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Flatliners (1990) 68,725 This R | 1H 55Min | Drama, Horror, Sci-Fi | 10 August 1990 (USA)
Find Movies, TV shows, Celebrities and more... All | Help IMDb Movies, TV Celebs, Events News & & Showtimes & Photos Community Watchlist Sign in with Facebook Other Sign in options FULL CAST AND CREW | TRIVIA | USER REVIEWS | IMDbPro | MORE SHARE 6.6/10 Rate Flatliners (1990) 68,725 This R | 1h 55min | Drama, Horror, Sci-Fi | 10 August 1990 (USA) Five medical students experiment with "near death" experiences, until the dark consequences of past tragedies begin to jeopardize their lives. Director: Joel Schumacher Writer: Peter Filardi Stars: Kiefer Sutherland, Kevin Bacon, Julia Roberts | See full cast & crew » IMDb Picks: December Metascore Reviews Popularity 55 From metacritic.com 160 user | 42 critic 1,662 ( 260) Watch Now From EUR2.99 (SD) on Amazon Video ON DISC Nominated for 1 Oscar. Another 2 nominations. See more awards » Videos Photos "Doctor Who" We can't wait to travel through time and space one last time with the Twelfth Doctor. See which other movies and TV shows we're excited about this month. 58 photos | 1 video | Related news articles » Visit IMDb Picks » Edit Like 5.6K people like this. Sign Up to see what Cast your friends like. Cast overview, first billed only: Kiefer Sutherland ... Nelson Wright Related News Julia Roberts ... Dr. Rachel Mannus New Flatliners Movie Coming to Blu-ray, DVD, and Digital Platforms This Kevin Bacon ... David Labraccio December 15 November 2017 7:21 PM, +01:00 | DailyDead William Baldwin ... Dr. Joe Hurley Julia Roberts Acts Out 26 of Her Movies in Under 10 Minutes Oliver Platt ... Randy Steckle 5 October 2017 12:55 PM, +01:00 | E! Online The ‘Flatliners’ Remake Buckled Under Kimberly Scott .. -
Cold War II: Hollywood's Renewed Obsession with Russia
H-USA Edited Collection: Cold War II: Hollywood’s Renewed Obsession with Russia Discussion published by Tatiana Konrad on Monday, August 13, 2018 Date: October 1, 2018 The Cold War, with its bald confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union, has been widely depicted in film. Starting even before the conflict actually began with Ernst Lubitsch’s portrayals of communism in Ninotschka (1939), and ranging from Stanley Kubrick’s openly “Cold War” Dr. Strangelove (1963) to Fred Schepisi’s The Russia House (1990), Hollywood’s obsession with the Cold War, the Soviets/Russians, communism, and the political and ideological differences between the U.S. and Russia were pronounced. This obsession has persisted even after the fall of the Berlin Wall and the breakup of the Soviet Union. Cold War tropes continue to be (ab)used, as can be seen in multiple representations of evil Russians on screen, including Wolfgang Petersen’s Air Force One (1997), Jon Favreau’s Iron Man 2 (2010), Phillip Noyce’s Salt (2010), Brad Bird’s Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol (2011), John Moore’s A Good Day to Die Hard (2013), and Antoine Fuqua’s The Equalizer (2014), to name just a few. All these films portray Russians in a rather similar manner: as members of the mafia or as plain criminals. Yet recently Hollywood cinema has made a striking turn regarding its portrayals of Russians, returning to the images of the Cold War. This turn and the films that resulted from it are what the collection proposes to examine. The sanctions imposed on Russia during the Ukrainian crisis in 2014 by several Western countries, including the United States, along with Trump’s admiration for Putin, Russian attempts to influence the 2016 American election, the fatal poisoning in the UK, etc., have led to a tense relationship between Russia and the Western world. -
Review of Rogue One: a Star Wars Story
DVD reviews Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (Gareth Edwards US 2016). Walt Disney Studios 2017. Region 1. 2.39:1 widescreen. US$23. Sean Guynes-Vishniac After the release of Revenge of the Sith (Lucas US 2005), the third film in the Star Wars prequel trilogy in 2005, George Lucas and Lucasfilm had no plans to add further feature films to the multi-billion-dollar franchise. This was in part because fans of the original Star Wars trilogy (1977–83) hated the prequels, and because Lucas was now interested in television, starting with the animated series The Clone Wars (2008–14, 2019). When Disney bought Lucasfilm, they announced a new trilogy extending the saga of the Skywalker family, and several standalone non-saga ‘anthology’ films to fill narrative gaps in the universe; Rogue One: A Star Wars Story is the first of these anthology films. Its position raises important questions about the contemporary state of the transmedia sf franchise, while its narrative looks at the limits and possibilities of sf blockbusters’ political work. To provide an easy entry into the franchise’s storyworld, Rogue One offers a cast of new characters that fit (and slightly modify) well-known franchise types: protagonist Jyn Erso (Felicity Jones), for example, pairs the scruffiness of Han Solo with the paternal drama of Luke Skywalker; Chirrut Îmwe (Donnie Yen) takes on the Jedi mystique and mentor role of Obi-Wan Kenobi; K-2SO (Alan Tudyk) is the non-human, comedy-relief sidekick, a cynical update of C-3PO. Cassian Andor (Diego Luna), however, stands out thematically, mixing the scoundrel qualities of Solo with the risky charm of Lando Calrissian, and bringing a moral ambiguity to the normally black-and-white world of Jedi and Sith; perhaps these qualities have led to Andor’s being named as the protagonist of one of the upcoming Star Wars series on the new streaming service Disney+. -
B R I a N K I N G M U S I C I N D U S T R Y P R O F E S S I O N a L M U S I C I a N - C O M P O S E R - P R O D U C E R
B R I A N K I N G M U S I C I N D U S T R Y P R O F E S S I O N A L M U S I C I A N - C O M P O S E R - P R O D U C E R Brian’s profile encompasses a wide range of experience in music education and the entertainment industry; in music, BLUE WALL STUDIO - BKM | 1986 -PRESENT film, television, theater and radio. More than 300 live & recorded performances Diverse range of Artists & Musical Styles UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Music for Media in NYC, Atlanta, L.A. & Paris For more information; www.bluewallstudio.com • As an administrator, professor and collaborator with USC working with many award-winning faculty and artists, PRODUCTION CREDITS - PARTIAL LIST including Michael Patterson, animation and digital arts, Medeski, Martin and Wood National Medal of Arts recipient, composer, Morton Johnny O’Neil Trio Lauridsen, celebrated filmmaker, founder of Lucasfilm and the subdudes (w/Bonnie Raitt) ILM, George Lucas, and his team at the Skywalker Ranch. The B- 52s Jerry Marotta Joseph Arthur • In music education, composition and sound, with a strong The Indigo Girls focus on establishing relations with industry professionals, R.E.M. including 13-time Oscar nominee, Thomas Newman, and 5- Alan Broadbent time nominee, Dennis Sands - relationships leading to PS Jonah internships in L.A. and fundraising projects with ASCAP, Caroline Aiken BMI, the RMALA and the Musician’s Union local 47. Kristen Hall Michelle Malone & Drag The River Melissa Manchester • In a leadership role, as program director, recruitment Jimmy Webb outcomes aligned with career success for graduates Col. -
Executive Producer)
PRODUCTION BIOGRAPHIES STEVEN SODERBERGH (Executive Producer) Steven Soderbergh has produced or executive-produced a wide range of projects, most recently Gregory Jacobs' Magic Mike XXL, as well as his own series "The Knick" on Cinemax, and the current Amazon Studios series "Red Oaks." Previously, he produced or executive-produced Jacobs' films Wind Chill and Criminal; Laura Poitras' Citizenfour; Marina Zenovich's Roman Polanski: Odd Man Out, Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired, and Who Is Bernard Tapie?; Lynne Ramsay's We Need to Talk About Kevin; the HBO documentary His Way, directed by Douglas McGrath; Lodge Kerrigan's Rebecca H. (Return to the Dogs) and Keane; Brian Koppelman and David Levien's Solitary Man; Todd Haynes' I'm Not There and Far From Heaven; Tony Gilroy's Michael Clayton; George Clooney's Good Night and Good Luck and Confessions of a Dangerous Mind; Scott Z. Burns' Pu-239; Richard Linklater's A Scanner Darkly; Rob Reiner's Rumor Has It...; Stephen Gaghan'sSyriana; John Maybury's The Jacket; Christopher Nolan's Insomnia; Godfrey Reggio's Naqoyqatsi; Anthony and Joseph Russo's Welcome to Collinwood; Gary Ross' Pleasantville; and Greg Mottola's The Daytrippers. LODGE KERRIGAN (Co-Creator, Executive Producer, Writer, Director) Co-Creators and Executive Producers Lodge Kerrigan and Amy Seimetz wrote and directed all 13 episodes of “The Girlfriend Experience.” Prior to “The Girlfriend Experience,” Kerrigan wrote and directed the features Rebecca H. (Return to the Dogs), Keane, Claire Dolan and Clean, Shaven. His directorial credits also include episodes of “The Killing” (AMC / Netflix), “The Americans” (FX), “Bates Motel” (A&E) and “Homeland” (Showtime). -
HBO and the HOLOCAUST: CONSPIRACY, the HISTORICAL FILM, and PUBLIC HISTORY at WANNSEE Nicholas K. Johnson Submitted to the Facul
HBO AND THE HOLOCAUST: CONSPIRACY, THE HISTORICAL FILM, AND PUBLIC HISTORY AT WANNSEE Nicholas K. Johnson Submitted to the faculty of the University Graduate School in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Arts in the Department of History, Indiana University December 2016 Accepted by the Graduate Faculty, Indiana University, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts. Master’s Thesis Committee __________________________________ Raymond J. Haberski, Ph.D., Chair __________________________________ Thorsten Carstensen, Ph.D. __________________________________ Kevin Cramer, Ph.D. ii Acknowledgements First, I would like to thank the members of my committee for supporting this project and offering indispensable feedback and criticism. I would especially like to thank my chair, Ray Haberski, for being one of the most encouraging advisers I have ever had the pleasure of working with and for sharing his passion for film and history with me. Thorsten Carstensen provided his fantastic editorial skills and for all the times we met for lunch during my last year at IUPUI. I would like to thank Kevin Cramer for awakening my interest in German history and for all of his support throughout my academic career. Furthermore, I would like to thank Jason M. Kelly, Claudia Grossmann, Anita Morgan, Rebecca K. Shrum, Stephanie Rowe, Modupe Labode, Nancy Robertson, and Philip V. Scarpino for all the ways in which they helped me during my graduate career at IUPUI. I also thank the IUPUI Public History Program for admitting a Germanist into the Program and seeing what would happen. I think the experiment paid off. -
F5833 FLATLINERS (USA, 1990) (Other Titles: Egyenesen At; Experience Interdite; Linea Mortale)
F5833 FLATLINERS (USA, 1990) (Other titles: Egyenesen at; Experience interdite; Linea mortale) Credits: director, Joel Schumacher ; writer, Peter Filardi. Cast: Kiefer Sutherland, Julia Roberts, Kevin Bacon, William Baldwin. Summary: Horror film set in the contemporary U.S. An ambitious, charismatic medical student (Sutherland) persuades two classmates (Roberts and Bacon) to take part in an experiment to determine if there is life after death. When the Julia Roberts character crosses over to the other side, she is greeted as a little girl by images of her father returning home from Vietnam. She sees what she has suppressed since childhood: her father mainlining dope and killing himself with a .45 pistol. Blair, Iain, “Chicago quickens pulse of ‘Flatliners’: Sci-fi thriller mixes local sets, Sutherland and Roberts with macabre experiments seeking life after death” Chicago tribune (Aug 8, 1990), Tempo, p. 1. Boesch, Xavier (see under Outarquin, Laurent) Brown, Joe. “‘Flatliners’ lacks intensive scare” Washington post (Aug 10, 1990), Weekend, p. 49. Brudny, Wolfgang. “Jenseits - hin und zurueck” Medien 35/1 (1991), p. 40-41. Buehrer, Beverly Bare. “Flatliners” Magill’s cinema annual Englewood Cliffs, N.J. : Salem Press, 1982- (1991, p. 109-112) Busby, Scott. “Do or die” Millimeter 18 (Jun 1990), p. 205. Carr, Jay. “Dark ‘Flatliners’ takes idealism to heart” Boston globe (Aug 10, 1990), Arts and film, p. 31. Cosford, Bill. “Flatliners: A blip on the silver screen” Miami herald (Aug 10, 1990), p. 10G. Dawes, Amy. “Flatliners” Variety 340 (Aug 1, 1990), p. 67. Dwyer, V. [Flatliners] Maclean’s 103 (Aug 13, 1990), p. 58. Edelstein, David. -
English Management Sociology
Wintersession 2014 English CIN 372 W01: FILM GENRES: FILM NOIR (Fulfills LIT requirement or A&S elective): This course will closely examine the period of American filmmaking during and following WWII later labeled “Film Noir” as well as contemporary reinventions of the genre. The noir canon of films has been so categorized by their mood (bleakness, desperation, moral corruption), style (low-key and expressionistic lighting, deep focus), and characters (antiheroes, femmes fatales, doomed love). Exploring the cultural references to the more dark side of human nature, we will look at such films as They Live By Night and In a Lonely Place (Nicholas Ray), Touch of Evil (Orson Welles), Key Largo (John Huston), Mildred Pierce (Michael Curtiz), Double Indemnity and Sunset Boulevard (Billy Wilder), The Wrong Man (Alfred Hitchcock), Kiss Me Deadly (Robert Aldrich), and The Killing (Stanley Kubrick), as well as Post-noir and Neo Noir reinventions including Bonnie and Clyde (Arthur Penn), Chinatown (Roman Polanski), Blood Simple (Coen Bros.), Blade Runner (Ridley Scott), Pulp Fiction (Quentin Tarantino), Body Heat (Lawrence Kasdan), Lost Highway (David Lynch), Memento (Christopher Nolan), and A History of Violence (David Cronenberg), among others. We will also analyze how contemporary films, television dramas, and video games have incorporated certain aspects of noir; in particular, the male antihero (Breaking Bad, The Walking Dead), chiaroscuro lighting and cinematography as metaphor in television (Dexter, Mad Men), as well as the renewed interest in the genre as part of the game play in L.A. Noire. Management MG340A W01 Emotional Intelligence at Work PREQ: GB 215 The idea of emotional intelligence has been growing in interest during the last decade as an essential set of capacities and skills that complement and enhance the classic business focus on cognitive ability. -
The New Hollywood Films
The New Hollywood Films The following is a chronological list of those films that are generally considered to be "New Hollywood" productions. Shadows (1959) d John Cassavetes First independent American Film. Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966) d. Mike Nichols Bonnie and Clyde (1967) d. Arthur Penn The Graduate (1967) d. Mike Nichols In Cold Blood (1967) d. Richard Brooks The Dirty Dozen (1967) d. Robert Aldrich Dont Look Back (1967) d. D.A. Pennebaker Point Blank (1967) d. John Boorman Coogan's Bluff (1968) – d. Don Siegel Greetings (1968) d. Brian De Palma 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) d. Stanley Kubrick Planet of the Apes (1968) d. Franklin J. Schaffner Petulia (1968) d. Richard Lester Rosemary's Baby (1968) – d. Roman Polanski The Producers (1968) d. Mel Brooks Bullitt (1968) d. Peter Yates Night of the Living Dead (1968) – d. George Romero Head (1968) d. Bob Rafelson Alice's Restaurant (1969) d. Arthur Penn Easy Rider (1969) d. Dennis Hopper Medium Cool (1969) d. Haskell Wexler Midnight Cowboy (1969) d. John Schlesinger The Rain People (1969) – d. Francis Ford Coppola Take the Money and Run (1969) d. Woody Allen The Wild Bunch (1969) d. Sam Peckinpah Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (1969) d. Paul Mazursky Butch Cassidy & the Sundance Kid (1969) d. George Roy Hill They Shoot Horses, Don't They? (1969) – d. Sydney Pollack Alex in Wonderland (1970) d. Paul Mazursky Catch-22 (1970) d. Mike Nichols MASH (1970) d. Robert Altman Love Story (1970) d. Arthur Hiller Airport (1970) d. George Seaton The Strawberry Statement (1970) d. -
Scary Movies at the Cudahy Family Library
SCARY MOVIES AT THE CUDAHY FAMILY LIBRARY prepared by the staff of the adult services department August, 2004 updated August, 2010 AVP: Alien Vs. Predator - DVD Abandoned - DVD The Abominable Dr. Phibes - VHS, DVD The Addams Family - VHS, DVD Addams Family Values - VHS, DVD Alien Resurrection - VHS Alien 3 - VHS Alien vs. Predator. Requiem - DVD Altered States - VHS American Vampire - DVD An American werewolf in London - VHS, DVD An American Werewolf in Paris - VHS The Amityville Horror - DVD anacondas - DVD Angel Heart - DVD Anna’s Eve - DVD The Ape - DVD The Astronauts Wife - VHS, DVD Attack of the Giant Leeches - VHS, DVD Audrey Rose - VHS Beast from 20,000 Fathoms - DVD Beyond Evil - DVD The Birds - VHS, DVD The Black Cat - VHS Black River - VHS Black X-Mas - DVD Blade - VHS, DVD Blade 2 - VHS Blair Witch Project - VHS, DVD Bless the Child - DVD Blood Bath - DVD Blood Tide - DVD Boogeyman - DVD The Box - DVD Brainwaves - VHS Bram Stoker’s Dracula - VHS, DVD The Brotherhood - VHS Bug - DVD Cabin Fever - DVD Candyman: Farewell to the Flesh - VHS Cape Fear - VHS Carrie - VHS Cat People - VHS The Cell - VHS Children of the Corn - VHS Child’s Play 2 - DVD Child’s Play 3 - DVD Chillers - DVD Chilling Classics, 12 Disc set - DVD Christine - VHS Cloverfield - DVD Collector - DVD Coma - VHS, DVD The Craft - VHS, DVD The Crazies - DVD Crazy as Hell - DVD Creature from the Black Lagoon - VHS Creepshow - DVD Creepshow 3 - DVD The Crimson Rivers - VHS The Crow - DVD The Crow: City of Angels - DVD The Crow: Salvation - VHS Damien, Omen 2 - VHS -
Regional St. Patrick's Day Events Consolidation Update SEAT Might
Volume 19, Issue #5 April 2018 Consolidation Update SEAT might cut TRCC Route Regional St. Patrick’s Day Events Advisor The Current is the official student publication of Three Rivers Community College. The Kevin Amenta Current is written, edited, and designed solely by students. The Current staff is producing five issues this Spring which Editor are free of charge. We encourage students, Cheryl Gibson faculty, staff, and other readers to contribute to future issues. Front Cover Email submissions, responses, and ideas to: [email protected] Cheryl Gibson or to Kevin Amenta at: [email protected] Staff Only submissions with proper contact Catalina Anzola information will be accepted. The Current reserves the right to edit submissions. Views Katherine Collins expressed are those of the writers and are not to be considered those of The Current, TRCC, the Kenzie Costello faculty, staff or administration. Mark Dunning Cheryl Gibson Ashley Hanson Abigail Moran Find and Like us on Facebook! www.facebook.com/ George Simones TRCCTheCurrent Special Thanks: Dr. Mary Ellen Jukoski, Robert Allen Painter, Kenzie Costello, Shelley Reynolds, Alexa Shelton, Kathryn Gaffney and the TRCC Copy Center 2 The Current CONTENTS 4 Editorial 5 Writer’s Guild Contest 12 6 College Consolidation 8 Transportation Budget Cuts 18 10 Veterans Resource Fair 12 Regional St. Patty’s Events 14 Rights of the Undocumented 17 TRCC Baseball 18 Food on the Go 20 At the Movies 20 22 GamerCon is Back! Trinity COMPLETE IDP YOUR DEGREE Fall in love with learning again! Trinity’s Individualized Degree Program (IDP) offers: • Excellent need-based, year-round financial aid • Accessible academic advising • Full-time or part-time study • Faculty-guided undergraduate research • Phi Theta Kappa (PTK) Scholars Program • 41 majors and many minors Contact us to arrange for a personalized visit. -
Becoming Legendary: Slate Financing and Hollywood Studio Partnership in Contemporary Filmmaking
Kimberly Owczarski Becoming Legendary: Slate Financing and Hollywood Studio Partnership in Contemporary Filmmaking In June 2005, Warner Bros. Pictures announced Are Marshall (2006), and Trick ‘r’ Treat (2006)2— a multi-film co-financing and co-production not a single one grossed more than $75 million agreement with Legendary Pictures, a new total worldwide at the box office. In 2007, though, company backed by $500 million in private 300 was a surprise hit at the box office and secured equity funding from corporate investors including Legendary’s footing in Hollywood (see Table 1 divisions of Bank of America and AIG.1 Slate for a breakdown of Legendary’s performance at financing, which involves an investment in a the box office). Since then, Legendary has been a specified number of studio films ranging from a partner on several high-profile Warner Bros. films mere handful to dozens of pictures, was hardly a including The Dark Knight, Inception, Watchmen, new phenomenon in Hollywood as several studios Clash of the Titans, and The Hangoverand its sequel. had these types of deals in place by 2005. But In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, the sheer size of the Legendary deal—twenty five Legendary founder Thomas Tull likened his films—was certainly ambitious for a nascent firm. company’s involvement in film production to The first film released as part of this deal wasBatman an entrepreneurial endeavor, stating: “We treat Begins (2005), a rebooting of Warner Bros.’ film each film like a start-up.”3 Tull’s equation of franchise. Although Batman Begins had a strong filmmaking with Wall Street investment is performance at the box office ($205 million in particularly apt, as each film poses the potential domestic theaters and $167 million in international for a great windfall or loss just as investing in a theaters), it was not until two years later that the new business enterprise does for stockholders.