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Directing
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Letters
Steady as He Goes
Seattle's Brad Nelson breaks new ground by shooting an all-steadicam feature.
Brad Nelson of Seattle shoots and all-steadicam feature and shakes up the film world.
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Mein Seattle Kampf
Guerrillas in the Midst
A tongue-in-cheek look at the struggles of one Seattle-based producer.
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Roman Keeps on Rolling
A Bitter Moon Trilogy
With his devilish new movie, Bitter Moon, Polanski is back. An overview of the influential director's career.
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Peter Coyote is Not P.C.
The favored son of the cult film circuit tells it like it is.
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Grant’s a Hugh Success
With three features out this month, coming to America is a lucrative proposition for Hugh Grant.
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The Movies are Shrinking
Hollywood filmmakers lower their sites for a generation raised on television
A new generation of movie producers are looking to TV for inspiration.
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Bit Men and Hitmen
Corma's Carnosaur rips the meat off arms, legs, Jurassic Park and Alien.
Corman's Carnosaur is a poor man's Jurassic Park. Now that's scary.
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Intravenous Video
Are movies our substitute for an illicit drug experience?
Movies affect you like a drug. And reading this column could put you in detox
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Letters
Marty and Me
Martin Scorses's tutelge helps launch a promising directorial career.
Dan Algrant tells Martin Scorsese gave him his big break.
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How I Made a 1 Mil. Feature Virtually for Free
Martin Scorses's tutelge helps launch a promising directorial career.
A Seattle man tells how he made a million dollars movie without cash.
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Are Women Psycho or is it Just Hollywood?
The new genre of "erotic thrillers" portrays a ruthless new version of the femme fatale.
Women are psycho. A billion movie viewers can't be wrong. Can they?
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Citizen Cotten
Suave, cool intelligent, he was one of the last survivors of Hollywood's golden era.
During his forty-year career, Joseph Cotten's presence was felt in some of the most presitigious films of all time.
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Spielberg Finally Wins the Gold
Hollywood pays homage to its biggest breadwinner.
Oscar predictions and reflections from the editor of LA's BoxOffice Magazine.
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Another Getaway
Walter Hill is the latest moviemaker to get his way with Jim Thompson's dark visions.
With The Getaway remake, Jim Thompson's cult status is alive and well.
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Scraping Bottom
The third annual Lucky Charm Awards prove that there are a lot of sickos out there with video cameras.
More than you ever need to know about the Lucky Charm awards.
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MM Notebook
Hot air, braggadocio, and ramblings from the editorial department.
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Ben Stiller Bytes
An Interview with Ben Stiller
When Reality Bites for Ben Stiller, he creates his own. And he's on a roll.
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Pay Attention to the Man Behind the Curtain
This month MovieMaker reviews two books about "Influence."
Paula Hunt reviews The Phantom Empire, and Tom Barr gives a thumbs up to Behind the Oscar: A Secret History of the Academy Awards.
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Portrait of the Screenwriter as a Young Man
Seattle screenwriter George Wing talks about his first taste of success.
An interview with George Wing, a Seattle-based screenwriter with lots of options for his future.
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“Making it” in Super 8
The Rodney Dangerfield of motion picture film formats is finally getting some respect.
A new film stock is helping make Super 8 a viable format for professional moviemakers.
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Mike Leigh
With no scripts and no delusions, Mike Leigh's chosen direction dinall pays off.
With his Cannes Best-Director award and a hot new movie, Director Mike Leigh may finally get the popular recognition he deserves.
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Extreme Projectionist
It's OK with Dennis Nyback if you don't like the image he projects.
Dennis Nyback's Pike Street Cinema could be the Northwest's most unusual movie house.
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Making History Hollywood Style
Steven Spielberg remakes Schindler in his own image.
Speilberg's spoonful of sugar prevents Schindler's List from being one of the all-time greats.
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A Touch of Welles
The "greatest of all sleaze movies" is recognized a national treasure.
Orson Welles must be having a good last laugh at that wrap party in the sky.
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Posing at the Posies
It sounds like a stretch, but moshing is a lot like moviemaking. No, really...
A brief analysis of "moshing" as it applies to moviemaking. Seriosly, folks.
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Letters
High on Hollywood
Steve Wright's Federal Way helicopter company loves to fly for the studios, and it shows.
A strong Washington film industry would be a book for businesses like Steven Wright's helicoptor company.
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Scapegoat: Hollywood
The movie industry takes cover as the new censorship advocates gather strength.
Will the movie industry censor itself now that government has threatened to clean up its act?
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Joy & Luck in Hollywood
Ron Bass talks about The Joy Luck Club, Sleeping With the Enemy, and how he got to be Hollywood's busiest screenwriter.
He may be the busiest screenwriter in Hollywood, but this Oscar-winner wouldn't have it any other way.
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McElwee’s March - Part 2
As in life, there are no scripts to Ross McElwee's Films. And he hopes to keep it that way.
The art hours phenom talks about the changes success has brought to his career.
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Visions From Down Under
Peter Weir and Jane Champion sail into the mystic
The sensibilities of foreign directors seem to change after coming to America.
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Triumph and Tragedy
The only U.S. film to be blacklisted, Salt of the Earth finally makes its debut on home video.
The only U.S. film ever blacklisted debuts on home video.
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Video Masturbation
You have to master the fundamentals if you want to master your doman.
You can do it all in the video world… but are you the master of your doman?
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In Theaters Now: Body of Lies, City of Ember, Quarantine, Happy-Go-Lucky & RocknRolla
Russell Crowe and Ridley Scott take Leonardo DiCaprio along for the ride on their gravy train while Bill Murray and Guy Ritchie aim for comebacks after Garfield and Swept Away, respectively.
Posted 10.10.08 | In Theaters Now | No comments yet...
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