Vanja cernjul biography of rory

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  • Imagine, Exploring Sale, Scores 8 Emmy Nominations For Ron Howard’s ‘Jim Henson Idea Man’

    Ron Howard’s Jim HensonIdea Man led all comers in the documentary categories as the nominations for the 67th Primetime Emmy Awards were announced, racking up eight altogether, three more than the next most-nominated doc.

    Among its nominations are Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Special, Outstanding Directing for a Documentary/Nonfiction Program for Howard, recognition for writer Mark Monroe, cinematographers Igor Martinovicand Vanja Cernjul, picture editors Sierra Nealand Paul Crowder, the film’s sound editing and sound mixing teams, as well as David Fleming’s score.

    “We’re so thrilled. What an honor from the Academy,” said Imagine DocumentariesPresident Sara Bernstein, herself nominated for producing Jim Henson Idea Man. “We’re so excited.”

    Jim Henson with Kermit the Frog, ca. early s

    The documentary explores the life and extraordinary creative output of the late Jim Henson, who created the Muppetsand Fraggle Rock, directed Labyrinth, The Dark Crystal,

    See full article at Deadline Film + TV

    Join IndieWire and Disney for Our FYC ‘Jim Henson Idea Man’ Panel on May 24 at Vidiots in LA

    IndieWirelaunched our “Pass the Remote” FYC TV screening series, produced in partnership with Disney, with a dynamic casting directors panel April 25, two Disney Storytellers panels April 29, and a panel about “Abbott Elementary” May

    Next up? A “Jim Henson Idea Man” panel on May 24 celebrating the documentary about the Muppets creator, which just premiered at the Cannes Film Festival. Like all events in the “Pass the Remote” screening series, it will take place at the Vidiots Foundation in Los Angeles’s Eagle Rock neighborhood.

    Legendary director Ron Howardwill be in attendance on the panel, as will composer David Flemingand editor Paul Crowder. Howard is a two-time Oscar winner. In recent vintage, he’s become a more prolific documentary director, with films such as “Th

    A reel from cinematographer Vanja Cernjul surfaced over the weekend, one that includes what is presumably the first peek of something from "Precious" writer Geoffrey Fletcher's directorial debut.

    "Violet & Daisy" stars Alexis Bledel, aka Rory Gilmore, and Saoirse Ronan ("Atonement") as a pair of teen assassins in New York City. The film also stars James Gandolfini, the always good Marianne Jean-Baptiste and Danny "Machete" Trejo.

    The video, which contains some brief nudity is slowly getting pulled down across the web (although you can probably still find it at Shadow & Actor The Playlist), includes footage Cerjul has shot for "Bored to Death," "Nurse Jackie" and "City Island."

    Gandolfini is of course no stranger to killers, and Ronan is fantastic playing one in her next film, "Hanna," but Bledel's involvement is a puzzle. She was great in "Gilmore Girls," but hasn't really shined in anything since.

    The closest Bledel's come to this sort of material was in "Sin City," and even then, she was the prostitute not cut out for violence. That said, judging from the look in her eyes above, when she's pointing a gun, that may be what drew Fletcher to her.

    The film is done shooting, but there's no word yet on a release date, look for it on the festival circuit.

    76th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards

    Outstanding Sound Editing for a Limited or Anthology Series, Movie or Special

    • Ripley: "III Sommerso" – Larry Zipf, Michael Feuser, Michael McMenomy, Lidia Tamplenizza, David Forshee, Bill R. Dean, Wyatt Sprague, Angelo Palazzo, Matt Haasch, Igor Nikolic, Dan Evans Farkas, Ben Schor, Jay Peck, and Sandra Fox (Netflix)
      • All the Light We Cannot See: "Episode 4" – Craig Henighan, Ryan Cole, Emma Present, Jill Purdy, David Grimaldi, Matt Cloud, Gina Wark, Dan DiPrima, Steve Durkee, and Steve Baine (Netflix)
      • Fargo: "The Tragedy of the Commons" – Nick Forshager, Joe Bracciale, Dustin Harris, Alex Bullick, Brad Bakelmun, Ben Schor, Jason Charbonneau, and Stefan Fraticelli (FX)
      • Masters of the Air: "Part Five" – Jack Whittaker, Michael Minkler, Jeff Sawyer, Luke Gibleon, Dave McMoyler, Michael Hertlein, Michele Perrone, Jim Brookshire, Bryan Parker, Zach Goheen, Paul B. Knox, Adam Kopald, Angela Claverie, Dylan Tuomy-Wilhoit, and Jeff Wilhoit (Apple TV+)
      • True Detective: Night Country: "Part 6" – Martin Hernández, Stephen Griffiths, Tom Jenkins, Michele Woods, Andy Shelley, Jake Fielding, Stuart Bagshaw, Barnaby Smyth, Rebecca Glover, and Ben Smithers (HBO)

    Outstanding Sound Editing for a Nonfiction or Reality Program

    • Jim Henson Idea Man – Daniel Timmons, Jeremy S. Bloom, Ian Cymore, and Ryan Rubin (Disney+)
      • The Greatest Night in Pop – Richard Gallagher (Netflix)
      • Planet Earth III: "Freshwater" – Jonny Crew, Tim Owens, Ellie Bowler, and Paul Ackerman (BBC America)
      • Steve! (Martin) A Documentary in 2 Pieces – Bob Edwards, Kim B. Christensen, and Joel Raabe (Apple TV+)
      • Welcome to Wrexham: "Goals" – Shaun Cromwell, William Harp, Jon Schell, and Sean Gray (FX)

    Jamie's Sundance Diary

    Day 10 - Saturday 28 January

    This is the way the Sundance Film Festival ends – not with a bang but a whimper.

    Bowling up to the Racquet Club at pm for the Awards Night Ceremony, Total Film took a seat and stared, transfixed, at the montage of clips from the festival’s golden oldies. Reservoir Dogs, Clerks, Napoleon Dynamite, sex, lies and videotape, Donnie Darko, Memento, Buffalo 66, Boys Don’t Cry… talk about whetting the appetite. And while this year’s festival paled against such luminous titles, it at least gave us the harrowing, affecting Half Nelson. Bring on the prizes.

    As with most awards shows, the ceremony passed in a stop-start fashion, any chance of momentum body-checked by the winners’ rambling thank you lists and seeming inability to make a graceful exit. No matter that the eight previous recipients had all started to walk off stage right, only to be halted by a nice, smiley lady and ushered off to the left… number nine hooked a right all the same.

    The full list of award winners is too long and obscure to go into here [that's where us web techies come in useful - here you go], but suffice to say that documentary Iraq In Fragments (voices from the other side) did rather nicely while coruscating drama A Guide To Recognizing Your Saints (writer recalls his misspent youth in 80s Queens) picked up the Dramatic Directing Award for Dito Montiel and also nabbed the acting honours for its ensemble cast (‘They blew my mind,’ gasped juror Terrence Howard). Hard to argue with that one given the angsty veracity on show, but it was a shame to see Half Nelson’s Ryan Gosling and Shareeka Epps – sensational as the year-old pupil who befriends her crack-addict teacher – go empty handed.

    Unfortunately it was a taste of things to come, Half Nelson getting the full elbow when it came to gathering trophies. Just how Quinceanera, an enjoyable but perfunctory feelg