Latest – Page 296
-
Features
Production Guild Awards 2015
Warner Bros. exec Roy Button and producer Mairi Bett among those to receive awards.
-
Features
Ryoo Seung-wan talks Korean box office hit 'Veteran'
Director talks corruption, near-death stunts and sequels following well-received TIFF screening.
-
Features
'Noma: My Perfect Storm': filming in the world's best restaurant
Screen talks to San Sebastian title Noma: My Perfect Storm’s director and star about crafting culinary cinema.
-
Features
Doing business in France: trade and export guide
Metropolitan France, known as “L’Hexagone” is an ideally situated, diverse and prosperous export market for British companies.
-
Features
TIFF 2015: Fridrik Thor Fridriksson and Bergur Bernberg, 'Horizon'
Icelandic filmmaking veteran Fridrik Thor Fridriksson returns to Toronto with Horizon, which he directed alongside photographer and budding filmmaker Bergur Bernburg.
-
Features
TIFF 2015: Roar Uthaug, 'The Wave'
Director Roar Uthaug’s fourth feature The Wave (Bolgen) has the proud distinction of being Scandinavia’s first disaster movie.
-
Features
Doing business in Thailand: trade and export guide
Thailand is in transition to Digital TV after the National Broadcasting and Telecommunication Commission (NBTC) granted 24 commercial digital licenses to 19 companies to operate digital TV in Thailand in 2014.
-
Features
David Kosse talks Film4's global ambitions and future projects
Film4 director David Kosse and his team talk Andreas Wiseman through the company’s direction, its roster of up-and-coming directors and future projects.
-
Features
TIFF 2015: Jeremy Irons talks 'The Man Who Knew Infinity'
The British actor discusses his role as a brilliant mathematician alongside co-star Dev Patel in Matthew Brown’s period drama.
-
Features
TIFF 2015: Dev Patel talks 'The Man Who Knew Infinity'
The star of HBO’s The Newsroom and Neill Blomkamp’s Chappie will next be seen in the Toronto world premiere of The Man Who Knew Infinity, playing a poor Brahmin maths prodigy from South India who became a Fellow of the Royal Society and Trinity College.
-
Features
Pan Nalin, 'Angry Indian Goddesses'
Indian director Pan Nalin (Samsara) comes to Toronto with the world premiere of Angry Indian Goddesses, which screens in Special Presentations and is sold by Mongrel Media.
-
Features
TIFF 2015: Ben Wheatley reveals the story behind 'High-Rise'
Ben Wheatley had his biggest budget to date to create the dystopian world portrayed in JG Ballard’s novel High-Rise. Michael Rosser speaks to the UK film-maker about his vision to “shoot on location in the past”.
-
Features
Michael Luisi, WWE Studios
The president of WWE Studios, the film subsidiary of World Wrestling Entertainment, is in Toronto scouring the ground for titles.
-
Features
Alexandra-Therese Keining, 'Girls Lost'
With gender identity making headlines around the globe, Alexandra-Therese Keining’s Girls Lost (Pojkarna) couldn’t be more timely.
-
Features
Interview: Marina Cordoni
With her latest venture, industry insider Marina Cordoni is using her passion and experience as an international sales agent and executive producer to benefit film-makers, she tells Screen.
-
Features
In focus: screenwriting
Ahead of the eve of the sixth Bafta and BFI Screenwriters’ Lecture Series (Sept 23-Oct 3), four celebrated screenwriters discuss how the Netflix era has put them back in control.
-
Features
Awards season preview: a shot at glory
As the autumn festival line-ups are revealed, Screen analyses the titles in pole position for a competitive awards season.
-
Features
TIFF 2015: Terence Davies talks 'Sunset Song'
Terence Davies has been striving to bring Sunset Song to the big screen for 15 years. Ahead of the film’s world premiere in Toronto, he tells Screen why the classic novel struck such a powerful chord.
-
Features
TIFF 2015: Interview, Charlotte Mickie
Charlotte Mickie continues to champion bold, authentic voices at Mongrel Media’s new international arm. Screen talks to her about the company’s diverse slate.
-
Features
TIFF 2015: Jean-Marc Vallée talks 'Demolition'
After Dallas Buyers Club and Wild, Jean-Marc Vallée hopes awards season magic strikes again with this year’s TIFF opener Demolition.