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  • The Enigmatic Director Godfrey Reggio and his producer Jon Kane Talk About Their Amazing New Film “Visitors”

    by Francesca McCaffery

    Godfrey Reggio Godfrey Reggio

    It is so amazing to come across and be exposed to an artist who is not only a true original, but one who seems to be operating from a truly higher conscious. The director Godfrey Reggio certainly qualifies as one of those rare artists who seem to aim high, as in, the collective third eye, or, the global consciousness. Although he insists that art should have no purpose,  his powerful, devastating and poetically gorgeous Qatsi trilogy of films, which he is most well-known for, and which includes  KOYAANISQATSI, POWAQQATSI, and NAQOYQATSI, beg to differ. Scored by Phillip Glass and filling the screen with image after image of various stages of global community, searing beauty,  eco-devastation,  commerce and industry- assaulting us with the most vivid, the most poignant global imagery.

    VISITORS

     His new film, VISITORS, is a complete departure from this style: We are greeted, as soon as we sit down, with still, slow faces of people, (and the wisest gorilla you have ever laid eyes upon), and we move on to close-ups of hands “playing” with invisible computer and digital devices, large groups walking, watching something (sports? porn?)  and reacting in lush slo-mo, in cuts that last several minutes at a time. Oh, and did we mention it’s all shot in back-and-white?

    The film is beyond wonderful, and you leave the theatre feeling centered and clear, your senses bright, your body lightened. That is how powerful an experience the film is, and, defying all current film-making convention, has under 80 cuts total.

    I had both the pleasure and great honor to sit down with Mr. Reggio and his whip-smart producer Jon Kane, and we spoke about his early day as a monk with the Christian Brothers, the future of our society, reaction to Visitors, and working with his crew on Visitors.

    I am so fascinated by your early journey. Before you became a filmmaker, you were a monk for many years. Can you tell us a bit about this?

    I was actually a Christian Brother. Christian Brothers don’t live in monasteries, they live in community. I was like a male nun! If you look at in military terms- we were the lowest on the totem pole, we were the foot soldiers, but we did the real fighting. We weren’t like the bishops, you know, the generals, or the super generals, like the Pope! The Jesuits, who are like the Colonels, or the Lieutenants…We were a very humble order, but a very important order, for me. It was the first order of monks who were not priests. As you know, the further you get away from the founder’s spirit, and this order was founded in 1681, in that measure, you lose the spirit of the founder, and it becomes vestigial, and bureaucratized.  When you have monks that are priests, and monks that are not priests, than the monks who are not priests become subservient to the ones who are- that should never be.  Our mission was to teach them  (the poor) to live in community in a religious way.  So, when I joined the brothers, very few brothers taught the poor, because of the rationale, “How are we going to pay for ourselves?” So, being young and zealous brother, my Che Guevara was Pope John XXIII, brilliant guy, someone that didn’t even want to be the Pope, which impressed me even more! He said, “Accept nothing, and question everything, even the structure of the Church.” This was like marching orders to my young and zealous energy.  Of course, I then had final vows at that time, I was a “monk for life,” and the Order asked me to leave! So it was a shock for me. It’s like getting out of prison, but at least in prison, they give you a suit, a little pocket money to get out! And there- I got nothin’! (laughs) But if I may say this, ‘I’m not a brother, a brother is me. ‘ All my proclivities are owned in that tradition.

    (Producer Jon Kane walks into the room and sits down.) How did you two meet?

    Jon Kane:  We met originally, before Naqoyqatsi. Godfrey was trying to raise money for the film. (“Forever!” Godfrey smiles.)  There was an article written in the NY Times by a friend of mine, Ty Burr, and I was a successful director of TV commercials at the time, so he asked me for a quote on the influence of  Koyaanisqatsi on me, and on commercial filmmaking, generally. So, I gave him a quote, Godfrey read it, Steven Soderberg read it, and we all kind of came together, and Godfrey asked me to join him on the journey to make  Naqoyqatsi.. So, I left my profession, for two years, and joined his monastery (laughs).

    GR: Jon is beyond capable, and really brilliant at technology. They are other people who may be more brilliant or capable technologically, but it’s his sensibility I responded to. I feel that he’s a misplaced person in the commercial world, that his real love is art, is expression, making, doing… The only requirement I had was….well….he had an extremely commercial company, and he had to give it up come and work with me. He had a wife, kids, and I paid him a pittance! 

    VISITORS

    Tell us about your new film VISITORS.

    GR: 74 images in 87 minutes and 33 seconds!  (The form followed the idea of) ….the moving still.  What that meant depended upon what the photography would reveal. The portraits in the very beginning of the film- there were six portraits, beginning with the woman with very intense eyes, and ending with this gorgeous old black woman… (He gestures to the very long conference table the three of us are sitting at one end of)  Take this table (he gestures all he way down to the other end)  if the portrait person is sitting in that chair, and the camera is here (he gestures near us)-now, the simple way to do it would be to use a zoom lens, but it doesn’t have the same effect.  So, the camera is on a dolly track, and the Assistant Camera person has to rack focus as it’s tracking, so, it’s very demanding. I asked for the shot to be slow. The DP, Graham, flipped out! (He laughs.) He said, “Godfrey, you can’t even get a machine to do that! You want us to something that’s not human!” And we had a beautiful grip there, Danny, and he says….

    JK: It was the slowest dolly move in history!

    GR: One person could never do it. But this Danny, he had his assistant held the wheels, and just went imperceptibly slow…So that already, in the photography, indicated that the moving still was what we were trying to get at…

    JK:  Also, one of his instructions to me was that every shot in the film had to be its own movie- with a beginning, middle and end. We don’t have coverage in this movie. There are no edits in the traditional sense, where you start wide, and cut to a detail. No shot relies on the other shot for its power,  or its meaning. Each shot is its own, contained thing.

    visitor-gorilla

    How did this process work with the gorilla?

    JK: We shot her over six days, for a variety of reasons. To try and get this gorilla at the Bronx Zoo, shooting with a 3000 mm lens, through glass, (the gorilla was in its natural environment) and we knew we wanted to capture the full face of this gorilla, and make it live with these portraits. The idea at first was just to get the gorilla looking in the camera, which was hard enough! Finally, we got a long take of the gorilla, where a variety of things happened- the blinks, the head moves. So, we did get the gorilla looking in the camera. That said, those two shoots took two animators six months to realize them in the form they are in now, for a variety of reasons.

     GR: Let me add something. Had we seen the gorilla, say if she was in Uganda, or the Bronx Zoo spent thirty million to make it look like Africa, than we would be looking at a “gorilla.” But if you take the background out of the gorilla, and put in the “black”-ground, then the gorilla is looking at you. So, when Jon said it to them six months, think of the hairs of the gorilla, you can’t just cut an oval out!

    JK: The color correction, the timing of the blinks, the breathing of the body…

    GR: Everything….It’s the real gorilla, of course, but we had to take her out of the background.  This beautiful animal is looking at another animal- you and me.

     VISITORS

    What has the reaction to the film been so far?

    GR:  Well, one, I’m surprised that we have such a passionate and extremely (hard-working)  distributor. There was a much larger company that wanted to bid on it and get it, but we would have been like a salami in their shop. But this one is a new one,  (Cinedigm) Susan Margolin, who is the co-President, and Emily Rothschild, who just had a baby on my daughter’s birthday- and Laura and Jeff, I mean, these people are like gold. And they don’t have ten other films to deal with. They  have a lot of other stuff going on, but it’s in another dimension., They’ve  really gone to the wall. I’ve had so many pre-screenings of films for press. I can’t organize that! But  we had 25 screenings, coast-to-coast. And with Steven (Soderberg) coming on board, everybody knows that dude! He calls someone, and they pay attention. He truly lives the film, and his commitment  is to do everything  possible to make sure it gets a shot- being “in the ring, ” so it can be seen. So, that’s blowing my mind, What the reaction is, it’s hard to say…

    JK: We’ve had hugely positive response, and reviews… When we screened it a Toronto Film Festival, people stayed for the entire thing. Steven said, “More people walked out of Magic Mike than this one!”

    Godfrey, how do you really feel about technology?

    GR:  It depends on which personality you’re talking to! No, but I have a clear point of view. On the one hand, I think it’s one of the most misunderstood subjects on the planet. Two, I think we face a danger that is unspeakable, unsayable, even- it’s the vivid unknown. All we know about technology is from the people that make it, and all they want to do is sell it.  So, we have no real point of view about it: Technology is not something we use, it’s something we live- it’s ubiquitous as the air we breathe in the natural environment, and in fact, it has replaced the natural environment as our host of life. It is now the environment that we live in- the great acceleration, the effect of human on the world we live in.  It’s all human-made, although humans aren’t driving it anymore: We think we’re in charge, but we’ve created a Frankenstein- not Hollywood’s version, but Mary Shelly’s version- something that has a life of its own, that’s autonomous. Its determinance has us along for the ride. So, we’re like strapped in, and we’re on for the ride. I guess I’m saying that it’s not the effect of technology on the way we live, it’s that technology IS what we live.

    GO SEE VISITORS THIS WEEK!

    http://youtu.be/RhQIxcAbMHQ

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  • Winners of 2013 Directors Guild of America Outstanding Directorial Achievement Awards; Jehane Noujaim, director of THE SQUARE Wins Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Documentary

    Jehane Noujaim, director of THE SQUARE won DGA’s Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in DocumentaryJehane Noujaim, director of THE SQUARE won DGA’s Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Documentary

    The winners of the Directors Guild of America Outstanding Directorial Achievement Awards for 2013 were announced at the 66th Annual DGA Awards Dinner on Saturday night. Jehane Noujaim, director of THE SQUARE won DGA’s Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Documentary. This is Ms. Noujaim’s second DGA Award and third nomination. She won the DGA Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Documentary for STARTUP.COM in 2001 (together with Chris Hegedus) and was also nominated in this category in 2004 for CONTROL ROOM.

    The complete list of 2014 Directors Guild winners:

    Feature Film

    Winner: ALFONSO CUARÓN, GRAVITY
    PAUL GREENGRASS, CAPTAIN PHILLIPS?
    STEVE MCQUEEN, TWELVE YEARS A SLAVE?
    DAVID O. RUSSELL, AMERICAN HUSTLE?
    MARTIN SCORSESE, THE WOLF OF WALL STREET

    Documentary

    ZACHARY HEINZERLING, CUTIE AND THE BOXER
    Winner: JEHANE NOUJAIM, THE SQUARE 
    JOSHUA OPPENHEIMER, THE ACT OF KILLING?
    SARAH POLLEY, STORIES WE TELL?
    LUCY WALKER, THE CRASH WHEEL

    Dramatic Series

    BRYAN CRANSTON, BREAKING BAD, “BLOOD MONEY”?
    DAVID FINCHER, HOUSE OF CARDS, “CHAPTER 1”
    Winner: VINCE GILLIGAN, BREAKING BAD, “FELINA” 
    LESLI LINKA GLATTER, HOMELAND, “THE STAR”
    DAVID NUTTER, GAME OF THRONES, “THE RAINS OF CASTAMERE”

    Comedy Series

    MARK CENDROWSKI, THE BIG BANG THEORY, “THE HOFSTADTER INSUFFICIENCY”?
    BRYAN CRANSTON, MODERN FAMILY, “THE OLD MAN & THE TREE”?
    GAIL MANCUSO, MODERN FAMILY, “MY HERO”?
    Winner: BETH MCCARTHY-MILLER, 30 ROCK, “HOGCOCK!/LAST LUNCH” 
    ANTHONY RICH, THE BIG BANG THEORY, “THE LOVE SPELL POTENTIAL”

    Movies for Television and Mini-Series

    STEPHEN FREARS, MUHAMMAD ALI’S GREATEST FIGHT?
    DAVID MAMET, PHIL SPECTOR
    BETH MCCARTHY-MILLER AND ROB ASHFORD, THE SOUND OF MUSIC LIVE!?
    NELSON MCCORMICK, KILLING KENNEDY?
    Winner: STEVEN SODERBERGH, BEHIND THE CANDELABRA 

    Variety/Talk/News/Sports — Regularly Scheduled Programming

    DAVE DIOMEDI, LATE NIGHT WITH JIMMY FALLON, “#799”?
    ANDY FISHER, JIMMY KIMMEL LIVE, “#13-1810”?
    JIM HOSKINSON, THE COLBERT REPORT, “#10004”?
    Winner: DON ROY KING, SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE, “SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE WITH HOST JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE” 
    CHUCK O’NEIL, THE DAILY SHOW WITH JON STEWART, “#19018”

    Variety/Talk/News/Sports — Specials

    LOUIS C.K., LOUIS C.K.: OH MY GOD
    JOEL GALLEN, 2013 ROCK AND ROLL HALL OF FAME INDUCTION CEREMONY
    LOUIS J. HORVITZ, THE 55TH ANNUAL GRAMMY AWARDS
    DON MISCHER, THE 85TH ANNUAL ACADEMY AWARDS?
    Winner: GLENN WEISS, THE 67TH ANNUAL TONY AWARDS 

    Reality Programs

    MATTHEW BARTLEY, THE BIGGEST LOSER, “1501”?
    Winner: NEIL P. DEGROOT, 72 HOURS, “THE LOST COAST” 
    PAUL STARKMAN, TOP CHEF, “GLACIAL GOURMAND”?
    J. RUPERT THOMPSON, THE HERO, “TEAMWORK”?
    BETRAM VAN MUNSTER, THE AMAZING RACE, “BEARDS IN THE WIND”

    Children’s Programs

    STEPHEN HEREK, JINXED?
    JEFFREY HORNADAY, TEEN BEACH MOVIE?
    JONATHAN JUDGE, SWINDLE?
    Winner: AMY SCHATZ, AN APOLOGY TO ELEPHANTS 
    ADAM WEISSMAN, A.N.T. FARM

    Commercials

    FREDRIK BOND, VOYAGE, HEINEKEN; FROM THE FUTURE, JOHNNY WALKER
    JOHN X. CAREY, REAL BEAUTY SKETCHES, DOVE?
    Winner: MARTIN DE THURAH, THE MAN WHO COULDN’T SLOW DOWN, HENNESSY VS; HUMAN RACE, ACURA MDX 2014
    MATTHIJS VAN HEIJNINGEN, PERFECT DAY, SONY PLAYSTATION; #FORTY EIGHT, VERIZON?
    NOAM MURRO, BASKETBALL, GUINNESS; KIDS, DIRECTV; MASK, VOLKSWAGEN

    ROBERT B. ALDRICH AWARD: Steven Soderbergh

    via US Magazine

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  • Sundance Institute Launches Short Film Challenge to Highlight Hunger and Poverty; Unveils First 5 Films

    Sundance Institute Short Film Challenge, AFTER MY GARDEN GROWS, KOMBIT, AM I GOING TOO FAST?, THE MASTERCHEF

    Sundance Institute, with support from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, launched the Sundance Institute Short Film Challenge that “will harness the power of independent film to create a global conversation about extreme hunger and poverty.”  Five new films made with production grants to launch the project premiered at a private screening co-hosted with the Gates Foundation at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah. 

    The Institute is working with Tongal.com to manage the online call for entries. Winning films will receive a $10,000 grant and premiere at a private event at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival. Users can submit through July 1, 2014. There is no fee to apply. More information can be found at tongal.com/sundance.

    The first five films for the Sundance Institute Short Film Challenge are:

    AFTER MY GARDEN GROWS

    AFTER MY GARDEN GROWSAFTER MY GARDEN GROWS

    Director: Megan Mylan
    India / Documentary

    A young girl in rural India tills a small plot of land to feed her family and plant seeds of independence and financial freedom in her male dominated community.

    Director Megan Mylan directed and produced the Oscar-winning film Smile Pinki, which broadcast on HBO and the Sundance Channel. Her film, Lost Boys of Sudan, had a 70-city theatrical release and a national television broadcast on PBS’s POV.

    AM I GOING TOO FAST?

    AM I GOING TOO FAST?AM I GOING TOO FAST?

    Directors: Hank Willis Thomas, Christopher Myers
    Kenya / Experimental Doc

    Am I Going Too Fast? is a digital tapestry of the intersecting worlds and interactions of craftspeople, shopkeepers, and ordinary folks whose lives have been transformed by new technologies, cell phone banking, and micro-finance; threads that weave together to form a web of connection and possibility in contemporary Nairobi.

    Hank Willis Thomas is the creator of Question Bridge: Black Male, a non-fiction new media project and recipient of a New Media Fellowship, New Media Fund grant from the Tribeca Film Institute and Aperture West Book Prize.

    Co-Director Christopher Myers is an artist and writer best known for his books for young people, which have garnered Caldecott Honors and been shortlisted for the National Book Award.

    KOMBIT

    KOMBITKOMBIT

    Directors: Jeff Reichert, Farihah Zaman
    Haiti / Documentary

    Haiti’s internally displaced people start a micro-garden movement to combat post-earthquake hunger and despair.

    Jeff Reichert and Farihah Zaman produced and directed the feature documentary Remote Area Medical, which premiered at the 2013 Full Frame Documentary Film Festival and was supported by the Sundance Institute Documentary Film Program.

    THE MASTERCHEF

    THE MASTERCHEFTHE MASTERCHEF

    Director: Ritesh Batra
    India / Narrative

    Akhil, a young shoeshine boy, dreams of becoming a gourmet chef when he has a chance encounter with India’s most popular TV cuisiner.

    Director Ritesh Batra’s The Lunchbox will screen at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival. It won the Grand Rail d’Or at Cannes 2013 and was acquired by Sony Pictures Classics for North America. Batra also won the Best Director prize at the Odessa International Film Festival.

    VEZO

    VEZOVEZO

    Director: Tod Lending
    Africa, Madagascar / Documentary

    A 9-year-old girl tells a tale about how her family and village came back from near starvation after their fishing village adopted sustainable fishing practices.

    Director Tod Lending is an Academy Award-nominated and national Emmy-winning producer, director, and cinematographer whose work has aired nationally on ABC, CBS, NBC, PBS, HBO, Al Jazeera.

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  • Mark Rosenberg, Founder of Rooftop Films and Director of AD INEXPLORATA Wins 2014 Sundance Institute/NHK Award

    Mark RosenbergMark Rosenberg

    Mark Rosenberg, director of the upcoming film, AD INEXPLORATA, has been selected as the winner of the 2014 Sundance Institute/NHK Award. Created in 1996 to celebrate 100 years of cinema, the annual award recognizes and supports a visionary filmmaker on his or her next film. Films previously supported by this award include BEASTS OF THE SOUTHERN WILD, by Benh Zeitlin, and MAY IN THE SUMMER, by Cherien Dabis, which had its world premiere at last year’s Sundance Film Festival.

    Rosenberg is a filmmaker and the Founder and Artistic Director of Rooftop Films, a New York-based non-profit organization. He has produced and directed numerous short films and recently co-produced and co-directed Orbit(Film), an omnibus movie about our solar system. He is also developing a screenplay about a man who suddenly realizes he has the power of telekinesis. He has participated in the Sundance Institute Feature Film Program June Screenwriters Lab and Creative Producing Lab and is the recipient of the Institute’s Creative Producing and Indian Paintbrush grants.

    AD INEXPLORATA is a multi-media fictional story about Captain William D. Stanaforth, an astronaut alone on a one-way mission toward the unknown. Mark Strong is attached to star in the lead role.

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  • MAGIC MAGIC Director Sebastián Silva Selected for San Francisco Film Society’s 7th Artist in Residence

    MAGIC MAGIC Director Sebastián Silva

    Chilean filmmaker Sebastián Silva has been selected for the San Francisco Film Society’s seventh Artist in Residence program and will be in San Francisco February 14 – 28, 2014. Silva’s packed two-week schedule will include a screening of his film MAGIC MAGIC. MAGIC MAGIC is described as Silva’s gripping psychological thriller starring Juno Temple, Michael Cera and Emily Browning.

    Sebastián Silva was born in Santiago, Chile in 1979. He studied filmmaking at the Escuela de Cine de Chile in Santiago and English at McGill University in Montreal, while pursuing his career as an artist and musician. His first feature film, Life Kills Me (La Vida Me Mata), was released in 2008, followed by The Maid in 2009, which won the World Cinema Jury Prize (Dramatic) at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival and was nominated for Best Foreign Language Film at the 2010 Golden Globes Awards. Silva returned to Sundance in 2013 to premiere two new films, Magic Magic and Crystal Fairy (SFIFF 2013), where he won the World Cinema Directing Award (Dramatic) for Crystal Fairy. He is currently in post-production on his latest feature, Nasty Baby, to be released in 2014.

     Juno Temple stars in Sebastian Silva's MAGIC MAGIC, playing February 20 at the Clay Theatre as part of the San Francisco Film Society's Artist in Residence program.Juno Temple stars in Sebastian Silva’s MAGIC MAGIC, playing February 20 at the Clay Theatre as part of the San Francisco Film Society’s Artist in Residence program.

    About MAGIC MAGIC: If Alicia could just get some sleep, everything would be all right. As she and her cousin Sarah make their way through rural Chile with Sarah’s boyfriend, his sister, and their strange American friend Brink, Alicia’s insomnia slowly takes control. The difference between what is happening in reality and what is happening in her own mind becomes less and less clear to her. After she takes a stab at hypnosis to help solve the problem, things only get worse. As her waking nightmare continues, will her “friends” be her salvation or her downfall? Writer/director Sebastián Silva crafts an unsettling film that examines sexual repression and the fear of loss. With vivid characters in conflict, evocative landscapes, and Christopher Doyle and Glenn Kaplan’s fluid cinematography, Silva shows how the smallest choices we make can have significant and insurmountable consequences.  — Mike Plante, Sundance Film Festival

     Michael Cera stars in Sebastian Silva's MAGIC MAGIC, playing February 20 at the Clay Theatre as part of the San Francisco Film Society's Artist in Residence program. Michael Cera stars in Sebastian Silva’s MAGIC MAGIC, playing February 20 at the Clay Theatre as part of the San Francisco Film Society’s Artist in Residence program.

    Juno Temple stars in Sebastian Silva's MAGIC MAGIC, playing February 20 at the Clay Theatre as part of the San Francisco Film Society's Artist in Residence program.Juno Temple stars in Sebastian Silva’s MAGIC MAGIC, playing February 20 at the Clay Theatre as part of the San Francisco Film Society’s Artist in Residence program.

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  • 4 Filmmakers Selected as Winners of 2014 Sundance Institute | Mahindra Global Filmmaking Award

    Tobias LindholmTobias Lindholm

    The winners of the 2014 Sundance Institute | Mahindra Global Filmmaking Award were announced today at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival. The winning directors and projects are Hong Khaou, MONSOON from Vietnam/UK; Tobias Lindholm, A WAR from Denmark; Ashlee Page, ARCHIVE from Australia; and Neeraj Ghaywan, FLY AWAY SOLO from India. Each of the four winning filmmakers will receive a cash award of $10,000 in addition to other filmmaker mentoring and support opportunities.

    The winners of the 2014 Sundance Institute | Mahindra Global Filmmaking Award are:

    Hong Khaou / MONSOON (Vietnam/UK): Two young men visit present day Vietnam, and are confronted with the war’s ramifications nearly forty years after its end.

    Hong Khaou’s debut feature film Lilting premiered in World Cinema Competition at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival.  The film stars Ben Whishaw and Cheng Pei Pei. He is also the director of three short films, including Spring, which premiered at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, and Summer, which premiered at the 2006 Berlinale. This year, Hong was named one of the Stars of Tomorrow by Screen International.

    Tobias Lindholm / A WAR (Denmark):  The major of a Danish unit in Afghanistan faces the consequences of his actions in the aftermath of his most dangerous mission..

    Tobias Lindholm graduated as a screenwriter from the National Film School of Denmark in 2007, and has collaborated with Thomas Vinterberg as co-writer on Submarino and Oscar nomineeThe Hunt. In 2010 he wrote and directed his first feature film in collaboration with Michael Noer, and in 2012 he wrote and directed the critical acclaimed A hijacking.

    Ashlee Page / ARCHIVE (Australia): With the help of a supercomputer, an isolated 16-year-old girl grows plant life on Saturn’s moon Titan in the hope of one day restoring Earth’s ecosystems. But when an unexpected accident leads her to the moon’s surface, she discovers evidence that her mission is a lie and that her life is in danger.

    Ashlee Page is an Australian writer and director. Her multi-award winning short The Kiss screened at Busan, Clermont-Ferrand, Palm Springs and Tribeca film festivals. Her most recent work is on the film compendium The Turning, adapted from the novel by Tim Winton. Archive is her first feature film.

    Neeraj Ghaywan / FLY AWAY SOLO (India): Four lives intersect along the Ganges river: a lower-caste boy in a hopeless love, a daughter torn with guilt, a father sinking in greed, and a spirited kid craving a family, all yearning to escape the constrictions of a small-town.

    Neeraj Ghaywan worked with Anurag Kashyap on the veteran director’s two-part opus Gangs of Wasseypur and as the second unit director on Ugly.  His short films as writer-director include Shor and The EpiphanyShor won the grand jury prize at three International film festivals.

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  • WE STEAL SECRETS: THE STORY OF WIKILEAKS Wins PGA Documentary Award

    WE STEAL SECRETS: THE STORY OF WIKILEAKSWE STEAL SECRETS: THE STORY OF WIKILEAKS

    WE STEAL SECRETS: THE STORY OF WIKILEAKS made up for its lack of a Oscar nomination by winning the The Award for Outstanding Producer of Documentary Theatrical Motion Pictures at the 25th Producers Guild Awards held last night at the Beverly Hilton. Directed by Alex Gibney, the film is described as the definitive story of Julian Assange, Bradley Manning and WikiLeaks, and explores the people and events behind the upstart website that rocked the U.S. government, ushered in a new era of transparency and ignited an information war. FRUITVALE STATION was honored with the Stanley Kramer Award which was presented by star Michael B. Jordan. 

    Here is the full list of winners of the 25th Annual PGA Awards.

    The Darryl F. Zanuck Award for Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Pictures: (tie)
    Gravity (Warner Bros. Pictures) Producers: Alfonso Cuarón, David Heyman
    12 Years a Slave (Fox Searchlight Pictures);  Producers: Anthony Katagas, Jeremy Kleiner, Steve McQueen, Brad Pitt and Dede Gardner

    The Norman Felton Award for Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television, Drama:
    Breaking Bad (AMC); Producers: Melissa Bernstein, Sam Catlin, Bryan Cranston, Vince Gilligan, Peter Gould, Mark Johnson, Stewart Lyons, Michelle MacLaren, George Mastras, Diane Mercer, Thomas Schnauz, Moira Walley-Beckett

    The Award for Outstanding Producer of Documentary Theatrical Motion Pictures:
    We Steal Secrets: The Story Of Wikileaks (Focus Features);  Producers: Alexis Bloom, Alex Gibney, Marc Shmuger

    The David L. Wolper Award for Outstanding Producer of Long-Form Television:
    Behind the Candelabra (HBO); Producers: Susan Ekins, Gregory Jacobs, Michael Polaire, Jerry Weintraub

    The Award for Outstanding Sports Program:
    SportsCenter (ESPN)

    The Award for Outstanding Children’s Program:
    Sesame Street  (PBS)

    The Award for Outstanding Digital Series:
    Wired: What’s Inside 

    The Award for Outstanding Producer of Non-Fiction Television:
    Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown (CNN);  Producers: Anthony Bourdain, Christopher Collins, Lydia Tenaglia, Sandra Zweig

    The Award for Outstanding Producer of Animated Theatrical Motion Pictures:
    Frozen (Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures); Producer: Peter Del Vecho

    The Award for Outstanding Producer of Competition Television:
    The Voice (NBC); Producers: Stijn Bakkers, Mark Burnett, John de Mol, Chad Hines, Lee Metzger, Audrey Morrissey, Jim Roush, Kyra Thompson, Nicolle Yaron, Mike Yurchuk, Amanda Zucker

    The Award for Outstanding Producer of Live Entertainment and Talk Television:
    The Colbert Report (Comedy Central); Producers: Meredith Bennett, Stephen T. Colbert, Richard Dahm, Paul Dinello, Barry Julien, Matt Lappin, Emily Lazar, Tanya Michnevich Bracco, Tom Purcell, Jon Stewart

    The Danny Thomas Award for Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television, Comedy:
    Modern Family (ABC); Producers: Paul Corrigan, Abraham Higginbotham, Ben Karlin, Elaine Ko, Steven Levitan, Christopher Lloyd, Jeffrey Morton, Dan O’Shannon, Jeffrey Richman, Chris Smirnoff, Brad Walsh, Bill Wrubel, Danny Zuker

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  • Cate Blanchett, Jared Leto, Matthew McConaughey Among Winners of 20th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards

    20th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards - Cate Blanchett, Jared Leto, Matthew McConaughey and Lupita Nyong’o 

    SAG-AFTRA presented its coveted Actor statuette for the outstanding motion picture and primetime television performances of 2013 at the “20th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards” in ceremonies attended by film and television’s leading actors, held Saturday, January 18, at the Los Angeles Shrine Exposition Center. Honored with awards were Cate Blanchett, Jared Leto, Matthew McConaughey and Lupita Nyong’o for performances in motion pictures.

    20th ANNUAL SCREEN ACTORS GUILD AWARDS® RECIPIENTS

    THEATRICAL MOTION PICTURES 

    Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role
    MATTHEW McCONAUGHEY / Ron Woodroof – “DALLAS BUYERS CLUB” (Focus Features)

    Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role
    CATE BLANCHETT / Jasmine – “BLUE JASMINE” (Sony Pictures Classics)

    Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role
    JARED LETO / Rayon – “DALLAS BUYERS CLUB” (Focus Features)

    Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role
    LUPITA NYONG’O / Patsey – “12 YEARS A SLAVE” (Fox Searchlight Pictures)

    Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture
    AMERICAN HUSTLE (Columbia Pictures)
    AMY ADAMS / Sydney Prosser
    CHRISTIAN BALE / Irving Rosenfeld
    LOUIS C.K. / Stoddard Thorsen
    BRADLEY COOPER / Richie DiMaso
    PAUL HERMAN / Alfonse Simone
    JACK HUSTON / Pete Musane
    JENNIFER LAWRENCE / Rosalyn Rosenfeld
    ALESSANDRO NIVOLA / Federal Prosecutor
    MICHAEL PEÑA / Sheik (Agent Hernandez)
    JEREMY RENNER / Mayor Carmine Polito
    ELISABETH RÖHM / Dolly Polito
    SHEA WHIGHAM / Carl Elway

    TELEVISION PROGRAMS

    Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Television Movie or Miniseries
    MICHAEL DOUGLAS / Liberace – “BEHIND THE CANDELABRA” (HBO)

    Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Television Movie or Miniseries
    HELEN MIRREN / Linda Kenney Baden – “PHIL SPECTOR” (HBO)

    Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Drama Series
    BRYAN CRANSTON / Walter White – “BREAKING BAD” (AMC)

    Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series
    MAGGIE SMITH / Violet, Dowager Countess of Grantham – “DOWNTON ABBEY” (PBS)

    Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Comedy Series
    TY BURRELL / Phil Dunphy – “MODERN FAMILY” (ABC)

    Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Comedy Series
    JULIA LOUIS-DREYFUS / Vice President Selina Meyer – “VEEP” (HBO)

    Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series
    BREAKING BAD (AMC)
    MICHAEL BOWEN / Uncle Jack
    BETSY BRANDT / Marie Schrader
    BRYAN CRANSTON / Walter White
    LAVELL CRAWFORD / Huell
    TAIT FLETCHER / Lester
    LAURA FRASER / Lydia Rodarte-Quale
    ANNA GUNN / Skyler White
    MATTHEW T. METZLER / Matt
    RJ MITTE / Walter White Jr.
    DEAN NORRIS / Hank Schrader
    BOB ODENKIRK / Saul Goodman
    AARON PAUL / Jesse Pinkman
    JESSE PLEMONS / Todd
    STEVEN MICHAEL QUEZADA / Gomez
    KEVIN RANKIN / Kenny
    PATRICK SANE / Frankie

    Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series
    MODERN FAMILY (ABC)
    JULIE BOWEN / Claire Dunphy
    TY BURRELL / Phil Dunphy
    AUBREY ANDERSON EMMONS / Lily Tucker-Pritchett
    JESSE TYLER FERGUSON / Mitchell Pritchett
    NOLAN GOULD / Luke Dunphy
    SARAH HYLAND / Haley Dunphy
    ED O’NEILL / Jay Pritchett
    RICO RODRIGUEZ / Manny Delgado
    ERIC STONESTREET / Cameron Tucker
    SOFIA VERGARA / Gloria Delgado-Pritchett
    ARIEL WINTER / Alex Dunphy

    SAG AWARDS® HONORS FOR STUNT ENSEMBLES

    Outstanding Action Performance by a Stunt Ensemble in a Motion Picture
    LONE SURVIVOR (Universal Pictures)

    Outstanding Action Performance by a Stunt Ensemble in a Comedy or Drama Series
    GAME OF THRONES (HBO)

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  • BLUE IS THE WARMEST COLOR and 20 FEET FROM STARDOM among Winners of 19th Critics’ Choice Movie Awards

    19th Annual Critics’ Choice Movie Awards , DALLAS BUYERS CLUB, BLUE JASMINE, BLUE IS THE WARMEST COLOR, 20 FEET FROM STARDOM 

    The Broadcast Film Critics Association (BFCA) announced the winners for the 19th Annual Critics’ Choice Movie Awards and “DALLAS BUYERS CLUB” received two major awards, one for Best Actor, which went to Matthew McConaughey, the other going to Jared Leto for Best Supporting Actor. The award for Best Actress went to Cate Blanchett (“BLUE JASMINE”) and Adele Exarchopoulos (“BLUE IS THE WARMEST COLOR”) took home Best Young Actor/Actress. Best Foreign Language Film went to “BLUE IS THE WARMEST COLOR” and Best Documentary Feature to “20 FEET FROM STARDOM.”

    The Critics’ Choice Movie Awards are bestowed annually by the BFCA to honor the finest in cinematic achievement. The BFCA is the largest film critics organization in the United States and Canada, representing more than 280 television, radio and online critics.  BFCA members are the primary source of information for today’s film going public.  

    WINNERS OF THE 19th ANNUAL CRITICS’ CHOICE MOVIE AWARDS

    Best Picture – “12 Years a Slave”
    Best Actor – Matthew McConaughey, “Dallas Buyers Club”
    Best Actress – Cate Blanchett, “Blue Jasmine”
    Best Supporting Actor – Jared Leto, “Dallas Buyers Club”
    Best Supporting Actress – Lupita Nyong’o, “12 Years a Slave”
    Best Young Actor/Actress – Adele Exarchopoulos, “Blue Is The Warmest Color”
    Best Acting Ensemble – “American Hustle”
    Best Director – Alfonso Cuarón, “Gravity”
    Best Original Screenplay – Spike Jonze, “Her”
    Best Adapted Screenplay – John Ridley, “12 Years a Slave”
    Best Cinematography – Emmanuel Lubezki, “Gravity”
    Best Art Direction – Catherine Martin (Production Designer), Beverley Dunn (Set Decorator), “The Great Gatsby”
    Best Editing – Alfonso Cuarón and Mark Sanger, “Gravity”
    Best Costume Design – Catherine Martin, “The Great Gatsby”
    Best Hair & Makeup – “American Hustle”
    Best Visual Effects – “Gravity”
    Best Animated Feature – “Frozen”
    Best Action Movie – “Lone Survivor”
    Best Actor in an Action Movie – Mark Wahlberg, “Lone Survivor”
    Best Actress in an Action Movie – Sandra Bullock, “Gravity”
    Best Comedy – “American Hustle”
    Best Actor in a Comedy – Leonardo DiCaprio, “The Wolf of Wall Street”
    Best Actress in a Comedy – Amy Adams, “American Hustle”
    Best Sci-Fi/Horror Movie – “Gravity”
    Best Foreign Language Film – “Blue Is the Warmest Color”
    Best Documentary Feature – “20 Feet From Stardom”
    Best Song – “Let It Go” Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez, “Frozen”
    Best Score – Steven Price, “Gravity”

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  • THE ACT OF KILLING and THE GRANDMASTER Among Films Honored by Denver Film Critics Society as Best Films of 2013

    Denver Film Critics Society 2013 Awards, THE ACT OF KILLING, THE GRANDMASTER THE ACT OF KILLING that features former Indonesian death squad leaders re-enacting their crimes was honored by the Denver Film Critics Society as the Best Documentary of 2013. THE ACT OF KILLING emerged top doc over other nominees that included BLACKFISH, 20 FEET FROM STARDOM, CUTIE AND THE BOXER, and STORIES WE TELL.  THE GRANDMASTER, the new film by director Wong Kar-wai which spans the five first decades of the 20th Century in China, and depicts the life of legendary kung fu master Ip Man, portrayed by Tony Leung won for Best Foreign Language Film. Other nominees for Best Foreign Language Film include THE GREAT BEAUTY, THE HUNT, BLUE IS THE WARMEST COLOR, and THE BROKEN CIRCLE BREAKDOWN.

    THE 2013 DFCS AWARD WINNERS:

    BEST PICTURE: “Gravity” BEST DIRECTOR: Alfonso Cuaron, “Gravity” BEST ACTOR: Matthew McConaughey, “Dallas Buyers Club” BEST ACTRESS: Cate Blanchett, “Blue Jasmine” BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR: Jared Leto, “Dallas Buyers Club” BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Jennifer Lawrence, “American Hustle” BEST ANIMATED FILM: “Frozen” BEST SCI-FI/HORROR FILM: “Gravity” BEST COMEDY: “This Is the End” BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: David O. Russell and Eric Singer, “American Hustle” BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: Terence Winter, “The Wolf of Wall Street” BEST DOCUMENTARY: “The Act of Killing” BEST SONG: “Let It Go,” Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez, “Frozen” BEST SCORE: “Gravity,” Steven Price BEST FOREIGN-LANGUAGE FILM: “The Grandmaster”

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  • Complete List of 2014 Oscar Nominations

    nominations for the 86th Academy Awards

    The nominations for the 86th Academy Awards were announced this morning and although there were quite a few snubs, films like DALLAS BUYERS CLUb and NEBRASKA received multiple nominations including Best Picture. There were not many surprises in the Documentary category, with THE ACT OF KILLING, CUTIE AND THE BOXER, DIRTY WARS, THE SQUARE and 20 FEET FROM STARDOM grabbing nominations. Academy Awards for outstanding film achievements of 2013 will be presented on Oscar® Sunday, March 2, 2014, at the Dolby Theatre® at Hollywood & Highland Center® and televised live on the ABC Television Network. 

    Nominations for the 86th Academy Awards

    Performance by an actor in a leading role

  • Christian Bale in “American Hustle”
  • Bruce Dern in “Nebraska”
  • Leonardo DiCaprio in “The Wolf of Wall Street”
  • Chiwetel Ejiofor in “12 Years a Slave”
  • Matthew McConaughey in “Dallas Buyers Club”

  • Performance by an actor in a supporting role

  • Barkhad Abdi in “Captain Phillips”
  • Bradley Cooper in “American Hustle”
  • Michael Fassbender in “12 Years a Slave”
  • Jonah Hill in “The Wolf of Wall Street”
  • Jared Leto in “Dallas Buyers Club”

  • Performance by an actress in a leading role

  • Amy Adams in “American Hustle”
  • Cate Blanchett in “Blue Jasmine”
  • Sandra Bullock in “Gravity”
  • Judi Dench in “Philomena”
  • Meryl Streep in “August: Osage County”

  • Performance by an actress in a supporting role

  • Sally Hawkins in “Blue Jasmine”
  • Jennifer Lawrence in “American Hustle”
  • Lupita Nyong’o in “12 Years a Slave”
  • Julia Roberts in “August: Osage County”
  • June Squibb in “Nebraska”

  • Best animated feature film of the year

  • “The Croods” Chris Sanders, Kirk DeMicco and Kristine Belson
  • “Despicable Me 2” Chris Renaud, Pierre Coffin and Chris Meledandri
  • “Ernest & Celestine” Benjamin Renner and Didier Brunner
  • “Frozen” Chris Buck, Jennifer Lee and Peter Del Vecho
  • “The Wind Rises” Hayao Miyazaki and Toshio Suzuki

  • Achievement in cinematography

  • “The Grandmaster” Philippe Le Sourd
  • “Gravity” Emmanuel Lubezki
  • “Inside Llewyn Davis” Bruno Delbonnel
  • “Nebraska” Phedon Papamichael
  • “Prisoners” Roger A. Deakins

  • Achievement in costume design

  • “American Hustle” Michael Wilkinson
  • “The Grandmaster” William Chang Suk Ping
  • “The Great Gatsby” Catherine Martin
  • “The Invisible Woman” Michael O’Connor
  • “12 Years a Slave” Patricia Norris

  • Achievement in directing

  • “American Hustle” David O. Russell
  • “Gravity” Alfonso Cuarón
  • “Nebraska” Alexander Payne
  • “12 Years a Slave” Steve McQueen
  • “The Wolf of Wall Street” Martin Scorsese

  • Best documentary feature

  • “The Act of Killing”Joshua Oppenheimer and Signe Byrge Sørensen
  • “Cutie and the Boxer” Zachary Heinzerling and Lydia Dean Pilcher
  • “Dirty Wars” Richard Rowley and Jeremy Scahill
  • “The Square” Jehane Noujaim and Karim Amer
  • “20 Feet from Stardom” Nominees to be determined

  • Best documentary short subject

  • “CaveDigger” Jeffrey Karoff
  • “Facing Fear” Jason Cohen
  • “Karama Has No Walls” Sara Ishaq
  • “The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed
  • “Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall” Edgar Barens

  • Achievement in film editing

  • “American Hustle” Jay Cassidy, Crispin Struthers and Alan Baumgarten
  • “Captain Phillips” Christopher Rouse
  • “Dallas Buyers Club” John Mac McMurphy and Martin Pensa
  • “Gravity” Alfonso Cuarón and Mark Sanger
  • “12 Years a Slave” Joe Walker

  • Best foreign language film of the year

  • “The Broken Circle Breakdown” Belgium
  • “The Great Beauty” Italy
  • “The Hunt” Denmark
  • “The Missing Picture” Cambodia
  • “Omar” Palestine

  • Achievement in makeup and hairstyling

  • “Dallas Buyers Club” Adruitha Lee and Robin Mathews
  • “Jackass Presents: Bad Grandpa” Stephen Prouty
  • “The Lone Ranger” Joel Harlow and Gloria Pasqua-Casny

  • Achievement in music written for motion pictures (Original score)

  • “The Book Thief” John Williams
  • “Gravity” Steven Price
  • “Her” William Butler and Owen Pallett
  • “Philomena” Alexandre Desplat
  • “Saving Mr. Banks” Thomas Newman

  • Achievement in music written for motion pictures (Original song)

  • “Alone Yet Not Alone” from “Alone Yet Not Alone”
    Music by Bruce Broughton; Lyric by Dennis Spiegel
  • “Happy” from “Despicable Me 2”
    Music and Lyric by Pharrell Williams
  • “Let It Go” from “Frozen”
    Music and Lyric by Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez
  • “The Moon Song” from “Her”
    Music by Karen O; Lyric by Karen O and Spike Jonze
  • “Ordinary Love” from “Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom”
    Music by Paul Hewson, Dave Evans, Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen; Lyric by Paul Hewson

  • Best motion picture of the year

  • “American Hustle” Charles Roven, Richard Suckle, Megan Ellison and Jonathan Gordon, Producers
  • “Captain Phillips” Scott Rudin, Dana Brunetti and Michael De Luca, Producers
  • “Dallas Buyers Club” Robbie Brenner and Rachel Winter, Producers
  • “Gravity” Alfonso Cuarón and David Heyman, Producers
  • “Her” Megan Ellison, Spike Jonze and Vincent Landay, Producers
  • “Nebraska” Albert Berger and Ron Yerxa, Producers
  • “Philomena” Gabrielle Tana, Steve Coogan and Tracey Seaward, Producers
  • “12 Years a Slave” Brad Pitt, Dede Gardner, Jeremy Kleiner, Steve McQueen and Anthony Katagas, Producers
  • “The Wolf of Wall Street” Nominees to be determined

  • Achievement in production design

  • “American Hustle” Production Design: Judy Becker; Set Decoration: Heather Loeffler
  • “Gravity” Production Design: Andy Nicholson; Set Decoration: Rosie Goodwin and Joanne Woollard
  • “The Great Gatsby” Production Design: Catherine Martin; Set Decoration: Beverley Dunn
  • “Her” Production Design: K.K. Barrett; Set Decoration: Gene Serdena
  • “12 Years a Slave” Production Design: Adam Stockhausen; Set Decoration: Alice Baker

  • Best animated short film

  • “Feral” Daniel Sousa and Dan Golden
  • “Get a Horse!” Lauren MacMullan and Dorothy McKim
  • “Mr. Hublot” Laurent Witz and Alexandre Espigares
  • “Possessions” Shuhei Morita
  • “Room on the Broom” Max Lang and Jan Lachauer

  • Best live action short film

  • “Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me)” Esteban Crespo
  • “Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just before Losing Everything)” Xavier Legrand and Alexandre Gavras
  • “Helium” Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson
  • “Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)” Selma Vilhunen and Kirsikka Saari
  • “The Voorman Problem” Mark Gill and Baldwin Li

  • Achievement in sound editing

  • “All Is Lost” Steve Boeddeker and Richard Hymns
  • “Captain Phillips” Oliver Tarney
  • “Gravity” Glenn Freemantle
  • “The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug” Brent Burge
  • “Lone Survivor” Wylie Stateman

  • Achievement in sound mixing

  • “Captain Phillips” Chris Burdon, Mark Taylor, Mike Prestwood Smith and Chris Munro
  • “Gravity” Skip Lievsay, Niv Adiri, Christopher Benstead and Chris Munro
  • “The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug” Christopher Boyes, Michael Hedges, Michael Semanick and Tony Johnson
  • “Inside Llewyn Davis” Skip Lievsay, Greg Orloff and Peter F. Kurland
  • “Lone Survivor” Andy Koyama, Beau Borders and David Brownlow

  • Achievement in visual effects

  • “Gravity” Tim Webber, Chris Lawrence, Dave Shirk and Neil Corbould
  • “The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug” Joe Letteri, Eric Saindon, David Clayton and Eric Reynolds
  • “Iron Man 3” Christopher Townsend, Guy Williams, Erik Nash and Dan Sudick
  • “The Lone Ranger” Tim Alexander, Gary Brozenich, Edson Williams and John Frazier
  • “Star Trek Into Darkness” Roger Guyett, Patrick Tubach, Ben Grossmann and Burt Dalton

  • Adapted screenplay

  • “Before Midnight” Written by Richard Linklater, Julie Delpy, Ethan Hawke
  • “Captain Phillips” Screenplay by Billy Ray
  • “Philomena” Screenplay by Steve Coogan and Jeff Pope
  • “12 Years a Slave” Screenplay by John Ridley
  • “The Wolf of Wall Street” Screenplay by Terence Winter

  • Original screenplay

  • “American Hustle” Written by Eric Warren Singer and David O. Russell
  • “Blue Jasmine” Written by Woody Allen
  • “Dallas Buyers Club” Written by Craig Borten & Melisa Wallack
  • “Her” Written by Spike Jonze
  • “Nebraska” Written by Bob Nelson
  •  

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  • DGA Announces 5 Nominees for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Documentary for 2013

    DGA Announces 5 Nominees for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Documentary for 2013

    The Directors Guild of America announced the five nominees for the DGA Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Documentaries for 2013.  The winner will be named at the 66th Annual DGA Awards Dinner on Saturday, January 25, 2014 at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza in Los Angeles.

    The nominees are (in alphabetical order):

    Zachary Heinzerling
    CUTIE AND THE BOXER

    Cutie and the BoxerCutie and the Boxer

    Jehane Noujaim
    THE SQUARE

    THE SQUARETHE SQUARE

    Joshua Oppenheimer
    THE ACT OF KILLING

    THE ACT OF KILLINGTHE ACT OF KILLING

    Sarah Polley
    STORIES WE TELL

    STORIES WE TELLSTORIES WE TELL

    Lucy Walker
    THE CRASH REEL 

    THE CRASH REEL THE CRASH REEL

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