Training programmes, when designed well, benefit the Board members, and in turn, the company on whose Boards they sit.
Read More: https://lnkd.in/dTbYm76v
I'm raising money for a short film!!! It explores grief in a fantastical, timeless diner, following a young girl whose escaped from reality and must choose whether to spend her days in this diner, or face what she's lost.
If you're supporting the WGA strike this is how you help – by uplifting indie filmmakers and giving them a platform.
If you're able to donate even $5 it would be a great help, if not, please reblog and share the word! We only have 37 more days to reach our goal, and I want to make sure my cast and crew are paid for their time and efforts.
Here's the link to check out the campaign: https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/honeybuddy-s/x/34963784#/
PLEASE REBLOG! SPREAD THE WORD! SUPPORT INDEPENDENT FILMMAKERS!
Letterboxd senior editor and podcast co-host Mitchell Beaupre joins us this week and is bringing their favorite film along, and it’s our oldest film yet: Martin Scorsese’s After Hours. In the mid-80s Scorsese was rebounding from his closest call with Oscar yet in Raging Bull and a first attempt to make The Last Temptation of Christ falling apart. In a quick turnaround, he made what some may call his most atypical film and freaked some critics out with its dreamlike, absurd take on male ego. With Griffin Dunne leading a cast that includes a delightful female ensemble of Rosanna Arquette, Teri Garr, Linda Fiorentino, and Catherine O’Hara, the film remains one of Scorsese’s most fascinating.
This episode, we get into the film’s underrated status and the oddball first Independent Spirit Awards where the film took top honors. We also discuss the Globes Comedy races where Dunne was nominated for Best Actor, going long distances for rep screenings, and the 1986 Cannes Film Festival.
Topics also include Ordinary People beating Raging Bull, the Bridesmaids SAG drinking game, and the To Leslie Oscar season surprise campaign.
pissing myself off every time i work on bobbys movie taste and it becomes clearer and clearer how much he would have loved gregg araki + the living end + teenage apocalypse trilogy. like king im so sorry i didn’t write you living into the 90s