Golden Globes, it's officially in full swing. The show, which was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, is now set to take place live on Sunday, Feb.
03.02.2021 - 06:39 / hollywoodreporter.com
Bring Your Own Brigade isn't the first cinematic report on the Camp Fire that destroyed Paradise, California, in 2018, or even the first one to screen at Sundance (Ron Howard's Rebuilding Paradise played at the festival in 2020). It almost certainly won't be the last film about the devastation wrought by uncontrolled wildfires, particularly in California, by a long shot.
Golden Globes, it's officially in full swing. The show, which was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, is now set to take place live on Sunday, Feb.
UK and California Covid variants ‘have merged into mutated virus’Two Covid-19 variants have reportedly merged into a mutated hybrid version of the virus, sparking warnings that the pandemic could be entering a new phase. The hybrid virus was discovered in a sample at a US laboratory, and is the result of the “recombination” of a UK and California strain, scientists said.
California dreaming on a cold winter’s day! With warm weather on the horizon, it’s time to break out your bathing suits, sunscreen and beach bags!
Green Day played their first live show in nearly a year this weekend, bringing a career-spanning three-song set to the annual NFL Honors show – watch the set below.The band played ‘Holiday’, ‘Basket Case’ and 2016 track ‘Still Breathing’ outside the SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California.Watch the set, which intersperses the band’s performance with highlights of footage from this year’s NFL competition, below.At the time of writing, Green Day are still set to return to the UK for their
Also Read: See the Shocking Devastation of Southern California's Wildfires (Photos and Video)But Walker didn’t want the film to become a didactic explanation of science and policy, so she worked to make the people suffering the worst and most direct effects of the fires at the center of the story, especially the firefighters who find themselves increasingly overwhelmed as they try to protect hillside homes from fires that are spreading faster than ever.“I really want to make character-driven,
Movie theater advertising network National CineMedia has inked a deal with Harkins Theatres, expanding its foothold in the Southwestern U.S. as it hopes movie-going will pick up this year.
Also Read: Sundance 2021: What Has Sold So Far, From 'CODA' to 'Flee' (Photos)Other Sundance films that have nothing to do with viruses have somehow caught the mood of the moment. Lucy Walker’s “Bring Your Own Brigade,” for example, is a documentary about the wildfires that have grown increasingly deadly in California over the past few years.
Matt Donnelly Senior Film WriterMovies about the end of the world share a similar DNA: chaos, fire, looting, revelations.
NEW YORK -- Peter Nicks had for months been documenting the students of Oakland High School, in California, when the pandemic hit.“It’s in the Bay,” says one student of the virus as he and others mill together in a classroom, excitedly contemplating the cancellation of school.Soon, the principal is heard over the loudspeaker — an announcement that would signal not just the scuttling of prom and graduation ceremonies, but, potentially, Nicks’ film.
Rounding out his trilogy of Oakland based verité documentaries, which includes 2012’s “The Waiting Room” and 2017’s “The Force,” Peter Nicks’ newest, “Homeroom,” is a poignant look at the 2019-20 school year in Oakland, CA, in which the compounding issues around defunding the police and COVID-19 force the school district to reevaluate their priorities.
Peter Nicks had for months been documenting the students of Oakland High School, in California, when the pandemic hit.
Self-confessed animal lover Meghan Markle has had the “support” of her two dogs during COVID-19.
Getting away with her girls. Vanessa Bryant documented her snowy vacation with her daughters amid the first anniversary of her husband, Kobe Bryant, and daughter Gianna’s deaths.
Shaquille O’Neal says the one-year anniversary of Kobe Bryant and his daughter Gianna‘s tragic deaths was a really “tough day.”
Shaquille O'Neal says the one-year anniversary of Kobe Bryant and his daughter Gianna's tragic deaths was a really «tough day.»While speaking to ET via Zoom on Wednesday, the former Los Angeles Lakers star admitted it's hard to believe that a year has already passed since Kobe, Gianna and seven others died in a helicopter crash near Calabasas, California.«I'm sort of a tough cookie, but I was more worried about [Kobe's] parents,» Shaq told ET's Nischelle Turner.
Demi Moore is striking a pose.