#filmmaking

[ follow ]
fromTheregister
2 hours ago

Now even Netflix has its own video AI

VOID stands for Video Object and Interaction Deletion. It's a VLM (vision-language model) that can not only erase objects from a scene but can also inpaint how remaining objects in the scene should behave without the influence of whatever was excised.
Independent films
Independent films
fromInverse
2 days ago

James Gunn's First Movie Proves He Hasn't Changed in 20 Years

James Gunn transitioned from B-movies to mainstream filmmaking, showcasing his unique style in 'Slither' despite initial box office struggles.
Media industry
fromIndieWire
2 days ago

To Access Stranded Capital, Filmmakers Need to Learn Demand-Side Thinking

Shifting from supply-side to demand-side thinking is crucial for independent filmmakers to attract investment and audience interest.
Film
fromOpen Culture
2 days ago

How James Cameron Shot Titanic/i>'s Hugely Complex Sinking Scene

James Cameron directed several of the most expensive movies, showcasing his engineering mindset and innovative techniques in filmmaking.
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
3 days ago

Lena Dunham on Falling in Love with the Movies

A young filmmaker's journey begins with a short film, leading to acceptance at Slamdance and a memorable festival experience.
Independent films
fromFilmmaker Magazine
1 week ago

They Will Kill You Took the Blood, Sweat and Tears of Kirill Sokolov, Zazie Beetz, and Myha'la

Sokolov passionately engages with audiences before his film, reflecting on his journey from Russia to America amid political turmoil.
#ai
fromWIRED
1 month ago
Television

'Fallout' Producer Jonathan Nolan on AI: 'We're in Such a Frothy Moment'

fromFortune
3 months ago
Artificial intelligence

Actress Natasha Lyonne dropped out of NYU and watched movies at the Film Forum instead. Now, she's helping to shape the future of AI. | Fortune

fromWIRED
1 month ago
Television

'Fallout' Producer Jonathan Nolan on AI: 'We're in Such a Frothy Moment'

fromFortune
3 months ago
Artificial intelligence

Actress Natasha Lyonne dropped out of NYU and watched movies at the Film Forum instead. Now, she's helping to shape the future of AI. | Fortune

fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Alexander Kluge, author and key film-maker in the New German Cinema movement, dies aged 94

Kluge was an accomplished director of intellectually rewarding, if at times oblique filmic essays, and an ever-productive writer of short fiction. He played a key role in organising the rule-breaking New German Cinema movement that brought forth better-known auteurs such as Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Werner Herzog.
Berlin
Film
fromIndependent
1 week ago

'First thing I did was bring the team to see the bog bodies in the National Museum' - Hollywood director Lee Cronin on giving his take on The Mummy an Irish spin

Lee Cronin's new take on 'The Mummy' emphasizes personal loss and horror set against a haunting landscape.
Snowboarding
fromSnowBrains
1 week ago

Pro Freeskier Kai Smart, 23, Dies After Avalanche Burial in Japan - SnowBrains

Kai Smart, a talented freeskier and filmmaker, tragically died from avalanche injuries in Japan, leaving a legacy through organ donation and impactful films.
Independent films
fromOpen Culture
1 week ago

See the Climactic Ending of Steven Spielberg's Breakout Duel Recreated Entirely with 3D-Printed Models

Steven Spielberg's journey from a young filmmaker to a Hollywood icon is depicted in The Fabelmans, showcasing his passion for storytelling and filmmaking.
#horror
fromConsequence
1 week ago
Film

How Directors Like Zach Cregger and Jorma Taccone Create Horror Magic With Comedic Timing

Zach Cregger transitioned from comedy to horror, using his comedic background to enhance the impact of his films.
fromConsequence
7 months ago
Film

Zach Cregger's Weapons Crafts a Captivating Mystery. Then It Goes Totally Nuts: Review

Weapons tells the story of 17 missing third graders that unveils a mystery and resolves with a cathartic ending.
Film
fromConsequence
1 week ago

How Directors Like Zach Cregger and Jorma Taccone Create Horror Magic With Comedic Timing

Zach Cregger transitioned from comedy to horror, using his comedic background to enhance the impact of his films.
Film
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

Urban Legend director Jamie Blanks dies aged 54

Jamie Blanks, renowned Australian filmmaker known for Urban Legend, passed away unexpectedly at 54, leaving behind a legacy of influential horror films.
Independent films
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

The world was hard this movie was meant to be a hug': Ugo Bienvenu on his heartwarming eco-fable Arco

French animator Ugo Bienvenu created Arco, an Oscar-nominated animated film combining heartfelt storytelling with Studio Ghibli-inspired artistry, driven by his desire to offer hope and optimism to his future children despite his naturally pessimistic nature.
Film
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

Why Sentimental Value should win the best picture Oscar

Sentimental Value is an ambitious family saga spanning decades that blends personal drama with filmmaking themes, featuring exceptional performances from its four Oscar-nominated leads.
fromBusiness Insider
3 weeks ago

Werner Herzog says he refuses to work 'a single hour' of overtime

When I was about 13 or 14, I knew I was a poet. And then, of course, I knew I had to make films. Although I had hardly ever seen any films. The very first time I had noticed that there was such a thing like movies was when I was 11.
Berlin
Film
fromHarvard Gazette
3 weeks ago

The downside of winning an Oscar - Harvard Gazette

Edward Zwick reflects on his four-decade Hollywood career, revealing that early award success taught him that accolades have minimal impact on creative process or self-worth.
Music
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Musician and film-maker Flying Lotus: The whole lo-fi beats thing has become like Starbucks music'

Kendrick Lamar pairs lyrical genius with precise production instincts, making close collaboration a rare, career-elevating creative meeting.
Film
fromFast Company
1 month ago

Ben Affleck has one word for AI-generated creative writing. His take on LLMs is going viral

AI will function as a filmmaking tool, not a full replacement for human creativity, because it tends to produce average, unreliable creative output.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

The Uncool by Cameron Crowe audiobook review memoir of an awestruck insider

Cameron Crowe experienced life as a sincere, wide-eyed teenage music journalist among major 1970s rock acts and ultimately discovered filmmaking.
Film
fromFilmmaker Magazine
1 month ago

True Story: I Used My Jeopardy! Winnings to Finance My First Feature

Lifelong passions for magic, film, and trivia converged into a filmmaking career and a rekindled fascination with Colon, Michigan's rich magic heritage and storytelling potential.
fromCaribbean Life
1 month ago

Bronx filmmaker spotlights Jamaican Diaspora stories - Caribbean Life

But rather than walk away from his creative calling, Driven said he pivoted - teaching himself videography and landing his first paid job through a Craigslist post filming Caribbean DJ, and DJ Mad Out. "That opportunity introduced him to New York's Caribbean music scene, where he went on to work with artists such as Shaggy, Ding Dong and Kranium," she said. "Those early experiences sharpened Hillmedo's eye for authenticity, capturing Caribbean culture not as spectacle, but as lived reality," she added.
Brooklyn
Film
fromwww.bbc.com
1 month ago

Wheelchair camera 'is milestone for disabled film-makers'

A patented wheelchair-mounted Steadicam system enables wheelchair users to operate professional camera rigs, improving accessibility and production value in film and broadcast.
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 months ago

Jim Jarmusch, filmmaker: If you put money into my movie, you don't tell me how to make it, no matter who you are'

When a movie ends, Jim Jarmusch almost always gets sick. Which illness varies it could be a cold, the flu, or worse. The phenomenon has taken place for years. In his filmography, the director tends to post more questions than answers. In contrast, when it comes to his health, he has arrived at a clear conclusion: It's fucking hard to make a movie. And that's equally true if it's good or bad. It requires a lot of resistance and concentration.
Film
fromAnOther
2 months ago

Inside a New Exhibition of David Lynch's Paintings and Photographs

Before he was a filmmaker, David Lynch was a painter and, if you're familiar with his esoteric filmmaking practice - peppered as it is with some of cinema's most indelible imagery - it all makes a lot of sense. A year after the auteur's passing, a newly opened show at Pace Gallery's Berlin space, Die Tankestelle, foregrounds Lynch's career-spanning fine art practice and its inextricable link to his cinematic oeuvre.
Film
Film
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Matt Damon is right: phones + Netflix mean we are now in the pub bore age of cinema

Matt Damon criticizes Netflix's streaming-driven storytelling, arguing platform viewing conditions force simpler plotting, repeated exposition, and earlier action to retain distracted viewers.
#documentary
Film
fromJuxtapoz
2 months ago

Juxtapoz Magazine - William E. Jones "It Only Looks As If It Hurts" @ The Modern Institute, Glasgow

Filmmaking halted during lockdown; the artist pivoted to fiction and later painting; No Product scratched 1960s 16mm commercials to obliterate commodity images.
fromwww.npr.org
3 months ago

Remembering the actors, musicians, writers and artists we lost in 2025

Counterculture auteur David Lynch He directed off-kilter cinematic classics in the 1980s and 1990s, including Blue Velvet, Wild at Heart and Mulholland Drive, and he co-created the groundbreaking TV series Twin Peaks. David Lynch's surreal, sinister vision, he said, came from a happy 1950s childhood in Boise, Idaho, that was punctuated by startling glimpses of violence. An eye-catching figure known for his messy pompadour, Lynch was also a longtime devotee of transcendental meditation. Read Kyle Norris' remembrance.
Arts
#rob-reiner
fromJezebel
3 months ago
Film

Larry David, Billy Crystal, Martin Short, Albert Brooks, More Pen Letter Remembering Rob Reiner

fromJezebel
3 months ago
Film

Larry David, Billy Crystal, Martin Short, Albert Brooks, More Pen Letter Remembering Rob Reiner

fromwww.theguardian.com
3 months ago

I lived out moments of my mother's passing I never saw': Kate Winslet on grief, going red and Goodbye June

I do have tremendous amounts of peace and acceptance around what happened because of how we were able to make it for her. Winslet's eldest son, Joe, was then 13. For him as a child, seeing that love poured into this moment was huge. And then he discovered through conversations with friends that that's so rarely the case. Six years later, in 2023, Joe decided to turn the experience into a screenplay.
Film
fromThe New Yorker
3 months ago

Chloe Zhao Has Looked Into the Void

Born in Beijing, in 1982, she wound up at New York University's film school, where she studied under Spike Lee. Starting in 2015, she directed three small-scale, slow-burn features set in the American heartland: "Songs My Brothers Taught Me," "The Rider," and "Nomadland." All three capture the expansive beauty of the West-in particular South Dakota, with its moonlike badlands and wide, grassy plains-while using local nonprofessional actors to achieve documentary-like naturalism.
Film
Film
fromThe New Yorker
4 months ago

How Noah Baumbach Fell (Back) in Love with the Movies

A filmmaker rekindled his love for movies through crafting precise dialogue, marital fight scenes, and a new film starring George Clooney.
from48 hills
4 months ago

Screen Grabs: A soft spot for 'Sentimental Value' - 48 hills

Though I haven't loved all their films, Norwegian director Joachim Trier and his writing collaborator Eskil Vogt remains among the hopes of the medium-an accomplished team whose work is intelligent, involving, thematically ambitious but very human in scale. Their latest Sentimental Value won the Grand Prix at Cannes, and it again largely revolves around Renate Reinsve, the star of their last effort The Worst Person in the World.
Film
fromItsnicethat
4 months ago

Annie Atkins, Charlotte Mei, A View, from a bridge: Tickets now available for December's Nicer Tuesdays!

At December's event, you can expect talks from Charlotte Mei, a London-based contemporary artist, painter and illustrator who has worked with Sony Music, Hermés, Panasonic and the New York Times, as well as having her work exhibited in London, Hong Kong, Berlin and New York. She'll be talking about the evolution of her work which has gone through considerable changes. We'll also be joined by the creator of A View,
Graphic design
Film
fromRoger Ebert
4 months ago

It's Epic to Live a Normal Life: Joel Edgerton and Clint Bentley on "Train Dreams" | Interviews | Roger Ebert

Train Dreams follows a logger's journey through loss and regeneration, showing how friendship, acceptance, and small joys enable renewal amid finitude and change.
Film
fromRoger Ebert
4 months ago

We Live in Time: Joachim Trier on "Sentimental Value" | Interviews | Roger Ebert

Sentimental Value portrays a family confronting inherited memories and trauma while examining time, love, identity, and the personal legacy of filmmaking.
Design
fromArchitectural Digest
4 months ago

In Fabiola Beracasa Beckman's Greenwich Village Town House, Art and Family Unite

Fabiola Beracasa Beckman blends theatrical classicism and modern minimalism in her Greenwich Village home, merging domestic life with creative design and filmmaking influences.
fromIndieWrap - Independent Film Magazine
4 months ago

Brian DeRozan Is Redefining Hollywood on His Own Terms - IndieWrap

From college football fields to the sets of Star Trek: Picard and independent film festivals around the globe, Brian DeRozan's career is anything but ordinary.
Film
Film
fromVulture
5 months ago

Guillermo del Toro Would 'Rather Die' Than Use AI

Guillermo del Toro refuses to use generative AI in his work, calling AI uninteresting and blaming natural stupidity for the world's worst features.
Social media marketing
fromThe Drum
5 months ago

TikTok is not social media. In fact, it marks the end of the social era

TikTok transforms social media into a democratized broadcast film channel, ending the era of social platforms centered on interpersonal sharing and identity signaling.
Film
fromIndieWire
5 months ago

Logic Found His Calling as a Filmmaker with 'Paradise Records' - and It Might Not Be Long Before He's a Studio Head

After major commercial music success, Logic is shifting focus to writing and directing films, with multiple scripts and a magnum opus ready.
fromIndieWire
5 months ago

This Film Residency Isn't Like All the Others

The right way to describe the project and our reasons behind it will reveal itself through process. Let's slow down. Let's open the windows. In the afternoon, the air from the windows is so soft and gentle. The crows are back, talking to the dog again, and the other birds are singing in the trees. They are all a part of this. The best way to write this would be
Film
fromKqed
5 months ago

A Celebration of Asian Pacific Film in Sunnyvale | KQED

"We made this in an academic space," Magbanua says. "To have it be screened and experienced in a space surrounded by professionals and people who are established, seasoned and esteemed, it's really surreal, because we were just making this in a classroom a couple months ago."
Film
Film
fromIndieWire
5 months ago

The Camera He Wasn't Allowed to Touch: First-Person Storytelling from a Grand Slam Winner of The Moth

A 31-year pursuit culminates in a life-defining career moment that forces a high-stakes choice between breakthrough success and personal loss.
Books
fromInsideHook
6 months ago

The 10 Books You Should Be Reading This October

Ten October 2025 books reveal how filmmaking, internet culture, culinary life, speculative futures, and criminal profiling work and influence society.
Bicycling
fromBikeMag
6 months ago

How One Rider Filmed the Most Inspiring MTB Footage

Self-shot mountain bike films showcase artistic vision, self-reliance, creativity, and the solitary beauty of remote mountain spaces.
fromThe New Yorker
6 months ago

Richard Linklater's Uncompromising Artists

In "Nouvelle Vague," a new film from the director Richard Linklater, an impassioned young movie critic expresses his belief in what cinema could be-and frets about what he himself may never be. It's 1959, and the critic is Jean-Luc Godard, a soon-to-be leader of the French New Wave, a nascent movement of journalists who are trading in their typewriters for film cameras, aiming to ignite a cinematic revolution. But Godard, unlike some of his comrades, has yet to direct his first picture.
Film
Film
fromSlate Magazine
6 months ago

The Movie of the Year Is Here

Long-developing film projects sometimes fail from being overworked, but after a filmmaker gains experience, resources, and collaborators, they can realize ambitious visions successfully.
fromNew York Daily News
6 months ago

In tragic irony, dad of filmmaker killed in Brooklyn car crash also died in car accident

In a sad case of tragic irony, a 34-year-old filmmaker struck and killed by a driver who blew a red light in Brooklyn last Sunday was the son of a famous Dominican documentarian - who was also killed in a car accident seven years ago.
US news
Film
fromFast Company
6 months ago

Silicon Valley wants its own Steven Spielberg, and it think it's found him

Jason Carman leveraged aerospace experience to make an effects-driven sci-fi short and founded Story Company to promote techno-optimism through branded and original films.
#francis-ford-coppola
#robert-redford
Film
fromFilmmaker Magazine
6 months ago

Ross McElwee on "Remake"

Remake is an understated, wrenching documentary in which a filmmaker's essayistic voice navigates grief, a proposed Hollywood remake, and the death of his son.
fromFilmmaker Magazine
6 months ago

Interview: Actor Tim Blake Nelson

Tim Blake Nelson is a celebrated actor, writer, and director. His nearly 100 screen credits include The Thin Red Line, Lincoln, The Ballad of Buster Scruggs, Watchmen, and O Brother, Where Art Thou? For his latest, the independent film Bang Bang, he plays an aging boxer whose glory days are long past. On this episode, he details how his process has changed by comparing the patience he has now to his approach for O Brother, Where Art Thou? where "fear inspired hubris" fueled him.
Film
Film
fromwww.theguardian.com
7 months ago

I turned down $20m to do Terminator 3. I can't be bought, dude': Ridley Scott on directing, Daleks and ... cherry jam

An 87-year-old filmmaker reflects on mortality and environmental crisis, recalls making Hovis adverts, and describes increased filmmaking efficiency and physical limits with age.
Film
fromBusiness Insider
7 months ago

I studied film in college because it was my passion. Once I graduated, I craved a simpler life, so I pursued a different career.

Studied filmmaking, loved it, but chose a slower life and different career that fit personal priorities and skills, without regret.
Bicycling
fromBikeMag
7 months ago

The Beauty of Failure: Why Mountain Biking Is All About Trial and Error

Embrace imperfection and persistent repetition; cumulative attempts yield beautifully imperfect results in mountain biking and action sports.
Film
fromwww.theguardian.com
7 months ago

Post your questions for Ridley Scott

Ridley Scott's directorial career spans 30 films, showcasing unorthodox casting choices and significant contributions to cinematic history.
Film
fromIndieWire
7 months ago

The Roger Corman School of Filmmaking Remembered: Martin Scorsese, Ron Howard, Robert De Niro, and More on the B-Movie King

Roger Corman's influence was pivotal in shaping 1970s film and mentoring a generation of filmmakers and actors.
Brooklyn
fromRNS
7 months ago

At 175, a Brooklyn church turns to film to preserve its legacy for a new generation

Berean Baptist Church in Brooklyn creates a documentary to preserve its 175-year legacy and inspire future generations.
Film
fromIndieWire
7 months ago

'Two Seasons, Two Strangers' Review: Sho Miyake Is One of Japan's Most Perceptive Modern Filmmakers

Sho Miyake creates soulful films focused on lonely characters overcoming personal struggles through quiet connections.
fromAdvocate.com
7 months ago

Meet the young L.A. activist fighting for LGBTQ+ and AAPI people's rights

"I've always really loved storytelling. When I discovered I was queer at a very young age, the YouTube film community was a huge kind of anchor for me, which inspired me to go more into film. But I also think just generally, I've always had a love of movies."
LGBT
#youth-empowerment
fromInverse
7 months ago

127 Years Later, The Worst Movie of 2025 Butchers a Sci-Fi Literary Classic

"War of the Worlds focuses on the computer screen of Homeland Security officer Will Radford as he monitors a huge network of surveillance videos to keep the country safe."
Film
Film
fromIndieWire
7 months ago

The Single Takes of 'Adolescence' Make It Impossible to Look Away

Adolescence explores the aftermath of a school murder through innovative storytelling and technical cinematography.
fromwww.theguardian.com
7 months ago

I feel 32, Leonardo DiCaprio says of turning 50

DiCaprio reflected on turning 50, noting that he feels like he's in his early 30s, emphasizing a desire to be honest and not waste time.
Film
Film
fromIndieWire
7 months ago

Martin Scorsese Joins Friends and Colleagues To Honor Jonathan Kaplan: 'He Was a Very Special Filmmaker'

Jonathan Kaplan, notable filmmaker, passed away at 77, deserving greater recognition for his work and influence.
Film
fromInverse
7 months ago

The Criterion Channel Just Quietly Added The Most Ambitious Tech Epic Of The Century

Caught By The Tides is an impressionistic film weaving together unused footage from 1999-2000, exploring romance and technological transformation in contemporary China.
Film
fromIndieWire
7 months ago

Making 'Pee-wee as Himself' Nearly Broke Director Matt Wolf

The documentary provides an honest portrayal of Paul Reubens, contrasting traditional celebrity documentaries controlled by estate narratives.
fromInverse
7 months ago

28 Years Later, 'The Batman Part II' Rumor Reveals The Big-Screen Return Of An Iconic Hero

Matt Reeves' final draft of The Batman Part II is a 'big swing' and he and co-writer Mattson Tomlin are 'really going for it.'
Film
fromEntrepreneur
7 months ago

Universal Issues Warning to AI Companies in Movie Credits | Entrepreneur

Universal Pictures has embedded a warning in the end credits of 'How to Train Your Dragon' stating that the film may not be used for AI training.
Film
Film
fromwww.dw.com
7 months ago

Wim Wenders: Cinema and the 'art of getting lost' DW 08/07/2025

For Wim Wenders, getting lost is a blissful experience that leads to deeper insights.
fromRoger Ebert
8 months ago

The Unloved, Part 139: "Wild Card" | Features | Roger Ebert

Simon West's work often presents a mix of compromised studio projects with a grotesque and visually appealing style, emphasizing what he can 'get away with'.
Film
fromIndieWire
7 months ago

Demons Hate Her! 21-Year-Old Alice Maio Mackay Just Made Six Feature Films in Four Years

Maio Mackay's latest is a demonic lesbian love story that's inspired by the hazy pop-horniness of 'The L Word' and her favorite episodes of 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer.'
Film
fromAeon
7 months ago

What does it mean to say goodbye to a creature that doesn't know you're leaving? | Aeon Videos

In immigration limbo, she found herself bonding with her brother's dog, a German Shepherd named Turbo. Santos's autobiographical short documentary, A Film Is a Goodbye That Never Ends, lingers on the quiet gestures that characterise her relationship with Turbo—walks, snuggles, and relentless companionship.
Philosophy
Film
fromKotaku
8 months ago

10 Films To Watch After Playing Death Stranding 2

Hideo Kojima integrates notable filmmakers into his games, reflecting his deep passion for cinema and unique narrative vision.
Film
fromThe Verge
8 months ago

Superman's Fortress of Solitude is a Silver Age man cave inspired by nature's beauty

The new Superman movie emphasizes his connection to Krypton without rehashing his origin story, showcasing the Fortress of Solitude as a central element.
Film
fromThe New Yorker
8 months ago

"Clint" Highlights the Artistic Modernity of an Old-School Man

Clint Eastwood's biography reveals connections between his filmmaking methods and his worldview.
fromIndieWire
8 months ago

A Filmmaking Collective Can Create Sustainable Careers, but Is It Right for You?

"I actually have a lot of hope in American cinema," said "Christmas Eve in Miller's Point" director and Omnes founding member Tyler Taormina.
Film
Film
fromwww.theguardian.com
8 months ago

I went vegan on the second day of filming': James Cromwell on making Babe, the talking pig classic

Chris Noonan fought for a casting change for Babe, resulting in an American actor portraying a British character despite studio pressure.
Arts
fromwww.npr.org
8 months ago

'Sorry, Baby' is a wry, affecting take on trauma

Sorry, Baby is a film that combines humor and vulnerability to tackle the trauma of sexual assault.
Film
fromPolygon
8 months ago

How to Train Your Dragon star says no one has noticed his most difficult stunt

Mason Thames performed as Hiccup in How to Train Your Dragon remake by pretending to be left-handed, despite being naturally right-handed.
fromDefector
8 months ago

In Bill Paxton's 'Frailty,' Certainty Is The Scariest Thing There Is | Defector

"I've always wanted to be a filmmaker first and an actor second," Paxton said in that Texas Monthly profile, the (delightful) headline of which is Bill, Due.
Film
fromwww.theguardian.com
8 months ago

Rosanna Arquette: You pay the price for being outspoken'

During long night shoots, a sense of giddiness emerges around 4am, making the experience memorable. Celebrating the 40-year anniversary of such projects is special.
Film
fromIndependent
8 months ago

This Working Life: 'It would be good to have more rights to start my own business in the media'

After working as a bartender for six years and an accountant for ten, I aim to shift my career towards a passion for film and media production.
Podcast
fromThe New Yorker
8 months ago

A New Agnes Varda Exhibition Is an Extension of Her Life's Work

Agnès Varda is a filmmaker whose art and life were inseparable, creating movies that reflect her transformative energy. Her achievements are celebrated in an exhibition at the Musée Carnavalet.
Film
Running
fromiRunFar
8 months ago

Matt Trappe and the Art of Running

Matt Trappe combines running and filmmaking to critique ultrarunning marketing and showcase its passion.
fromBusiness Insider
8 months ago

My parents think of Vietnam as the country they escaped. I see it as the place I want to live.

I was born in a small town in the Mekong Delta in 1986. My parents left Vietnam through the Humanitarian Operation program, which helped former re-education camp detainees immigrate to the US.
LGBT
[ Load more ]