Tom Tapp Deputy Managing EditorCalifornia Governor Gavin Newsom released on Friday his long-awaited guidelines for restarting film and TV production in the state amid the ongoing COVID-19 crisis.
24.05.2020 - 12:23 / qvoicenews.com
Pixar made history Friday with the release of the animated short film “Out” — The first film from Pixar to feature an LGBTQ storyline and a main character who identifies as gay.
The 9-minute film debuted on Disney Plus through its SparkShorts series.
AdvertisementThe film follows Greg, who is excited about moving in with his boyfriend, Manuel. But Greg’s happiness is muted a little. He’s nervous because he’s not out to his parents, who unexpectedly stop by the apartment for a visit.
Greg tries
Tom Tapp Deputy Managing EditorCalifornia Governor Gavin Newsom released on Friday his long-awaited guidelines for restarting film and TV production in the state amid the ongoing COVID-19 crisis.
Raymond Motadi, writer of Feminine Lotus
«Will history stop repeating itself?» Spike Lee asks as much at the start of a minute-and-a-half-long short film he shared on Twitter, which splices clips from his 1989 film,, with footage of the police killings of Eric Garner in 2014 and George Floyd in May.
Spike Lee has made his own powerful statement about the death of George Floyd at the hands of police by releasing a short film comparing his treatment to a scene from his film Do The Right Thing.
Spike Lee has released a powerful short film that splices together the deaths of George Floyd and Eric Garner with clips from the climax of his 1989 film “Do the Right Thing,” calling Floyd, Garner and the character Radio Raheem “3 Brothers.”
Spike Lee has made his own powerful statement about the death of George Floyd at the hands of police by releasing a short film comparing his treatment to a scene from his film Do The Right Thing.
"Will history stop repeating itself?"
Spike Lee has made his own powerful statement about the death of George Floyd at the hands of police by releasing a short film comparing his treatment to a scene from his film Do The Right Thing. Floyd passed away last Monday after being apprehended by police in Minneapolis, Minnesota, with Derek Chauvin, an officer who was filmed kneeling on his neck facing a third degree murder charge and three other officers dismissed over the incident.
Over 30 years later and “Do the Right Thing” still sadly rings true.
By Nellie Andreeva
WWE star Becky Lynch just posted the sweetest birthday message for her fiancé Seth Rollins and marked his special day by sharing the first ultrasound of their baby. In a heartfelt Instagram post for her ‘favorite person in the world,’ the wrestler shared a series of pictures featuring Seth and added the ultrasound photo in the end, labelled ‘baby.’ Becky announced earlier this month that she would be taking a break from the wrestling scene as the two are expecting a child together.
NEW YORK -- In Steven Clay Hunter’s 23 years as an animator at Pixar, he has drawn a seven-armed octopus, a Canadian daredevil and a wheezing toy penguin. But there were scenes he never expected to animate until he began working on his short, “Out.”
Martin Scorsese self-shot a short film in his New York City home that saw him reflect on his self-isolation caused by the coronavirus pandemic through the lens of classic films. The 77-year-old director filmed the short for the BBC series “Lockdown Culture with Mary Beard,” which has seen many prominent Hollywood figures tell their stories of being in lockdown due to the pandemic through various creative means.
The director shot the film himself
If you’ve been a regular viewing of David Lynch’s recent YouTube work, you know that the filmmaker has been taking the time to post daily weather updates during the lockdown. But it appears that tomorrow, the filmmaker is breaking up that stream of videos to post something that will attract more than just amateur meteorologists.
By Jordan Moreau
Billie Eilish took another thinly veiled shot at body shamers -- and this time the clap back came in the form of a new short film. In the project, titled “Not My Responsibility," which first debuted during her "Where Do We Go?" world tour, the 18-year-old pop music superstar carefully disrobes as she responds to negative image comments strewn her way about her figure and her choice to don baggy clothing as a mechanism of defense to the hate.