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A post shared by instylemagazine (@instylemagazine) on Jan 6, 2020 at 12:43am Pst
It might be 2020, but the Golden Globes afterparties are determined to take us back to our favorite shows from the past! On Sunday night, after an evening of emotional speeches and lots of censored dialogues, three One Tree Hill alums hit an elevator for a good time. Sophia Bush, Danneel Ackles, and Bryan Greenberg reunited at the InStyle Magazine and Warner Bros. afterparty, where they posed together for an adorable Instagram video that called back to their iconic roles on The CW drama.
Bush and Ackles, who played Ravens cheerleaders Brooke Davis and Rachel Gatina, respectively, posed on either side of Greenberg, holding golden pom-poms and smirking like the high-school royalty they portrayed back in the early aughts. Greenberg kept it as cool as he did in his role as Jake Jagielski, dribbling...
A post shared by instylemagazine (@instylemagazine) on Jan 6, 2020 at 12:43am Pst
It might be 2020, but the Golden Globes afterparties are determined to take us back to our favorite shows from the past! On Sunday night, after an evening of emotional speeches and lots of censored dialogues, three One Tree Hill alums hit an elevator for a good time. Sophia Bush, Danneel Ackles, and Bryan Greenberg reunited at the InStyle Magazine and Warner Bros. afterparty, where they posed together for an adorable Instagram video that called back to their iconic roles on The CW drama.
Bush and Ackles, who played Ravens cheerleaders Brooke Davis and Rachel Gatina, respectively, posed on either side of Greenberg, holding golden pom-poms and smirking like the high-school royalty they portrayed back in the early aughts. Greenberg kept it as cool as he did in his role as Jake Jagielski, dribbling...
- 1/10/2020
- by Mekishana Pierre
- Popsugar.com
Everyone’s been unmasked on “The Masked Singer,” but there is one more mystery to solve: Will it get an Emmy nomination for Best Competition Series? Based on the South Korean series, “The Masked Singer” generated the type of pop culture buzz and ratings almost every other show would kill for these days. But can it carry that to some Emmy love? Here are four reasons why the most preposterous show of the season deserves to be shortlisted.
1. It’s reinvigorated the reality genre
It may be Peak TV right now, but the Golden Age of Reality TV was the early 2000s. Remember all the buzz over “Survivor,” “American Idol,” “Joe Millionaire” and “Who Wants to Marry a Multi-Millionaire?” back in the day? Somewhere along the way, networks settled into a formulaic groove of singing competition shows, cooking competition shows, dancing competition shows, fashion-designing competition shows, dating competition shows — you get the picture.
1. It’s reinvigorated the reality genre
It may be Peak TV right now, but the Golden Age of Reality TV was the early 2000s. Remember all the buzz over “Survivor,” “American Idol,” “Joe Millionaire” and “Who Wants to Marry a Multi-Millionaire?” back in the day? Somewhere along the way, networks settled into a formulaic groove of singing competition shows, cooking competition shows, dancing competition shows, fashion-designing competition shows, dating competition shows — you get the picture.
- 3/12/2019
- by Joyce Eng
- Gold Derby
Director Benedikt Erlingsson’s second feature scoops $53,000 prize.
Tonight at a ceremony in Oslo, Icelandic director Benedikt Erlingsson became the first director to win the Nordic Council Film Prize for both his first and second feature films.
This year’s winner was Woman At War, with Erlingsson sharing the $53,000 cash prize with co-writer Ólafur Egill Egilsson and his fellow producers Marianne Slot and Carine Leblanc from France’s Slot Machine.
Woman At War, which premiered at Cannes Critics Week and is Iceland’s submission for the foreign-language Oscar race, is about a middle-aged woman who becomes an eco terrorist to...
Tonight at a ceremony in Oslo, Icelandic director Benedikt Erlingsson became the first director to win the Nordic Council Film Prize for both his first and second feature films.
This year’s winner was Woman At War, with Erlingsson sharing the $53,000 cash prize with co-writer Ólafur Egill Egilsson and his fellow producers Marianne Slot and Carine Leblanc from France’s Slot Machine.
Woman At War, which premiered at Cannes Critics Week and is Iceland’s submission for the foreign-language Oscar race, is about a middle-aged woman who becomes an eco terrorist to...
- 10/30/2018
- by Wendy Mitchell
- ScreenDaily
Nbff kicks off opening night with Sundance hit “American Animals.” The British-American true crime drama, written and directed by Bart Layton, starring Evan Peters, Barry Keoghan, Blake Jenner and Jared Abrahamson, will be followed by a gala reception at the Fashion Island shopping mall.
The fest will end its eight-day run with the West Coast premiere of “All Square,” director John Hyams’ dramedy about a small-time bookie (Michael Kelly) who comes up with a scheme to take bets on Little League games.
Following the screening, the fest, in partnership with Schiefer ChopShop and Via Lido Plaza, will host the closing-night celebration. The outdoor event will feature a hosted bar by Tito’s Vodka, Oban Whiskey and Guinness, with culinary tastings from top local restaurants.
In between those bookends, Nbff will host the U.S. premieres of the Italian feature “Wife and Husband,” the Chinese film “End of Summer,” the Japanese award-winning film “3 Ft.
The fest will end its eight-day run with the West Coast premiere of “All Square,” director John Hyams’ dramedy about a small-time bookie (Michael Kelly) who comes up with a scheme to take bets on Little League games.
Following the screening, the fest, in partnership with Schiefer ChopShop and Via Lido Plaza, will host the closing-night celebration. The outdoor event will feature a hosted bar by Tito’s Vodka, Oban Whiskey and Guinness, with culinary tastings from top local restaurants.
In between those bookends, Nbff will host the U.S. premieres of the Italian feature “Wife and Husband,” the Chinese film “End of Summer,” the Japanese award-winning film “3 Ft.
- 4/26/2018
- by Peter Caranicas
- Variety Film + TV
The San Sebastian Film Festival today announced the line-up of its Kutxabank-New Directors Award, which seeks to discover new filmmaking talent.
Thirteen films will compete in the section, all made by first or second-time filmmakers.
Among the names, who have previously created waves in non-feature format, are Swedish photographer Jens Assur, whose 2011 short Killing Chickens To Scare Monkeys, won several festival awards. Here, he makes his debut with Ravens (Korparna) - the story of a young buy who is hell-bent on his son taking over the running of the family farm.
Also making the step up from short films - and TV show The Natives (Bevergem) - is director/screenwriter Gilles coulier. The Belgian brings his debut feature Cargo to San Sebastian, exploring conflict between three siblings of a family on the edge of an abyss.
Laura Mora is one of the directors screening their second film...
Thirteen films will compete in the section, all made by first or second-time filmmakers.
Among the names, who have previously created waves in non-feature format, are Swedish photographer Jens Assur, whose 2011 short Killing Chickens To Scare Monkeys, won several festival awards. Here, he makes his debut with Ravens (Korparna) - the story of a young buy who is hell-bent on his son taking over the running of the family farm.
Also making the step up from short films - and TV show The Natives (Bevergem) - is director/screenwriter Gilles coulier. The Belgian brings his debut feature Cargo to San Sebastian, exploring conflict between three siblings of a family on the edge of an abyss.
Laura Mora is one of the directors screening their second film...
- 7/18/2017
- by Amber Wilkinson
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
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