Morrison Hotel Gallery today announced its new contemporary photography collection in collaboration with CondéNast. Curated by photographer Timothy White and Condé Nast Corporate Photography Director Ivan Shaw, this collection features work from master photographers including Edward Steichen, George Hoyningen-Huene, John Rawlings, and Bert Stern.
The photos presented to Variety date are circa the late 1960s/ early 1970s, and include shots of Jim Morrison with model Donna Mitchell, one of Cher sporting a truly stunning pair of period sunglasses, a young and shirtless Iggy Pop, Barbra Streisand in some lace finery from the era, and Miles Davis with an unidentified young woman, sporting some truly stunning bell bottoms and boots, in the style that he frequently wore onstage during his rock phase of the early-to-mid 1970s.
The exhibit will initially be posted online starting at 12 p.m. Et Monday at https://www.morrisonhotelgallery.com/, with events at the Morrison Hotels in...
The photos presented to Variety date are circa the late 1960s/ early 1970s, and include shots of Jim Morrison with model Donna Mitchell, one of Cher sporting a truly stunning pair of period sunglasses, a young and shirtless Iggy Pop, Barbra Streisand in some lace finery from the era, and Miles Davis with an unidentified young woman, sporting some truly stunning bell bottoms and boots, in the style that he frequently wore onstage during his rock phase of the early-to-mid 1970s.
The exhibit will initially be posted online starting at 12 p.m. Et Monday at https://www.morrisonhotelgallery.com/, with events at the Morrison Hotels in...
- 10/7/2019
- by Variety Staff
- Variety Film + TV
Director: Theodore Melfi; Screenwriter: Theodore Melfi; Starring: Bill Murray, Melissa McCarthy, Naomi Watts, Chris O'Dowd, Terrence Howard, Jaeden Lieberher; Running time: 102 mins; Certificate: 12A
There is something joyous about Bill Murray in a bad mood from Ghostbusters through Groundhog Day to this comedy drama where he also brings stirring depths to the titular Vincent. It's a film cut to fit by indie writer/director Theodore Melfi and in playing to the strengths of his star, he manages to spin a rather obvious story into a fresh and edgy coming-of-age yarn.
Jaeden Lieberher features as 12-year-old Oliver, an efficiently pintsized straight-man who moves in next door to Vin with his adoptive mother Maggie (played with surprisingly gentle humour by Melissa McCarthy). Maggie works long shifts at the hospital and turns to Vin in desperation when she needs a last-minute babysitter; desperate, because with his bitter sarcasm, penchant for booze, gambling habit...
There is something joyous about Bill Murray in a bad mood from Ghostbusters through Groundhog Day to this comedy drama where he also brings stirring depths to the titular Vincent. It's a film cut to fit by indie writer/director Theodore Melfi and in playing to the strengths of his star, he manages to spin a rather obvious story into a fresh and edgy coming-of-age yarn.
Jaeden Lieberher features as 12-year-old Oliver, an efficiently pintsized straight-man who moves in next door to Vin with his adoptive mother Maggie (played with surprisingly gentle humour by Melissa McCarthy). Maggie works long shifts at the hospital and turns to Vin in desperation when she needs a last-minute babysitter; desperate, because with his bitter sarcasm, penchant for booze, gambling habit...
- 12/2/2014
- Digital Spy
Welcome to the fourth installment of Psycho Path, a look at fictional madman Norman Bates from the Psycho franchise.
Intended to run in five parts, Psycho Path will focus on each of Norman’s adventures – in novels, films, and television series – while examining each incarnation of the character and the differences amongst them.
Check out past installments of Psycho Path: Tracing Norman Bates' Twisted Trail Through Page and Screen here
Part IV: Endings
"There are times I wonder if all of what passes for sanity isn’t just a form of remission from our own natural state. What was it Norman Bates used to say? Something like 'everybody goes a little crazy at times.'"
In 1990, nine years after his last Psycho novel, novelist Robert Bloch returned to the world of Norman Bates for the third and final time with Psycho House - a tense thriller that finds good old-fashioned murder more popular than ever,...
Intended to run in five parts, Psycho Path will focus on each of Norman’s adventures – in novels, films, and television series – while examining each incarnation of the character and the differences amongst them.
Check out past installments of Psycho Path: Tracing Norman Bates' Twisted Trail Through Page and Screen here
Part IV: Endings
"There are times I wonder if all of what passes for sanity isn’t just a form of remission from our own natural state. What was it Norman Bates used to say? Something like 'everybody goes a little crazy at times.'"
In 1990, nine years after his last Psycho novel, novelist Robert Bloch returned to the world of Norman Bates for the third and final time with Psycho House - a tense thriller that finds good old-fashioned murder more popular than ever,...
- 3/20/2013
- by Jinx
- DreadCentral.com
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