2013 film by Eliza Hittman
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On this episode I am joined by musician and author Mickey Leigh! A staple in New York City music since the 1970's playing in bands like The Rattlers and Stop, Mickey's latest group Mickey Leigh's Mutated Music recently dropped their debut record Variants of Vibe. We discuss new music as well as-Goals for Mutated Music-Having Steven Van Zandt release your bands new record-Mickey's songwriting approach-Seeing he and brother Joey Ramones lives reenacted on the big screen as his book I Slept With Joey Ramone gets adapted into a Netflix movie-The great undertaking of writing a book and if he could see himself ever doing it again-The added responsibilities of being the sole guitarist in a band-If New York City surroundings shape the sound of his music-Finding creative inspiration in others lives and journeys and not just sticking to what you know-Being the most critical of your own work and why musicians are never 100% happy with the final product-What goes in to putting together the Joey Ramone Birthday Bash every year (and his plans for this year)-The ever changing music industry-The feeling he gets from playing Ramones songs on stage with Richie and CJ and much more!Follow Mickey Leigh/Mutated Musichttps://mickeyleigh.comhttps://mickeyleighsmutatedmusic.bandcamp.com/album/variants-of-vibehttps://www.youtube.com/user/OfficialMickeyLeighhttps://www.instagram.com/mickeyleighnyc/?hl=enhttps://www.facebook.com/MickeyLeighhttps://twitter.com/MickeyLeighNYCCheck out the Power Chord Hour radio show every Friday night at 10 to midnight est on 107.9 WRFA in Jamestown, NY. Stream the station online at wrfalp.com/streaming/ or listen on the WRFA app.powerchordhour@gmail.comInstagram - www.instagram.com/powerchordhourTwitter - www.twitter.com/powerchordhourFacebook - www.facebook.com/powerchordhourYoutube - www.youtube.com/channel/UC6jTfzjB3-mzmWM-51c8LggSpotify Episode Playlists - https://open.spotify.com/user/kzavhk5ghelpnthfby9o41gnr?si=4WvOdgAmSsKoswf_HTh_Mg
Deep Cut is visited by the Queen of Sensual Cinema herself, writer/director/actress Isabel Sandoval (Lingua Franca, Señorita, Apparition) to discuss her favorite Eliza Hittman feature, It Felt Like Love (2013). Isabel describes her personal connections to Hittman's sensitive presentation of adolescence and presents her big theory about debut features. Wilson extols Hittman's confident direction and Ben asks Isabel about the challenges that come with directing one's own performance as a director/actor, while Eli and Isabel detour to praise Jane Fonda's performance in Klute (1971). And Isabel teases her next feature, Tropical Gothic... Feel the love on our Discord server. Follow Isabel on Twitter and Instagram!
Theme: Johnny Angel by Shelley FabaresStories and films discussed: The Feels of Lovehttps://www.guernicamag.com/the-feels-of-love/It Felt Like Lovehttps://www.imdb.com/title/tt2328922/Forever's Gonna Start Tonight https://vimeo.com/115435198
Den amerikanske filmskaperen Eliza Hittman gjester oss på Filmfrelst i denne podkastepisoden, der vi snakker med henne om Never Rarely Sometimes Always, hennes tredje spillefilm, som hadde premiere på filmfestivalen i Berlin i 2020, og som Montages kåret til en av de tyve beste filmene fra 2020. I anledning at Never Rarely Sometimes Always nå er tilgjengelig som digital leie- og kjøpefilm (hos iTunes/Google Play/YouTube) har vi omsider gleden av å dele denne samtalen med Eliza Hittman. Regissøren stilte til et intervju med Montages over Zoom i forbindelse med filmfestivalen i Tromsø i januar, men da TIFF måtte avlyse fysiske kinovisninger, falt også Never Rarely Sometimes Always ut av festivalprogrammet. Dermed ble intervjuet med Hittman satt litt på vent – inntil nå, da filmen endelig er lansert på hjemmevideomarkedet i Norge. Never Rarely Sometimes Always tar oss med til et sted i Pennsylvania, der vi møter tenåringsjentene Autumn (Sidney Flanigan) og Skylar (Talia Ryder), bestevenninner som også er kusiner og kollegaer. Etter å ha avsluttet arbeidsdagen på det lokale handlesenteret, pakker de en koffert for å dra til New York for å finne en klinikk der Autumn kan ta abort uten at foreldrene blir involvert. De to veksler ikke mange ord, men vi forstår de er hverandres nærmeste tillitsperson, og med dette som premiss utspiller Never Rarely Sometimes Always seg som en velbalansert og troverdig film om å bestemme over egen kropp, om å være en ung kvinne i dagens Amerika, og om verdien av lojale vennskap. Brooklyn-baserte Eliza Hittman, som tidligere har signert It Felt Like Love (2013, hennes debut, som kan ses digitalt på MUBI) og Beach Rats (2017, også tilgjengelig digitalt via ulike tjenester), åpner i samtalen nedenfor opp om bl.a. sitt arbeid med aborttematikken i Never Rarely Sometimes Always, sin castingprosess og inspirasjonen hentet fra Robert Bressons presise visuelle filmspråk. Montages-redaktør Karsten Meinich leder samtalen med Hittman, og selv om podkastepisoden ikke inneholder spoilere, anbefaler vi at lytterne ser Never Rarely Sometimes Always for maksimalt utbytte av innholdet. God lytting!
The WGAE Women’s Salon presents a series of four live recordings of OnWriting in honor of Women's History Month. In each episode, we’re speaking with women screenwriters whose latest projects center on women’s stories. To wrap up the series, Geri speaks with Eliza Hittman, the writer and director of the acclaimed 2020 film NEVER RARELY SOMETIMES ALWAYS. Eliza Hittman is an award-winning writer and director from Brooklyn, NY. She is the writer and director of the 2013 drama IT FELT LIKE LOVE and the 2017 drama BEACH RATS, the latter of which earned her the 2017 Director Award at Sundance Film Festival. She is also the recipient of the Emerging Artist Award from Lincoln Center and is a 2018 Guggenheim Fellow. Her latest project is the drama film NEVER RARELY SOMETIMES ALWAYS. The film follows Autumn, a 17-year-old who, after learning that she’s pregnant but unable to get an abortion without her parents’ consent in her native Pennsylvania, embarks on a trip to New York City with her cousin Skylar in order to get an abortion there. The film premiered at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival, where it won a Special Jury Award for Neo-Realism. It also won the Silver Bear Grand Jury Prize at the 70th Berlin International Film Festival. It is currently available to stream on HBO Max. -- Read shownotes, transcripts, and other member interviews: www.onwriting.org/ -- Follow the Guild on social media: Twitter: @OnWritingWGAE | @WGAEast Facebook: /WGAEast Instagram: @WGAEast
Welcome to FUSION VOICES: the brand new official podcast by FUSION FILM FESTIVAL, New York University Tisch School of the Arts' premiere student-run festival that celebrates women and non-binary creators in film, TV, and new media. Our first season premieres MARCH 8, 2021, international women's day! We have some exciting episodes coming up featuring conversations with documentary filmmakers, podcasters, student comedians, and more. Until then, please enjoy the full audio from Fusion Film Festival's conversation with our 2020 Woman of the Year, ELIZA HITTMAN. This Zoom webinar took place on January 22, 2021, where Eliza was presented with the 2020 Woman of the Year Award by Tisch Dean Allyson Green. She then took questions from Time Magazine film critic Stephanie Zacharek and from the live webinar audience. Eliza Hittman is an award-winning filmmaker, born and based in Brooklyn, NY. Her latest film, the critically acclaimed Never Rarely Sometimes Always, was released by Focus Features this spring following its international premiere in competition in the Berlin Film Festival where it won the Silver Bear Grand Jury Award. The film had its US premiere in competition at Sundance where it won a special jury prize. Hittman recently won Best Screenplay from both the New York Film Critics Circle and the National Society of Film Critics, among the many end-of-year accolades the film has received. Beach Rats, her previous film, premiered in the US Dramatic Competition at the 2017 Sundance Film Festival, where she won the Directing Award. It premiered internationally at Locarno in the Golden Leopard Competition and was the Centerpiece Film at New Directors / New Films. Beach Rats was released domestically by NEON Rated, and was a New York Times Critics' Pick. It was the winner of the Artios Award for Outstanding Achievement in Casting, Outstanding Screenwriting in a U.S. Feature at Outfest, and the London Critics’ Circle Film Award for Young British/Irish Performer of the Year. In 2018, it was nominated for Best Cinematography and Best Male Lead at the Independent Spirit awards and a Breakthrough Actor Award for the Gothams Awards. Her micro-budget feature film It Felt Like Love premiered at Sundance in 2013 in NEXT and was a New York Times Critic's Pick. She earned an MFA from California Institute of the Arts and is currently an Assistant Professor of Film/Video at Pratt Institute. She is the recipient of the Emerging Artist Award from Lincoln Center, and a 2018 Guggenheim Fellow. NEVER RARELY SOMETIMES ALWAYS SYNOPSIS: Written and directed by Eliza Hittman, Never Rarely Sometimes Always is an intimate portrayal of two teenage girls in rural Pennsylvania. Faced with an unintended pregnancy and a lack of local support, Autumn (Sidney Flanigan) and her cousin Skylar (Talia Ryder) embark across state lines to New York City on a fraught journey of friendship, bravery and compassion. NYU community can stream Never Rarely Sometimes Always at no charge here: https://stream.nyu.edu/media/1_un1c7jb0 Also available on HBO Max, Hulu, Amazon Prime. Event produced with the support of the NYU Production Lab. Thank you to Fusion Film Festival's faculty advisor, Susan Sandler, and the Fusion Voices team: Schuyler Barefoot, Maya Gavant, Carly Kline, Nina Leitenberg, Aspen Nelson, Roni Polsgrove, and Sam Whitley.
Welcome to the seventeenth episode of our competitive film podcast; Cine it to Win it! where two friends fight films for fun! This week is a little bit different as we aren't putting films against each other, instead we're doing a series of smaller reviews including Christopher Nolan's Tenet. Timestamps: 0:00 - The warm up (intro) 2:25 - Tenet review 15:37 - The Empire Strikes Back! It Felt Like Love review 25:30 - The Two Towers review 33:30 - Unhinged review 41:03 - Work It review 41:40 - Twilight review 44:21 - The warm down (outro) Thank you all for listening, if you enjoyed the episode please consider subscribing and leaving a rating, it would really go a long way. Catch you all next week! Email: cineittowinit@gmail.com Twitter: @cine_it Instagram: @cineittowinit Tags: Movies, Films, Latest, Releases, Review, Contest, Gameshow, Competition, Friendly, Rounds, Television, Games, News, VoD, Streaming, Netflix, Amazon Prime, HBOMax, Disney Plus, Christopher Nolan, John David Washington, Robert Pattinson, Elizabeth Debicki, Kenneth Branagh, Tenet, Eliza Hittman, Gina, Piersanti, Ronen Rubinstein, It Felt Like Love, Peter Jackson, Elijah Wood, The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers, Derrick Borte, Russell Crowe, Unhinged, Laura Terruso, Sabrina Carpenter, Jordan Fisher, Work It, Catherine Hardwicke, Kristen Stewart, Twilight Intro & Outro Music Coming for You by NEFFEX, https://smarturl.it/neffex_soundcloud (https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=0GQAgDwkBD5cdwgDvR9XyRjUio58MTU3OTczMTUxM0AxNTc5NjQ1MTEz&q=https%3A%2F%2Fsmarturl.it%2Fneffex_soundcloud&v=xPi1O8g8zII)
Hey remember a couple episodes ago when we had Saskia Kahn (@ohsaskia) on to discuss Eliza Hittman’s excellent Never Rarely Sometimes Always? If you didn’t, it was a good one. Saskia brought some great insight. Eliza heard the episode. Eliza Hittman is an award winning director and writer. Her short films and features are huge favorites among the Zebras, and have won awards and have been shown in many prestigious festivals, one of them being the Silver Bear at the Berlin International Film Festival for Never Rarely Sometimes Always. Eliza was gracious enough to talk with us (and Saskia of course) about her films, her Brooklyn experience, influences, challenges, and we even got cameos from her family. We have been talking about Hittman’s films since Episode 5 or so, so this is a huge accomplishment. Eliza’s new film is streamable on several platforms- https://www.focusfeatures.com/never-rarely-sometimes-always Previous Eliza Hittman focused episodes- Episode 121 NRSA- https://soundcloud.com/zebras-in-america/episode-121 Beach Rats- episode 24 https://soundcloud.com/zebras-in-america/episode-24 It Felt Like Love- episode 5 https://soundcloud.com/zebras-in-america/zebras-in-america-episode-5 Check Saskia out at SaskiaKahn.com and @ohsaskia on Instagram and Twitter We are in quarantine and decided to try out virtual recording, the audio is still getting there. Bear with us. reach out if you are bored/struggling both or neither We are virtually around Also, PLEASE RATE US ON ITUNES AND ANYWHERE YOU CAN RATE US Yo we have shirts- https://rdbl.co/2AYLPah Are there other Zebras items you would like to purchase? Email us at ZebrasPod@gmail.com Tweet us at @ZebrasPod Want Marcus to review your film in the written form? PinnlandEmpire.com Want Scott to score your movie? ScottThorough.com Check out Marcus’ new album https://marcus9.bandcamp.com/album/the-mpc-era Check out Scott’s new album- https://scottthorough.bandcamp.com/album/bird Scott’s new single- https://uddtba.bandcamp.com/album/losing-my-mind-queens-house-of-detention Want to be our intern? Shoot us an email!
Rubinstein is a Russian Jewish actor, director, producer, writer, music and visual effects editor. He likes to sing, play the ukulele, drums and the bongos in his free time. Rubinstein's favorite outdoor activities include playing basketball, football, jet skiing, surfing and snow boarding. He graduated from the New York Film Academy in 2013. Rubinstein has appeared in many commercials, and is best known for his roles in the films: Condemned, Detachment, It Felt Like Love, Jamie Marks Is Dead, Some Kind of Hate and Something in the Way. He was also a comedic skit on The Late Show with David Letterman. In 2015, Rubinstein guest starred as Nathan on Orange Is The New Black. In January 2016, Rubinstein joined the main cast of Freeform's Dead of Summer as Alex Powell. His most recent role is TK Strand in 911: Lone Star. Interviewed by Bryant Santos @TheBryantSantos --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
This week we take on our deadliest review yet, Extraction. Then we get schooled with a review of Bad Education. Lastly, we debate whether or not the Kelly Gang should be brought to justice in our review of True History of the Kelly Gang. We also discuss, Love Wedding Repeat, It Felt Like Love, Never Have I Ever, and Breaking Bad; Season 1. All while drinking Mas Agave. An imperial sour/gose style beer by Founders Brewing Company out of Grand Rapids, Michigan.Like us on Facebook! www.facebook.com/SudsandcinemapodcastFollow us on iTunes! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-sudsandcinema-podcast/id1494990925Follow us on Spotify! https://open.spotify.com/show/3Ludeu2hrTDuBfSGc9y7tOFollow us on PodBean! https://sudsandcinema.podbean.com/Follow us on Instagram! https://www.instagram.com/sudsandcinemapodcast/Send your questions and comments to sudsandcinemapodcast@gmail.comLogo and art by: @djmikeholiday
Eliza Hittman is an award-winning filmmaker whose feature films, It Felt Like Love, Beach Rats, have debuted to critical acclaim and her latest is no different, Never Rarely Sometimes Always, a story about a pair of teenage girls from rural PA who travel to NYC to seek out medical help after an unintended pregnancy, won a Special Jury Award for Neo-Realism at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival and the Silver Bear Grand Jury Prize from the 2020 Berlin Film Festival. Spoilers ahead! In this episode, Amy sits down with Eliza to chat about her creative process; the message of the film and, Eliza shares her advice for filmmakers. Check out Never Rarely Sometimes Always on all VOD platforms today. Follow on IG @neverrarelyfilm and Eliza Hittman @hittman. Rate and review us wherever you get your podcasts!
Eliza Hittman has been making a name for herself in the independent film worldstarting with her 2013 debut "It Felt Like Love," followed by her 2017 film "Beach Rats" and now she is back with her third film, the much acclaimed "Never Rarely Sometimes Always." The film debuted at the Sundance Film Festival where it won the U.S. Dramatic Competition Grand Jury Prize and then it screened a few days later at the Berlin International Film Festival where it won the Silver Bear Grand Jury Prize. Eliza was kind enough to spend a few moments talking about her experience making the film, discovering the film's breakout star Sidney Flanigan, her writing and shooting process and more! Please give it a listen and be sure to check out the film, now playing in limited release from Focus Features. Check out more on NextBestPicture.com Please subscribe on... SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/nextbestpicturepodcast iTunes Podcasts - https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/negs-best-film-podcast/id1087678387?mt=2 Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/7IMIzpYehTqeUa1d9EC4jT And be sure to help support us on Patreon for as little as $1 a month at https://www.patreon.com/NextBestPicture
On the latest episode of the Talkhouse Podcast, Eliza Hittman – the writer-director of It Felt Like Love and Beach Rats – chats with one of the great living filmmakers (and one of Hittman's personal heroes), Scottish writer-director Lynne Ramsay. The two talk about Ramsay's latest film, You Were Never Really Here starring Joaquin Phoenix, which is in theaters now, touching on such topics as the adaptation process, tackling violent subject matter, making a thriller for the first time, staying open to new ideas during all phases of the creative process, balancing life and work, and much more besides. For more filmmakers talking film and TV, visit Talkhouse Film at talkhouse.com/film. Subscribe now to stay in the loop on future episodes of the Talkhouse Podcast.
For the second half our gentleman-thieves pairing, we bring LOGAN LUCKY into the discussion, to see how it fits into the reliably eclectic filmography of Steven Soderbergh, and how it stands up to its clear forebear within that filmography, 2001’s OCEAN’S ELEVEN. But there are marked distinctions between the two films as well, from their wildly different settings and characters to the mechanics and styles of their central heists, all of which we get into in Connections. Plus, Your Next Picture Show, where we share recent filmgoing experiences in hopes of putting something new on your cinematic radar. Please share your comments, thoughts, and questions about OCEAN’S ELEVEN, LOGAN LUCKY, or both by sending an email to comments@nextpictureshow.net, or leaving a short voicemail at (773) 234-9730. Your Next Picture Show: • Genevieve: Matt Spicer’s INGRID GOES WEST • Keith: Michael Curtiz’s THE BREAKING POINT • Tasha: Jules Dassin’s RIFIFI and Sidney Lumet’s DOG DAY AFTERNOON • Scott: Eliza Hittman’s IT FELT LIKE LOVE and BEACH RATS Outro music: Farrah Mackenzie, “Take Me Home, Country Roads” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Sean has been chosen as one of Filmmaker Magazine's 25 New Faces of Independent Cinema and listed in Variety's 10 Cinematographers to Watch. Sean's film credits include Eden, Kumiko The Treasure Hunter, and It Felt Like Love, which garnered Sean an Independent Spirit Award nomination for Best Cinematography. More recent film projects Sean has shot include the thriller Green Room for Jeremy Saulnier, Mike Mill's 20th Century Women, and Lucia Aniello's dark comedy Rough Night, starring Scarlet Johansson.
We loved "It Felt Like Love" Episode 4 went out for cigarettes, should be back any time now
Eliza Hittman returns to Sundance with her follow up "It Felt Like Love."
On this week's episode we have Hannah Fiddel and Eliza Hittman in the studio.