Rosario Garcia-Montero who has studied film in Lima, NYC and in San Antonio de los Baños garnered numerous awards and nominations for 'Las Malas Intenciones' (Bad Intentions), her first feature length film which premiered at Berlin back in February and was chosen by Peru as their official entry for Best Foreign Film to The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts & Sciences. In 'Las Malas Intenciones', a beautifully dark and amusing film, 9 year old Cayetana, played precociously by Fatima Buntinx, finds solace in martyred heroes from Peru's bloody past during the turbulent 80's when guerrilla attacks were an ever present threat. Rosario, in her own words, considers herself the “slowest blossoming new face of independent film”but with a debut as memorable enough for me to think it was truly one of the best films of 2012, she's right on time.
LatinoBuzz: It seems that some Latin American filmmakers are exorcising their countries demons through their work and art – would you say that was true when making 'Las Malas Intenciones'?
Rosario Garcia-Montero:When making the bad intentions. I definitely exorcised 5 or 6 demons, 30 smaller demons a few children phobias, but also I exorcised my country collective demons and some of the upper classes.
To give a small example, I even fixed some of Peru’s needs for some triumphs. I made Peru beat Brazil 6-0 in soccer! But I've also too exorcised demons and the collective trauma of certain social classes.
LatinoBuzz:Your lead character, Cayetana has all the markings of a classic coming of age character. If she had to form a circle of misfit friends made up of characters from other coming of age films, who would they be?
Rosario Garcia-Montero: 'Let The Right One In' –vampire girl. 'Spirit of the Beehive', Ana & her Frankenstein friend. The Romanian girl from the film 'The Fall'. The arrogant 'Rushmore' boy and the girl burning her dead animals in Rene Clement's 'Jeux Interdits'. And most of the characters in my short films like the Indian mortician from 'Are You Feeling Lonely?' All of these characters would keep Cayetana company, because what do they have in common? They all have in common this sense of not fitting in.
LatinoBuzz: 'Las Malas Intenciones' is your first feature film – what kind of feeling was it to have your whole country supporting you and pushing you to be only the 2nd foreign film nomination from Peru?
Rosario Garcia-Montero: In Peru we're always torn between sentiments, but nevertheless, these types of events are what unite and raise the esteem of a country. This kind of news generated great expectations in the entire population and mobilized and united different sectors who generally are very antagonistic towards each other.
LatinoBuzz: How was your experience in raising money for the film?
Rosario Garcia-Montero:It's an experience that begins and never ends. To make films in Peru was and is heroic.
LatinoBuzz: Where do you see Peruvian cinema in 5 years time? And what do you see your role in it?
Rosario Garcia-Montero: In the 90s some years maybe 1 or 2 films were made. That was our reality. After that a new generation began. Now I think we have more than 20 films a year, so that is real progress. I see myself in that next wave.
LatinoBuzz: The film has a great sequence in which Cayetana shows her admiration for Historical Peruvian figures such as Tupac Amaru, Jose Oyala & Miguel Grau. Who have been your own personal heroes in life?
Rosario Garcia-Montero: Cayetana has admiration for people who have left a mark on the collective Peruvian imagination. But personally, Cassavetes, Buñuel and my personal hero and to whom I dedicated this film is Maria Jimena Pinilla, my big sister.
LatinoBuzz: Who do you think Cayetana grows up to be?
Rosario Garcia-Montero: She might become an archeologist or digging graveyards. Or ghost hunter trying to communicate with the dead heroes. But there is always a chance that she becomes a filmmaker.
Once I asked my little actress Fatima Buntinx–during the shoot what she wanted to be when she grow up and she said: “I want to be a mother”
LatinoBuzz: Usually the process of a writer is a lonely one. How did you feel once you started shooting 'Las malas....' and all of a sudden you had to share these characters with the world and they now no longer belonged just to you?
Rosario Garcia-Montero: It's shocking to be 5 years writing a script and then suddenly a 1st Ad begins to chop up your film in scenes, sequences, inserts - the film shoot looked more like a brick factory factory and you worry about the creative process. At the end in the editing and sound process the film recovered its beauty. So now I learned that you have to faith that things at the end will work out. It's an interesting lesson in learning to trust others.
LatinoBuzz: What made you believe that you could, against any odds, become a filmmaker?
Rosario Garcia-Montero:I always said, only when I finish my first feature film that I will be able to write down on the immigration information papers that you fill out on the planes: ”Occupation: Filmmaker”. Before I would write “Occupation: Parasite”. So it’s a matter of perseverance, the parasite which transforms elegantly into filmmaker.
LatinoBuzz: I loved that you used an Afro-Peruvian character, which is seldom seen in South American films. Did you write the character with that description?
Rosario Garcia-Montero: Im glad you ask about him. I love Melchor Gorrochategui (who plays Isaac). He was one of the most amazing casting “accidents”. In Peru when you are trying to cast Afro-Peruvian actors, there is very few. So I began looking for real characters in the street. The first casting call I did, all the non actors came to my casting they felt intimidated by the lights and cameras and literally escaped. So I found a new casting person that would go to their homes and have tiny camera. Melchor had never acted and he had never driven a car, so sometimes instead of rehearsing we would make him learn how to drive. Yes, it is true that in a certain high class in Lima, employees were black. So Issac in a way speaks of this Lima, disappearing with him. An old Lima. Finally, he is being replaced by a bodyguard who tells us that everything has changed and not necessarily for the better. Issac is a melancholy character. He's like a flame that extinguishes but one of the few that connects with Cayetana.
LatinoBuzz: Was there a particular film or filmmaker that inspired the aesthetic of 'Las Malas...'
Rosario Garcia-Montero: 'The Return', a film from Russia that I watched with my cinematographer. The way they use the color desaturation. Cassavetes' 'Faces', for the rawest acting. Buñuel – 'The Exterminating Angel', one of the most inspiring films. Fellini's 'Notti Di Cabiria', greatest character study. And 'Jeux Interdits' - darkest film from the 50's. A sleeper.
Written by Juan Caceres and Vanessa Erazo, LatinoBuzz is a weekly feature on SydneysBuzz that highlights Latino indie talent and upcoming trends in Latino film with the specific objective of presenting a broad range of Latino voices. Follow @LatinoBuzz on twitter.
LatinoBuzz: It seems that some Latin American filmmakers are exorcising their countries demons through their work and art – would you say that was true when making 'Las Malas Intenciones'?
Rosario Garcia-Montero:When making the bad intentions. I definitely exorcised 5 or 6 demons, 30 smaller demons a few children phobias, but also I exorcised my country collective demons and some of the upper classes.
To give a small example, I even fixed some of Peru’s needs for some triumphs. I made Peru beat Brazil 6-0 in soccer! But I've also too exorcised demons and the collective trauma of certain social classes.
LatinoBuzz:Your lead character, Cayetana has all the markings of a classic coming of age character. If she had to form a circle of misfit friends made up of characters from other coming of age films, who would they be?
Rosario Garcia-Montero: 'Let The Right One In' –vampire girl. 'Spirit of the Beehive', Ana & her Frankenstein friend. The Romanian girl from the film 'The Fall'. The arrogant 'Rushmore' boy and the girl burning her dead animals in Rene Clement's 'Jeux Interdits'. And most of the characters in my short films like the Indian mortician from 'Are You Feeling Lonely?' All of these characters would keep Cayetana company, because what do they have in common? They all have in common this sense of not fitting in.
LatinoBuzz: 'Las Malas Intenciones' is your first feature film – what kind of feeling was it to have your whole country supporting you and pushing you to be only the 2nd foreign film nomination from Peru?
Rosario Garcia-Montero: In Peru we're always torn between sentiments, but nevertheless, these types of events are what unite and raise the esteem of a country. This kind of news generated great expectations in the entire population and mobilized and united different sectors who generally are very antagonistic towards each other.
LatinoBuzz: How was your experience in raising money for the film?
Rosario Garcia-Montero:It's an experience that begins and never ends. To make films in Peru was and is heroic.
LatinoBuzz: Where do you see Peruvian cinema in 5 years time? And what do you see your role in it?
Rosario Garcia-Montero: In the 90s some years maybe 1 or 2 films were made. That was our reality. After that a new generation began. Now I think we have more than 20 films a year, so that is real progress. I see myself in that next wave.
LatinoBuzz: The film has a great sequence in which Cayetana shows her admiration for Historical Peruvian figures such as Tupac Amaru, Jose Oyala & Miguel Grau. Who have been your own personal heroes in life?
Rosario Garcia-Montero: Cayetana has admiration for people who have left a mark on the collective Peruvian imagination. But personally, Cassavetes, Buñuel and my personal hero and to whom I dedicated this film is Maria Jimena Pinilla, my big sister.
LatinoBuzz: Who do you think Cayetana grows up to be?
Rosario Garcia-Montero: She might become an archeologist or digging graveyards. Or ghost hunter trying to communicate with the dead heroes. But there is always a chance that she becomes a filmmaker.
Once I asked my little actress Fatima Buntinx–during the shoot what she wanted to be when she grow up and she said: “I want to be a mother”
LatinoBuzz: Usually the process of a writer is a lonely one. How did you feel once you started shooting 'Las malas....' and all of a sudden you had to share these characters with the world and they now no longer belonged just to you?
Rosario Garcia-Montero: It's shocking to be 5 years writing a script and then suddenly a 1st Ad begins to chop up your film in scenes, sequences, inserts - the film shoot looked more like a brick factory factory and you worry about the creative process. At the end in the editing and sound process the film recovered its beauty. So now I learned that you have to faith that things at the end will work out. It's an interesting lesson in learning to trust others.
LatinoBuzz: What made you believe that you could, against any odds, become a filmmaker?
Rosario Garcia-Montero:I always said, only when I finish my first feature film that I will be able to write down on the immigration information papers that you fill out on the planes: ”Occupation: Filmmaker”. Before I would write “Occupation: Parasite”. So it’s a matter of perseverance, the parasite which transforms elegantly into filmmaker.
LatinoBuzz: I loved that you used an Afro-Peruvian character, which is seldom seen in South American films. Did you write the character with that description?
Rosario Garcia-Montero: Im glad you ask about him. I love Melchor Gorrochategui (who plays Isaac). He was one of the most amazing casting “accidents”. In Peru when you are trying to cast Afro-Peruvian actors, there is very few. So I began looking for real characters in the street. The first casting call I did, all the non actors came to my casting they felt intimidated by the lights and cameras and literally escaped. So I found a new casting person that would go to their homes and have tiny camera. Melchor had never acted and he had never driven a car, so sometimes instead of rehearsing we would make him learn how to drive. Yes, it is true that in a certain high class in Lima, employees were black. So Issac in a way speaks of this Lima, disappearing with him. An old Lima. Finally, he is being replaced by a bodyguard who tells us that everything has changed and not necessarily for the better. Issac is a melancholy character. He's like a flame that extinguishes but one of the few that connects with Cayetana.
LatinoBuzz: Was there a particular film or filmmaker that inspired the aesthetic of 'Las Malas...'
Rosario Garcia-Montero: 'The Return', a film from Russia that I watched with my cinematographer. The way they use the color desaturation. Cassavetes' 'Faces', for the rawest acting. Buñuel – 'The Exterminating Angel', one of the most inspiring films. Fellini's 'Notti Di Cabiria', greatest character study. And 'Jeux Interdits' - darkest film from the 50's. A sleeper.
Written by Juan Caceres and Vanessa Erazo, LatinoBuzz is a weekly feature on SydneysBuzz that highlights Latino indie talent and upcoming trends in Latino film with the specific objective of presenting a broad range of Latino voices. Follow @LatinoBuzz on twitter.
- 12/26/2012
- by Juan Caceres
- Sydney's Buzz
Update: The official list has been revealed and the total is a record 71 movies. I have updated the list directly below or you can check it out here. The original article follows. I have been tracking the Oscar Foreign Language submissions again this year, as I have for the past several years, and it looks like we finally have a full field as I expect we will be seeing an official press release from the Academy some time this week. This year we have five more submissions already over last year as the total has now reached 68 submissions compared to last year's 63. This, despite, Iran boycotting the Oscars this year due to the anti-Islam film Innocence of Muslims, which has sparked so much controversy as of late. To reach the total of 68 films I have just finished adding 16 more titles to the list from the following countries: Afghanistan, Algeria, Argentina,...
- 10/7/2012
- by Brad Brevet
- Rope of Silicon
I have been tracking the Oscar Foreign Language submissions again this year, as I have for the past several years, and it looks like we finally have a full field as I expect we will be seeing an official press release from the Academy some time this week. This year we have five more submissions already over last year as the total has now reached 68 submissions compared to last year's 63. This, despite, Iran boycotting the Oscars this year due to the anti-Islam film Innocence of Muslims, which has sparked so much controversy as of late. To reach the total of 68 films I have just finished adding 16 more titles to the list from the following countries: Afghanistan, Algeria, Argentina, Armenia, China, Georgia, Greenland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Peru, South Africa, Spain, Taiwan, Turkey and Uruguay. To siphon out front-runners is never easy in this category, though there are a few that stick out immediately.
- 10/7/2012
- by Brad Brevet
- Rope of Silicon
Indian Oscar entry Anurag Basu’s “Barfi” will have to compete with 64 films from around the world. Barfi’s chance will be sealed on January 24th 2013 when the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences will announce the five nominees.
The deadline for submission of entries for the foreign language category got over yesterday on October 1st.
63 countries had sent their entries for the category last year.
Iran, the winner of last year (A separation) decided not to send an entry this year in protest of a youtube film that ridiculed the prophet.
The final list of submissions is yet to be announced by the academy.
Also Read: Who Selected “Barfi” for Oscars? and Where does “Barfi” stand in the Oscar race?
Here is the complete list of announced submissions:-
Afghanistan – The Patience Stone, directed by Atiq Rahimi (Persian) Albania – Pharmakon, directed by Joni Shanaj (Albania) Algeria – Zabana!, directed by Saïd Ould Khelifa (Arabic,...
The deadline for submission of entries for the foreign language category got over yesterday on October 1st.
63 countries had sent their entries for the category last year.
Iran, the winner of last year (A separation) decided not to send an entry this year in protest of a youtube film that ridiculed the prophet.
The final list of submissions is yet to be announced by the academy.
Also Read: Who Selected “Barfi” for Oscars? and Where does “Barfi” stand in the Oscar race?
Here is the complete list of announced submissions:-
Afghanistan – The Patience Stone, directed by Atiq Rahimi (Persian) Albania – Pharmakon, directed by Joni Shanaj (Albania) Algeria – Zabana!, directed by Saïd Ould Khelifa (Arabic,...
- 10/2/2012
- by NewsDesk
- DearCinema.com
You think it’s too early for this? Trust me, it’s not and that’s exactly why we’re here today to start our little chat about the official foreign language submissions for Oscar.
Nothing to be surprised about, after all – these titles are already familiar to you, mostly because of their success in some Film Festivals. Check out the rest of this report to see the list of announced submissions.
As you’re about to see, quite interesting list of movies from all over the world. Unfortunately we don’t have trailers and official synopsis part for every single film, but I’m sure we’ll soon have more material to share with you.
In the mean time, we will inform you that Kim Ki-duk‘s movie, Pieta, which won Golden Lion statue for best movie at the Venice Film Festival this year, has been submitted by South...
Nothing to be surprised about, after all – these titles are already familiar to you, mostly because of their success in some Film Festivals. Check out the rest of this report to see the list of announced submissions.
As you’re about to see, quite interesting list of movies from all over the world. Unfortunately we don’t have trailers and official synopsis part for every single film, but I’m sure we’ll soon have more material to share with you.
In the mean time, we will inform you that Kim Ki-duk‘s movie, Pieta, which won Golden Lion statue for best movie at the Venice Film Festival this year, has been submitted by South...
- 10/1/2012
- by Fiona
- Filmofilia
Updated through 6/27.
This year's Los Angeles Film Festival, running through June 26, opens tonight with the latest from Richard Linklater, and Steven Zeitchik talks with him for the Los Angeles Times: "'It was my most difficult one to get made,' he said flatly. 'It took 12 years to happen, and even then it was tough. People can say shooting in 22 days makes a movie better. It doesn't.' … Bernie is a shaggy, idiosyncratic work, possibly the strangest yet in a career full of strangeness. Set in the small town of Carthage, Texas, it tells of an effeminate, musical-loving mortician named Bernie Tiede [Jack Black] who befriends and then commits a horrible crime against a repressed wealthy matriarch [Shirley MacLaine], leaving him to face the wrath of a local prosecutor [Matthew McConaughey]. The movie is a dramatization of an actual case — the script was based on a 1998 Texas Monthly article about Tiede, and Linklater, who attended Tiede's trial,...
This year's Los Angeles Film Festival, running through June 26, opens tonight with the latest from Richard Linklater, and Steven Zeitchik talks with him for the Los Angeles Times: "'It was my most difficult one to get made,' he said flatly. 'It took 12 years to happen, and even then it was tough. People can say shooting in 22 days makes a movie better. It doesn't.' … Bernie is a shaggy, idiosyncratic work, possibly the strangest yet in a career full of strangeness. Set in the small town of Carthage, Texas, it tells of an effeminate, musical-loving mortician named Bernie Tiede [Jack Black] who befriends and then commits a horrible crime against a repressed wealthy matriarch [Shirley MacLaine], leaving him to face the wrath of a local prosecutor [Matthew McConaughey]. The movie is a dramatization of an actual case — the script was based on a 1998 Texas Monthly article about Tiede, and Linklater, who attended Tiede's trial,...
- 6/27/2011
- MUBI
'The Fatherless' Is Well-Shot And Competent, But Little More Announcing a great new voice in the world of cinema, Rosario Garcia-Montero's "The Bad Intentions" is a brilliant coming-of-age story that's funny, subtle, touching, and one of the best films of the year. Growing up in a bourgeois house in 1981 Lima, 8 year old Cayetana de la Heros spends a lot of time with herself. She is perhaps the most morose little girl seen on screen in a long time, idolizing Peruvian independence heroes from the past, focusing in particular on how they met their end. She finds out that…...
- 6/20/2011
- The Playlist
The Los Angeles Film Festival has announced the world premiere of Richard Linklater's Bernie as the opening night film for the 2011 festival.
The film will kick off the festival on June 16 at Regal Cinemas Stadium 14 at L.A. Live. It is written by Skip Hollandsworth and director Linklater and stars Jack Black, Shirley MacLaine, and Matthew McConaughey.
The film follows a beloved mortician (Black) from a small Texas town, even winning over the town's richest, meanest widow (MacLaine). Even after Bernie commits a horrible crime, people still will not utter a bad word against him.
"We're thrilled to be opening the Festival with the world premiere of this delicious black comedy - a treat from one of the most original and exciting voices in independent film, Richard Linklater," said Festival director Rebecca Yeldham. "With its fabulous all-star cast, Bernie is a perfect stage setter for the incredible line-up of...
The film will kick off the festival on June 16 at Regal Cinemas Stadium 14 at L.A. Live. It is written by Skip Hollandsworth and director Linklater and stars Jack Black, Shirley MacLaine, and Matthew McConaughey.
The film follows a beloved mortician (Black) from a small Texas town, even winning over the town's richest, meanest widow (MacLaine). Even after Bernie commits a horrible crime, people still will not utter a bad word against him.
"We're thrilled to be opening the Festival with the world premiere of this delicious black comedy - a treat from one of the most original and exciting voices in independent film, Richard Linklater," said Festival director Rebecca Yeldham. "With its fabulous all-star cast, Bernie is a perfect stage setter for the incredible line-up of...
- 5/30/2011
- by alyssa@mediavine.com (Alyssa Caverley)
- Reel Movie News
Holding court downtown from June 16-26, 2011, the Los Angeles Film Festival comprehensively curates the cinematic landscape across a variety of media. Produced by Film Independent, the festival has continued to grow in recent years, and now boasts many of the best independent films of the year.
With the departure of the organization’s CEO, Dawn Hudson, to run the Academy, it will be interesting to see whether the festival’s director Rebecca Yeldham will stay on board past 2011. In the meantime, they’ve announced their line-up for the 2011 festival, and it includes some much buzzed about Sundance and SxSW titles (“Project Nim,” “The Future,” “Crime After Crime,” “The Salesman,” “Terri,” “Another Earth,” “The Guard,” “Natural Selection,” “Tyrannosaur,” “Where Soldiers Come From” and “Higher Ground,” to name a few), as well as 27 world, North American and U.S. premieres.
For the official list of competition and other films, as well as...
With the departure of the organization’s CEO, Dawn Hudson, to run the Academy, it will be interesting to see whether the festival’s director Rebecca Yeldham will stay on board past 2011. In the meantime, they’ve announced their line-up for the 2011 festival, and it includes some much buzzed about Sundance and SxSW titles (“Project Nim,” “The Future,” “Crime After Crime,” “The Salesman,” “Terri,” “Another Earth,” “The Guard,” “Natural Selection,” “Tyrannosaur,” “Where Soldiers Come From” and “Higher Ground,” to name a few), as well as 27 world, North American and U.S. premieres.
For the official list of competition and other films, as well as...
- 5/3/2011
- by admin
- Moving Pictures Magazine
Holding court downtown from June 16-26, 2011, the Los Angeles Film Festival comprehensively curates the cinematic landscape across a variety of media. Produced by Film Independent, the festival has continued to grow in recent years, and now boasts many of the best independent films of the year.
With the departure of the organization’s CEO, Dawn Hudson, to run the Academy, it will be interesting to see whether the festival’s director Rebecca Yeldham will stay on board past 2011. In the meantime, they’ve announced their line-up for the 2011 festival, and it includes some much buzzed about Sundance and SxSW titles (“Project Nim,” “The Future,” “Crime After Crime,” “The Salesman,” “Terri,” “Another Earth,” “The Guard,” “Natural Selection,” “Tyrannosaur,” “Where Soldiers Come From” and “Higher Ground,” to name a few), as well as 27 world, North American and U.S. premieres.
For the official list of competition and other films, as well as...
With the departure of the organization’s CEO, Dawn Hudson, to run the Academy, it will be interesting to see whether the festival’s director Rebecca Yeldham will stay on board past 2011. In the meantime, they’ve announced their line-up for the 2011 festival, and it includes some much buzzed about Sundance and SxSW titles (“Project Nim,” “The Future,” “Crime After Crime,” “The Salesman,” “Terri,” “Another Earth,” “The Guard,” “Natural Selection,” “Tyrannosaur,” “Where Soldiers Come From” and “Higher Ground,” to name a few), as well as 27 world, North American and U.S. premieres.
For the official list of competition and other films, as well as...
- 5/3/2011
- by admin
- Moving Pictures Network
Film Independent Announces First Round Of Us & International
Film Selections For 2011 Los Angeles Film Festival,
Presented By The Los Angeles Times - 19 Films Chosen for Narrative & Documentary Competition - - International Spotlight to Focus on Cuba -
Los Angeles (May 3, 2011) . Today the Los Angeles Film Festival, presented by the Los Angeles Times, announced the first round of official Us and international selections. The 2011 Los Angeles Film Festival is produced by Film Independent . the non-profit arts organization that also produces the Spirit Awards . and will screen over 200 feature films, shorts, and music videos, representing more than 30 countries. Opening and Closing Night films, Galas, Conversations, Artists in Residence, Lafca.s Films That Got Away, along with additional special guests and programming for the Festival Talks will be announced at later dates.
Returning to downtown Los Angeles, with its central hub at L.A. Live, the Festival will run from Thursday, June 16 to Sunday,...
Film Selections For 2011 Los Angeles Film Festival,
Presented By The Los Angeles Times - 19 Films Chosen for Narrative & Documentary Competition - - International Spotlight to Focus on Cuba -
Los Angeles (May 3, 2011) . Today the Los Angeles Film Festival, presented by the Los Angeles Times, announced the first round of official Us and international selections. The 2011 Los Angeles Film Festival is produced by Film Independent . the non-profit arts organization that also produces the Spirit Awards . and will screen over 200 feature films, shorts, and music videos, representing more than 30 countries. Opening and Closing Night films, Galas, Conversations, Artists in Residence, Lafca.s Films That Got Away, along with additional special guests and programming for the Festival Talks will be announced at later dates.
Returning to downtown Los Angeles, with its central hub at L.A. Live, the Festival will run from Thursday, June 16 to Sunday,...
- 5/3/2011
- by Michelle McCue
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Trailers are an under-appreciated art form insofar that many times they’re seen as vehicles for showing footage, explaining films away, or showing their hand about what moviegoers can expect. Foreign, domestic, independent, big budget: I celebrate all levels of trailers and hopefully this column will satisfactorily give you a baseline of what beta wave I’m operating on, because what better way to hone your skills as a thoughtful moviegoer than by deconstructing these little pieces of advertising? Some of the best authors will tell you that writing a short story is a lot harder than writing a long one, that you have to weigh every sentence. What better medium to see how this theory plays itself out beyond that than with movie trailers? PressPausePlayTrailer If there are creative nerds out there, and I know there are dozens of you who are more adept than I with knowing how...
- 4/9/2011
- by Christopher Stipp
- Slash Film
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