Podcasts about foreign language oscar

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Best podcasts about foreign language oscar

Latest podcast episodes about foreign language oscar

Creativity in Captivity
JUDITH WESTON: Directing Actors

Creativity in Captivity

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2024 34:52


A sought-after coach and teacher for 35 years, to filmmakers and actors around the world, Judith is the author of two books. Her beloved classic Directing Actors, a bestseller ever since it was first published in 1996, has now been released in a 25th Anniversary Edition, expanded, revised and updated. Meanwhile, the original edition is available as an Audiobook, narrated by Judith. Her second book, The Film Director's Intuition, is still a favorite for many readers. These books bring hope and focus to directors, actors, screenwriters, and other film industry professionals. Her directing students include Mexican filmmaker, Alejandro González Iñárritu (director of The Revenant, Academy Award winner for Best Director, and Birdman, winner of the Academy Award for Best Director and Best Picture); Ava DuVernay (director of When They See Us, nominated for 16 Emmys, and Selma, nominated for a Best Picture Oscar); Steve McQueen (director of Small Axe and Best Picture Academy Award winner 12 Years a Slave); Taika Waititi  (Jojo Rabbit, Thor: Ragnarok, Hunt for the Wilderpeople, Boy, Flight of the Conchords); Deniz Gamze Erguven, (Handmaid's Tale, Mustang, nominated for Foreign Language Oscar) and David Chase (creator/writer/director, The Sopranos). Judith's international presence includes 17 years of workshops at the Binger FilmLab in Amsterdam. Other European cities where she has taught include Berlin, Cologne, Dublin, Stockholm, Lund, Copenhagen, Helsinki, Milan, Strasbourg, Belgrade, Utrecht, Geneva, Zurich, and Penzance. In Canada: Toronto, Vancouver, Winnipeg, Halifax, and St. John's. In the southern hemisphere: Sydney, Auckland, Wellington, and Cape Town, South Africa.  Judith has been on the faculty of USC, the American Film Institute, and the Los Angeles Film School. She has been a guest lecturer at UCLA, Film Independent Project Involve, Tisch School of the Arts Asia, and Cal State Universities at Long Beach and Northridge.

Face2Face with David Peck
Episode 489 - Pat Collins and Henry Glassie - Field Work

Face2Face with David Peck

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2020 44:06


Pat Collins and Henry Glassie and Face2Face host David Peck talk about Field Work, beauty, non-verbal cues, silence and listening, eliminating prejudice, and why art is always rooted in community. Trailer Synopsis: Following the success of Song of Granite, Irish Director Pat Collins returns with his new documentary feature, Henry Glassie: Field Work, which will have its world premiere at the upcoming Toronto International Film Festival.Over the last 50 years the celebrated American Folklorist Henry Glassie has been writing in-depth studies of communities and their art. Inspired by the writings and ideas of Glassie – Field Work is an immersive and meditative documentary set among the rituals and rhythms of working artists across Brazil, Turkey, North Carolina and Ireland. Glassie’s subject is folklore but his deep abiding love for the people who create it resonates throughout the film: 'I don’t study people. I stand with people and I study the things they create.'Collins’ achievement with Henry Glassie: Field Work is to bring these makers of art, in wood, fabric, yarn, paint, clay, metal, in song and story to our attention through their work, through the raw materials they shape into art objects and through the undeniable passion they carry in to their work.In this way the work is accorded profound meaning for the societies out of which it is generated an aesthetic value which is transcendent. And under Collins’ ever mindful direction, the process of making something out of raw materials is luminously manifested in sequences which reflect their measured and focused approach. The actual real time process of making works, such as hands, of the physicality of that work, and the close attention the artist is bringing to the work. For more info about the film head here.About Pat and Henry: Since 1999, Pat Collins has made over 30 films. His latest release Song of Granite, funded by the Irish Film Board, BAI, SODEC and Telefilm Canada, received its world premiere at SXSW 2017 and was the Irish nomination for best Foreign Language Oscar 2018. His other credits include Silence, which had its international premiere at London International Film Festival and the 3-part series 1916 (co-director), which aired on networks including the BBC and PBS. In 2012, the Irish Film Institute curated a mid-career retrospective of his work.Henry Glassie is one of the most celebrated folklorists across the world. He has spent the last 50 years making in-depth studies of communities and their art. Henry, College Professor Emeritus at Indiana University Bloomington, has done fieldwork on five continents and written books on the full range of folkloristic interest, from drama, song, and story to craft, art, and architecture. Glassie began teaching in the Folklore Institute at Indiana University in 1970. In 1976, he became the chairman of the Department of Folklore and Folklife at the University of Pennsylvania. In 1988, he returned as a College Professor to Indiana University, where he had appointments in Folklore and Ethnomusicology, American Studies, Central Eurasian Studies, Near Eastern Languages and Cultures, and India Studies. He retired in 2008.Glassie has served as president of the American Folklore Society, the Vernacular Architecture Forum, and his local historic preservation organization, Bloomington Restorations Incorporated. He is married to fellow folklorist Pravina Shukla, a professor at Indiana University, who is an award-winning teacher and the author of two major books on dress and adornment: The Grace of Four Moons and Costume. Glassie and Shukla co-authored Sacred Art, an ethnographic account of creativity in northeastern Brazil. Glassie has four children and four grandchildren.He published his first scholarly paper, an article on the Appalachian log cabin, in 1963. Since then, he has published over 100 articles and a steady stream of books.Image Copyright: Harvest Films and Pat Collins. Used with permission.F2F Music and Image Copyright: David Peck and Face2Face. Used with permission. For more information about David Peck’s podcasting, writing and public speaking please visit his site here. With thanks to Josh Snethlage and Mixed Media Sound. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Cinema Joes
Gemini Man / Is Digitally De-Aging A Good Idea?

Cinema Joes

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2019 121:02


This week we check in with Laika’s The Missing Link, Breaking Bad’s El Camino, last year's Foreign Language Oscar nominee Shoplifters, and, unfortunately, Todd Philip’s Joker. Then we review Ang Lee’s Gemini Man and wonder about de-aging role as a tool in modern day cinema. TV/Movies mentioned in today's episode: The Missing Link; Joker; El Camino: A Breaking Bad Film; Shoplifters; Gemini Man Follow the show @CinemaJoes on Twitter (https://twitter.com/CinemaJoes), @CinemaJoes on Instagram (https://Instagram.com/CinemaJoes) and follow our hosts around the web at the places below! Justin Blog - http://thecinemaverick.com/ Letterboxd - https://boxd.it/dW4n Noah Blog - http://francnoir.blogspot.com/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/NoahFranc Alex - Letterboxd - https://boxd.it/8DIN Twitter - https://twitter.com/MediaThinkings --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/CinemaJoes/support

Saturday Review
Never Look Away, The End of History at London's Royal Court, 8 Days to the Moon, Fleischman Is in Trouble, Felix Vallotton

Saturday Review

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2019 52:54


Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck's first film The Lives Of Others won the best Foreign Language Oscar, his follow-up The Tourist was a critical disaster. How will his latest - Never Look Away - fare critically and at the box office? Jack Thorne's latest play The End Of History has just opened at London's Royal Court Theatre. It's the story - over three decades - of a left-leaning family who love each other and love to bicker. 8 Days To The Moon on BBC TV follows the progress of the three astronauts who went to the Moon half a century ago in Apollo 11. It uses previously unreleased audio recordings from within the lunar pod mixed with recreations of the journey. Fleischman Is In Trouble is the debut novel by Taffy Brodesser-Akner, previously a features writer at The New York Times and GQ. It has had glowing reviews; what will our panle make of it? An exhibition of work by Swiss-born artist Felix Vallotton at London's Royal Academy includes paintings and woodcuts in the many styles he adopted during his career. The show's subtitle is "Painter of Disquiet" Tom Sutcliffe's guests are Rebecca Stott, Robert Hanks and Susan Jeffreys. The producer is Oliver Jones Podcast extra recommendations: Rebecca - Shame On me by Tessa McWatt Robert - Ngaio Marsh (and you can see Susan as a model on a Ngaio Marsh cover here https://tinyurl.com/y2jmths4 ) Susan - Jodrell Bank Blue Dot Festival and The Night Sky 2019 Tom - Jack Reacher books and BBC World Service's 13 Minutes To The Moon

new york times moon apollo swiss gq painter tourist night sky bbc tv bbc world service royal court 8 days end of history fleischman jack thorne taffy brodesser akner donnersmarck florian henckel never look away ngaio marsh rebecca stott foreign language oscar felix vallotton london's royal academy london's royal court theatre
Spoiler Alert Radio
Frank van den Eeden - Belgian Based Cinematographer - Someone Else's Happiness, It's All So Quiet, Het Vonnis, Zurich, Full Contact, Home, Waldstille, Past Imperfect, Cobain, Girl

Spoiler Alert Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2019 29:01


Born in the Netherlands and living in Antwerp, Belgium, Frank works in film, television, and commercials, with a continued presence at festivals like Cannes, Venice, Toronto, and Berlin. Frank's film work includes Someone Else's Happiness, It's All So Quiet, Het Vonnis, Zurich, Full Contact, The Invader, Home, Waldstille, and Past Imperfect. Frank's more recent projects include the acclaimed Cobain, and Girl, which won four awards at Cannes, was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Foreign Film, and was Belgium's submission for the Foreign Language Oscar. 

The Rad Carpet
029 - Bogdanovich Pt.3: Daisy Miller, They All Laughed)plus Annihilation and Red Sparrow

The Rad Carpet

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2018 94:10


The Rad Carpet's Bogdanovich month takes one more bumbling trip around the roller rink, this time tackling a pair of the director's box office bombs, 1974's Daisy Miller (27:15) and 1981's They All Laughed (45:50). Siblo and Whalen discuss those two vexing entries in the erstwhile New Hollywood stud's filmography before wrapping a bow on Bog's work at large in Wall to Wall Carpet (1:11:30). But first, your Carpeteers tear their Rad Ticket, spending a good chatty chunk dishing their thoughts on some new releases, including theatrical notables Annihilation (4:00), Game Night (10:40), Red Sparrow (14:40), and Foreign Language Oscar winner A Fantastic Woman (19:00), as well as the Netflix exclusives Mute (21:00) and Veronica (24:20). You can find the excellent Teresa Carpenter piece on the death of Dorothy Strattan that we discuss during the They All Laughed segment here: https://goo.gl/REq1ee. Be forewarned, the Carpenter essay does contain some graphically violent and sexually explicit material.

One Week Only - Podcast
Bonus Episode - AFI Fest

One Week Only - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2017 27:03


Bonus Episode of One Week Only! The AFI Film Fest starts tonight in Hollywood! We take a look at the festival schedule, and highlight some of the films and events we're excited about, including Foreign Language Oscar-contenders "Foxtrot", "A Fantastic Woman", and "On Body and Soul"; animated dramas "Have a Nice Day" and "The Breadwinner"; and the Indie Contenders panel featuring Sean Baker (The Florida Project) and Salma Hayek (Beatriz at Dinner)! Hosted by Carlos Aguilar & Conor Holt. Music by Kevin MacLeod at www.incompetech.com

The No Film School Podcast
Indie Film Weekly 12.22.16: Best Movies, Cameras & Filmmaker Advice of 2016

The No Film School Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2016 50:11


This special, year-end episode of Indie Film Weekly reveals the best that 2016 had to offer while you were busy making films. This year was full of outstanding indie releases and gear innovations, and in our final episode of 2016, co-hosts Liz Nord, Jon Fusco, Emily Buder, and Charles Haine share our favorite films. We also unveil top camera choices and review the biggest gear news of the year, namely the launch of Lytro's groundbreaking Cinema Camera. We also discuss our best takeaways from talking to some of the most interesting filmmakers and industry pros on the planet, from Kodak President Steve Bellamy to Gianfranco Rosi, director of Italy's 2017 Foreign Language Oscar contender. You can see all the links from this show in this week’s podcast post at nofilmschool.com.  

Indiewire: Screen Talk
"What's Wrong With the Foreign Language Oscar Shortlist?" (Episode 128)

Indiewire: Screen Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2016 37:55


Kohn and Thompson discuss the surprises and snubs of the foreign language Oscar shortlist.

Kermode Uncut
Oscar Shocker

Kermode Uncut

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2016 3:47


Mark talks about Under The Shadow - the British entry for the Foreign Language Oscar category

british shocker under the shadow foreign language oscar
Indiewire: Screen Talk
"What's Up With the Foreign Language Oscar Submissions?" (Episode 116)

Indiewire: Screen Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2016 28:28


Kohn and Thompson talk through the foreign language Oscar submissions from around the world, whether or not "La La Land" can hold onto its best picture frontrunner status, and what to expect from this year's Fantastic Fest.

In the Mood for Podcast
Episode 166: While the Cat’s Away [Venice and Toronto Round-Up; Foreign Language Oscar Race]

In the Mood for Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2016


   Episode 166: While the Cat’s Away [50:52] You can Listen online or Download Here  (Right Click… Save as) It’s Episode 166 of In the Mood for Podcast! Irini and Cal return from Venice and Toronto respectively, worn out but nevertheless enthused about many of the films showing in this year’s festival season. Tune in for thoughts […]