Crisis, where the real-life kidnapping of two government officials by a separatist group, the Front de Liberation du Quebec (Flq), sparked a countrywide panic.
But Picard, also a popular Quebec actor and comedian, is the first to examine his French-speaking province’s struggle for nationhood through the eyes of children. The result is Cross My Heart, a dramatic feature screening Feb. 18 as part of Berlin’s youth-focused Generation sidebar. The film tells the story of 12-year-old Manon, her little brother, Mimi, and two young...
But Picard, also a popular Quebec actor and comedian, is the first to examine his French-speaking province’s struggle for nationhood through the eyes of children. The result is Cross My Heart, a dramatic feature screening Feb. 18 as part of Berlin’s youth-focused Generation sidebar. The film tells the story of 12-year-old Manon, her little brother, Mimi, and two young...
- 2/16/2018
- by Etan Vlessing
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Youth-focused Berlinale sidebar will feature 65 short and feature films from from 39 production and co-production companies.
Source: Berlin Film Festival
‘303’
The Berlin Film Festival (15 - 25 Feb)has revealed the full list of titles that will play in this year’s Generation sidebar, which focuses on youth and children’s films.
In total there are 65 films, 30 of which are feature length in the Generation Kplus and Generation 14plus competitions. They hail from 39 production and co-production companies.
The first batch of Generation titles were announced in December.
Hans Weingartner’s 303 will open The Generation 14plus competition, with Weingartner and the cast attending. Danish animation Den Utrolige Historie Om Den Kæmpestore Pære (The Incredible Story Of The Giant Pear) will open the Generation Kplus competition.
Maryanne Redpath, Berlinale Generation section head, said: “Every single selection is an invitation to the audience to experience life from the perspective of youth. They are films with young people, as opposed to about...
Source: Berlin Film Festival
‘303’
The Berlin Film Festival (15 - 25 Feb)has revealed the full list of titles that will play in this year’s Generation sidebar, which focuses on youth and children’s films.
In total there are 65 films, 30 of which are feature length in the Generation Kplus and Generation 14plus competitions. They hail from 39 production and co-production companies.
The first batch of Generation titles were announced in December.
Hans Weingartner’s 303 will open The Generation 14plus competition, with Weingartner and the cast attending. Danish animation Den Utrolige Historie Om Den Kæmpestore Pære (The Incredible Story Of The Giant Pear) will open the Generation Kplus competition.
Maryanne Redpath, Berlinale Generation section head, said: “Every single selection is an invitation to the audience to experience life from the perspective of youth. They are films with young people, as opposed to about...
- 1/17/2018
- by Jasper Hart
- ScreenDaily
Youth-focused Berlinale sidebar will feature 65 short and feature films from from 39 production and co-production companies.
Source: Berlin Film Festival
‘303’
The Berlin Film Festival (15 - 25 Feb)has revealed the full list of titles that will play in this year’s Generations sidebar, which focuses on youth and children’s films.
In total there are 65 films, 30 of which are feature length. They hail from 39 production and co-production companies.
The first batch of Generations titles were announced in December.
Hans Weingartner’s 303 will open The Generation 14plus competition, with Weingartner and the cast attending. Danish animation Den Utrolige Historie Om Den Kæmpestore Pære (The Incredible Story Of The Giant Pear) will open the Generation Kplus competition.
Maryanne Redpath, Berlinale Generations section head, said: “Every single selection is an invitation to the audience to experience life from the perspective of youth. They are films with young people, as opposed to about them. An impressive characteristic throughout the programme is not only the...
Source: Berlin Film Festival
‘303’
The Berlin Film Festival (15 - 25 Feb)has revealed the full list of titles that will play in this year’s Generations sidebar, which focuses on youth and children’s films.
In total there are 65 films, 30 of which are feature length. They hail from 39 production and co-production companies.
The first batch of Generations titles were announced in December.
Hans Weingartner’s 303 will open The Generation 14plus competition, with Weingartner and the cast attending. Danish animation Den Utrolige Historie Om Den Kæmpestore Pære (The Incredible Story Of The Giant Pear) will open the Generation Kplus competition.
Maryanne Redpath, Berlinale Generations section head, said: “Every single selection is an invitation to the audience to experience life from the perspective of youth. They are films with young people, as opposed to about them. An impressive characteristic throughout the programme is not only the...
- 1/17/2018
- by Jasper Hart
- ScreenDaily
Daughter of MineThe titles for the 68th Berlin International Film Festival are being announced in anticipation of the event running February 15 - 25, 2018. We will update the program as new films are revealed.COMPETITIONDon't Worry, He Won't Get Far on Foot (Gus Van Sant)Dovlatov (Alexey German, Jr.)Eva (Benoît Jacquot)Daughter of Mine (Laura Bispuri)In the Aisles (Thomas Stuber)Mein Bruder heißt Robert und ist ein Idiot (Philip Gröning)Mug (Małgorzata Szumowska)Berlinale Special GALAThe Bookshop (Isabel Coixet)The Silent Revolution (Lars Kraume)Panoramal'Animale (Katharina Mückstein, Austria)Bixa Travesty (Tranny Fag) (Claudia Priscilla & Kiko Goifman, Brazil)Ex Pajé (Ex Shaman) (Luiz Bolognesi, Brazil)Malambo, el hombre bueno (Malambo, the Good Man) (Santiago Loza, Argentina)Obscuro Barroco (Evangelia Kranioti, France/Greece)La omisión (The Omission) (Sebastián Schjaer, Argentina/The Netherlands/Switzerland)Profile (Timur Bekmambetov, USA/UK/Cyprus)River's Edge (Isao Yukisada, Japan)That Summer (Göran Hugo Olsson, Sweden/Denmark/USA)Yocho (Foreboding) (Kiyoshi Kurosawa,...
- 12/21/2017
- MUBI
This is actually pretty spectacular. A guy who goes by the name of Halnicholas on YouTube, is digitally recreating the Jean-Luc Picard's starship the Enterprise-d, from Star Trek: The Next Generation. The starship is pretty damn huge, it's more than 2,100 feet long and 1,500 feet wide! And this guy is creating a 1:1 scale working version of the ship that you are actually able to walk around in a game called Minecraft. In this game, players mine for materials and then you can build with them whatever you want. He's only created the framework of the ship for now, but it's very impressive. He plans on eventually completing the whole ship interior and all.
Check out the video tour of what he's building below and tell us what you think!
Here's a note from the creator, filling us in on some of the details.
This is the beginning framework...
Check out the video tour of what he's building below and tell us what you think!
Here's a note from the creator, filling us in on some of the details.
This is the beginning framework...
- 10/4/2010
- by Venkman
- GeekTyrant
TORONTO -- Quebec films dominated nearly all the major categories as nominations for the Genies, Canada's top film honors, were unveiled Tuesday in Toronto.
In the best picture competiton, Ivan Reitman-produced Trailer Park Boys: The Movie was the lone English-language Canadian entry. It will face off against four Quebecois films: Erik Canuel's Bon Cop, Bad Cop, Charles Biname's Maurice Richard/The Rocket, Jean-Francois Pouliot's Guide De La Petite Vengeance and Robert Favreau's Un Dimanche A Kigali.
The same quartet of French-language filmmakers surfaced again in the best director category, an all-Quebecois affair rounded out by La Vie Secrete Des Gens Heureux helmer Stephane Lapointe.
"Maurice Richard/The Rocket," a French-language drama about the legendary hockey player, led the Genies field with 13 nominations, followed by bilingual buddy comedy Bon Cop, Bad Cop with 10 nominations.
Terry Gilliam's Tideland, a British-Canadian co-production, grabbed five craft nominations and a best actress nod for Jodelle Ferland, while Julia Kwan's Eve and the Fire Horse earned a best supporting actress nomination for Vivian Wu and a best supporting actor nomination for Lester Chit-Man Chan. Otherwise, English-language Canadian movies, which garner a paltry 1% of cinema screen-time nationwide, look set to play second fiddle to their French-language counterparts when the Genies are handed out next month. Quebec films similarly overshadow the acting categories, with Colm Feore (Bon Cop) going up against Roy Dupuis (Maurice Richard), Belgian actor Olivier Gourmet (Congorama), Patrick Huard (Bon Cop) and Luc Picard (Un Dimanche A Kigali) in the best actor competition.
In the best actress category, Sigourney Weaver, nominated for her role in Snow Cake, will challenge Julie Le Breton (Maurice Richard), Fatou N'Diaye (Un Dimanche A Kigali), veteran Quebec star Ginette Reno (Le Secret De Ma Mere) and Jodelle Ferland (Tideland).
The Genie nominations, which came on the second day of Canada's actors strike, were announced at a Toronto press conference with no nominated directors or actors on hand for the assembled media.
In the best picture competiton, Ivan Reitman-produced Trailer Park Boys: The Movie was the lone English-language Canadian entry. It will face off against four Quebecois films: Erik Canuel's Bon Cop, Bad Cop, Charles Biname's Maurice Richard/The Rocket, Jean-Francois Pouliot's Guide De La Petite Vengeance and Robert Favreau's Un Dimanche A Kigali.
The same quartet of French-language filmmakers surfaced again in the best director category, an all-Quebecois affair rounded out by La Vie Secrete Des Gens Heureux helmer Stephane Lapointe.
"Maurice Richard/The Rocket," a French-language drama about the legendary hockey player, led the Genies field with 13 nominations, followed by bilingual buddy comedy Bon Cop, Bad Cop with 10 nominations.
Terry Gilliam's Tideland, a British-Canadian co-production, grabbed five craft nominations and a best actress nod for Jodelle Ferland, while Julia Kwan's Eve and the Fire Horse earned a best supporting actress nomination for Vivian Wu and a best supporting actor nomination for Lester Chit-Man Chan. Otherwise, English-language Canadian movies, which garner a paltry 1% of cinema screen-time nationwide, look set to play second fiddle to their French-language counterparts when the Genies are handed out next month. Quebec films similarly overshadow the acting categories, with Colm Feore (Bon Cop) going up against Roy Dupuis (Maurice Richard), Belgian actor Olivier Gourmet (Congorama), Patrick Huard (Bon Cop) and Luc Picard (Un Dimanche A Kigali) in the best actor competition.
In the best actress category, Sigourney Weaver, nominated for her role in Snow Cake, will challenge Julie Le Breton (Maurice Richard), Fatou N'Diaye (Un Dimanche A Kigali), veteran Quebec star Ginette Reno (Le Secret De Ma Mere) and Jodelle Ferland (Tideland).
The Genie nominations, which came on the second day of Canada's actors strike, were announced at a Toronto press conference with no nominated directors or actors on hand for the assembled media.
TORONTO -- Quebec films continued their dominance of the Canadian movie industry Wednesday as Jean-Marc Vallee's C.R.A.Z.Y. picked up 12 nominations for the 2006 Genies, the nation's top film awards. C.R.A.Z.Y, a drama about a gay man coming of age in Catholic Quebec during the 1970s and Canada's Oscar contender in the best foreign-language category, brought Vallee nominations for best film, best direction and best original screenplay. Other Quebec contenders included Luc Picard's L'Audition, a drama about a bill collector who delves into his childhood to prepare for his first movie audition, and Louise Archambault's Familia. Both grabbed seven Genie nominations.
- 1/25/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
TORONTO -- Quebec films continued their dominance of the Canadian movie industry Wednesday as Jean-Marc Vallee's C.R.A.Z.Y. picked up 12 nominations for the 2006 Genies, the nation's top film awards. C.R.A.Z.Y, a drama about a gay man coming of age in Catholic Quebec during the 1970s and Canada's Oscar contender in the best foreign-language category, brought Vallee nominations for best film, best direction and best original screenplay. Other Quebec contenders included Luc Picard's L'Audition, a drama about a bill collector who delves into his childhood to prepare for his first movie audition, and Louise Archambault's Familia. Both grabbed seven Genie nominations.
- 1/25/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
TORONTO -- Quebec film critics on Tuesday chose David Cronenberg's A History of Violence as their best film of 2005. The Association quebecoise des critiques de cinema chose Cronenberg's drama about violence in a small American town over finalists including Ang Lee's Brokeback Mountain, the Dardenne brother's L'enfant, Lodge Kerrigan's Keane and Michael Haneke's Cache. The Quebec film critics will announce their choice for best Quebec film of 2005 at the upcoming Rendez-vous du cinema quebecois festival in February. The five finalists for the best Quebec film are Luc Picard's L'audition; Jean-Marc Vallee's C.R.A.Z.Y, Canada's Oscar contender in the best foreign-language category; Bernard Emond's La Neuvaine; and Robert Morin's Petit Pow! Pow! Noel.
- 1/10/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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