The Oscar race isn’t over until the last movie screens, and this year one of the final contenders to be unveiled will be “Phantom Thread.” The drama marks the hugely anticipated reunion between Paul Thomas Anderson and Daniel Day-Lewis, who last worked together a decade ago on “There Will Be Blood.” The Upton Sinclair-inspired drama earned eight Oscar nominations, including Best Picture and Best Director, and gave Day-Lewis his second trophy for Best Actor (he’d make history and win a third for “Lincoln” five years later), so anyone would be foolish to underestimate just how big “Phantom Thread” will be this awards season.
Focus Features has been keeping a majority of the details surrounding the movie under lock and key, although the official trailer was finally released on October 23, teasing a gorgeously shot drama about the romantic obsessions of a self-destructive artist. “Phantom Thread” seems to operating...
Focus Features has been keeping a majority of the details surrounding the movie under lock and key, although the official trailer was finally released on October 23, teasing a gorgeously shot drama about the romantic obsessions of a self-destructive artist. “Phantom Thread” seems to operating...
- 10/24/2017
- by Zack Sharf
- Indiewire
Wong Kar Wai, Artistic Director of China: Through the Looking Glass says in Andrew Rossi's grand The First Monday in May: "The only way to move forward is not forgetting your past." Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
Patti Smith, Francis Ford Coppola, Tom Hanks, Tina Fey and Idina Menzel will be in conversation with Ethan Hawke, Jay McInerney, John Oliver, Damian Holbrook and Marc Platt respectively, in the inaugural Tribeca Talks: Storytellers at this year's Tribeca Film Festival.
Opium perfume bottle drawings by Yves Saint Laurent in China: Through the Looking Glass Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
The First Monday In May, Andrew Rossi's insightful look at the exhibition and gala for The Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute China: Through the Looking Glass, features Andrew Bolton, Anna Wintour, Baz Luhrmann, André Leon Talley, Harold Koda, Karl Lagerfeld, Jean Paul Gaultier, John Galliano, Riccardo Tisci, Guo Pei, Thomas Campbell, Maxwell K.
Patti Smith, Francis Ford Coppola, Tom Hanks, Tina Fey and Idina Menzel will be in conversation with Ethan Hawke, Jay McInerney, John Oliver, Damian Holbrook and Marc Platt respectively, in the inaugural Tribeca Talks: Storytellers at this year's Tribeca Film Festival.
Opium perfume bottle drawings by Yves Saint Laurent in China: Through the Looking Glass Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
The First Monday In May, Andrew Rossi's insightful look at the exhibition and gala for The Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute China: Through the Looking Glass, features Andrew Bolton, Anna Wintour, Baz Luhrmann, André Leon Talley, Harold Koda, Karl Lagerfeld, Jean Paul Gaultier, John Galliano, Riccardo Tisci, Guo Pei, Thomas Campbell, Maxwell K.
- 4/8/2016
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Chicago – In the latest HollywoodChicago.com Hookup: Film, we have 50 pairs of advance-screening movie passes up for grabs to the new documentary “Iris” on fashion icon Iris Apfel from legendary documentary filmmaker Albert Maysles (“Gimme Shelter,” “Grey Gardens”)!
“Iris,” which opens in Chicago on May 15, 2015 and is rated “PG-13,” also stars Carl Apfel, Billy Apfel, Alexis Bittar, Mickey Boardman, Linda Fargo, Tavi Gevinson, David Hoey, Naeem Khan, Harold Koda, Jenna Lyons, Duro Olowu and Margaret Russell from director Albert Maysles.
To win your free “Iris” passes courtesy of HollywoodChicago.com, just get interactive with our social media widget below. That’s it! This screening is on Monday, May 4, 2015 at 7 p.m. in Chicago. The more social actions you complete, the more points you score and the higher yours odds of winning! Completing these social actions only increases your odds of winning; this doesn’t intensify your competition!
Preferably, use your...
“Iris,” which opens in Chicago on May 15, 2015 and is rated “PG-13,” also stars Carl Apfel, Billy Apfel, Alexis Bittar, Mickey Boardman, Linda Fargo, Tavi Gevinson, David Hoey, Naeem Khan, Harold Koda, Jenna Lyons, Duro Olowu and Margaret Russell from director Albert Maysles.
To win your free “Iris” passes courtesy of HollywoodChicago.com, just get interactive with our social media widget below. That’s it! This screening is on Monday, May 4, 2015 at 7 p.m. in Chicago. The more social actions you complete, the more points you score and the higher yours odds of winning! Completing these social actions only increases your odds of winning; this doesn’t intensify your competition!
Preferably, use your...
- 5/2/2015
- by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
- HollywoodChicago.com
The stars went retro glam to honor 20th century designer Charles James at tonights’s Costume Institute Gala in New York City. Celebs like Rihanna, Selena Gomez, Kim Kardashian, Beyoncé and Kendall Jenner all paid tribute to “America’s First Couturier” at fashion’s biggest night out. Harold Koda, curator in charge of the Costume Institute, describes James’ aesthetic as...Read more»...
- 5/6/2014
- by Barbara DeFranco
- Celebuzz.com
A new documentary celebrates the charismatic fashion editor who once high-kicked with the Tiller Girls and sold underwear to Wallis Simpson. Find out more with our quick catchup guide
With a documentary, Diana Vreeland: The Eye Has to Travel, in cinemas this week, the former American Vogue and Harper's Bazaar editor – all rouged cheeks, supersized earrings and fashion bon mots – is about to be discovered by a whole new generation. For a cheat sheet, here's five things you need to know about her now.
She loved flaws
Vreeland wasn't into a rarefied untouchable beauty – she wanted to celebrate what made people unique. Barbra Streisand's nose was seen up close and personal on American Vogue, Penelope Tree's alien-like look was championed, so was Twiggy's skinny frame. From John Lennon to Jackie Kennedy, she wanted personality. Her motto could have been "it takes all sorts".
It wasn't just about the magazines...
With a documentary, Diana Vreeland: The Eye Has to Travel, in cinemas this week, the former American Vogue and Harper's Bazaar editor – all rouged cheeks, supersized earrings and fashion bon mots – is about to be discovered by a whole new generation. For a cheat sheet, here's five things you need to know about her now.
She loved flaws
Vreeland wasn't into a rarefied untouchable beauty – she wanted to celebrate what made people unique. Barbra Streisand's nose was seen up close and personal on American Vogue, Penelope Tree's alien-like look was championed, so was Twiggy's skinny frame. From John Lennon to Jackie Kennedy, she wanted personality. Her motto could have been "it takes all sorts".
It wasn't just about the magazines...
- 9/21/2012
- by Lauren Cochrane
- The Guardian - Film News
Reviewed by Elliot V. Kotek
(from the 2011 Palm Springs International Film Festival)
Directed by: Richard Press
Starring: Bill Cunningham, Patrick McDonald, Anna Wintour, Iris Apfel, John Kurdewan, Carmen Dell’Orefice, Annette De la Renta, Howard Koda, Tom Wolfe, Kenny Kenny, Anna Piaggi, Editta Sherman
“Bill Cunningham New York” is both a tribute to a somewhat lost artistic past, when artists lived in affordable studios above Carnegie Hall and celebrated daily life with the likes of Editta Sherman, Leonard Bernstein, Marlon Brando and Andy Warhol, and a celebration of the present life of Bill Cunningham, longtime fashion and social-scene photographer for The New York Times, where his “Evening Hours” and “On the Street” columns have captured the lives and styles of New York’s finest and most trendsetting for what seems like forever (well, since the ’60s).
A young, working-class Catholic child who started a fashion label, served in the army...
(from the 2011 Palm Springs International Film Festival)
Directed by: Richard Press
Starring: Bill Cunningham, Patrick McDonald, Anna Wintour, Iris Apfel, John Kurdewan, Carmen Dell’Orefice, Annette De la Renta, Howard Koda, Tom Wolfe, Kenny Kenny, Anna Piaggi, Editta Sherman
“Bill Cunningham New York” is both a tribute to a somewhat lost artistic past, when artists lived in affordable studios above Carnegie Hall and celebrated daily life with the likes of Editta Sherman, Leonard Bernstein, Marlon Brando and Andy Warhol, and a celebration of the present life of Bill Cunningham, longtime fashion and social-scene photographer for The New York Times, where his “Evening Hours” and “On the Street” columns have captured the lives and styles of New York’s finest and most trendsetting for what seems like forever (well, since the ’60s).
A young, working-class Catholic child who started a fashion label, served in the army...
- 3/18/2011
- by admin
- Moving Pictures Network
Reviewed by Elliot V. Kotek
(from the 2011 Palm Springs International Film Festival)
Directed by: Richard Press
Starring: Bill Cunningham, Patrick McDonald, Anna Wintour, Iris Apfel, John Kurdewan, Carmen Dell’Orefice, Annette De la Renta, Howard Koda, Tom Wolfe, Kenny Kenny, Anna Piaggi, Editta Sherman
“Bill Cunningham New York” is both a tribute to a somewhat lost artistic past, when artists lived in affordable studios above Carnegie Hall and celebrated daily life with the likes of Editta Sherman, Leonard Bernstein, Marlon Brando and Andy Warhol, and a celebration of the present life of Bill Cunningham, longtime fashion and social-scene photographer for The New York Times, where his “Evening Hours” and “On the Street” columns have captured the lives and styles of New York’s finest and most trendsetting for what seems like forever (well, since the ’60s).
A young, working-class Catholic child who started a fashion label, served in the army...
(from the 2011 Palm Springs International Film Festival)
Directed by: Richard Press
Starring: Bill Cunningham, Patrick McDonald, Anna Wintour, Iris Apfel, John Kurdewan, Carmen Dell’Orefice, Annette De la Renta, Howard Koda, Tom Wolfe, Kenny Kenny, Anna Piaggi, Editta Sherman
“Bill Cunningham New York” is both a tribute to a somewhat lost artistic past, when artists lived in affordable studios above Carnegie Hall and celebrated daily life with the likes of Editta Sherman, Leonard Bernstein, Marlon Brando and Andy Warhol, and a celebration of the present life of Bill Cunningham, longtime fashion and social-scene photographer for The New York Times, where his “Evening Hours” and “On the Street” columns have captured the lives and styles of New York’s finest and most trendsetting for what seems like forever (well, since the ’60s).
A young, working-class Catholic child who started a fashion label, served in the army...
- 3/18/2011
- by admin
- Moving Pictures Magazine
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