Cary Joji Fukunaga and chef René Redzepi are teaming for a new docuseries at Apple, Variety has learned exclusively.
The series is produced by Film 45, Noma Projects, Parliament of Owls and Endeavor Content, with Endeavor serving as the studio. Narrated by Redzepi of the famed restaurant Noma in Copenhagen, the series is titled “Omnivore.”
It will look at the world through the lens of food and explores how food binds and defines us, powers politics, shapes our beliefs, explains our past, and forecasts our future .Each episode will take viewers on a journey around the world, exploring the ingredients that have built societies, shaped spirituality, and forever altered the human story.
The series was developed by Redzepi, Fukunaga, and James Beard & Emmy Award winner Matt Goulding. Xan Aranda serves as showrunner and executive producer. Redzepi, Fukunaga and Goulding serve as executive producers. Chris Rice will executive produce for Endeavor...
The series is produced by Film 45, Noma Projects, Parliament of Owls and Endeavor Content, with Endeavor serving as the studio. Narrated by Redzepi of the famed restaurant Noma in Copenhagen, the series is titled “Omnivore.”
It will look at the world through the lens of food and explores how food binds and defines us, powers politics, shapes our beliefs, explains our past, and forecasts our future .Each episode will take viewers on a journey around the world, exploring the ingredients that have built societies, shaped spirituality, and forever altered the human story.
The series was developed by Redzepi, Fukunaga, and James Beard & Emmy Award winner Matt Goulding. Xan Aranda serves as showrunner and executive producer. Redzepi, Fukunaga and Goulding serve as executive producers. Chris Rice will executive produce for Endeavor...
- 2/11/2022
- by Joe Otterson
- Variety Film + TV
In last week’s episode of “Room 104,” the inventive TV experiment from the Duplass brothers, two baby-faced Mormon missionaries ask “Heavenly Father” for a sign when their faith begins to flag. Feeling discouraged by their failure to persuade a single convert, Noah (Adam Foster) has recently tried coffee, and Joseph (Nat Wolff) zealously guides him back to the light. When they ask for a sign and the TV magically turns on so-called “pornography,” Joseph flip-flops and proposes breaking all the rules as a way to strengthen their faith. When Joseph returns with a six-pack of beer, they throw the tamest all nighter any hotel has ever seen, which to them is incredibly wild and thrilling. Through passing glances and hidden hard-ons, it soon becomes clear they’d like to switch teams in more ways than one.
What unfolds is a funny and sensitive exploration of repressed sexuality, their earnest...
What unfolds is a funny and sensitive exploration of repressed sexuality, their earnest...
- 9/15/2017
- by Jude Dry
- Indiewire
Jay and Mark Duplass are creators who don’t like to be put in a box, even if they’re making six hours of television set within the same four walls.
“Room 104,” the new HBO anthology series from the Duplass brothers, tells individual, episodic stories in each of its 12 half-hour installments, and all 12 are set within the same cheap, dingy hotel room. The first episode, which premiered at the Atx TV Festival Saturday evening, is a lot closer to Mark Duplass’ work in indie films “Creep” and “The One I Love” than the brothers’ former HBO comedy.
During a panel discussion following the episode, Duplass said he felt inspired by the constraints of the premise.
“I have something like 218 ideas in a Word document on my computer,” Duplass said.
Noting how it felt like he was back making low-budget indie films, Duplass said he wrote seven of the 12 episodes...
“Room 104,” the new HBO anthology series from the Duplass brothers, tells individual, episodic stories in each of its 12 half-hour installments, and all 12 are set within the same cheap, dingy hotel room. The first episode, which premiered at the Atx TV Festival Saturday evening, is a lot closer to Mark Duplass’ work in indie films “Creep” and “The One I Love” than the brothers’ former HBO comedy.
During a panel discussion following the episode, Duplass said he felt inspired by the constraints of the premise.
“I have something like 218 ideas in a Word document on my computer,” Duplass said.
Noting how it felt like he was back making low-budget indie films, Duplass said he wrote seven of the 12 episodes...
- 6/11/2017
- by Ben Travers
- Indiewire
The dangerous doll from The Conjuring franchise is coming to the West Coast this June, as Warner Bros. will present a special advance screening of Annabelle: Creation ahead of its theatrical release this August, with Sofia Coppola's The Beguiled also announced for the festival.
Press Release: Los Angeles (May 23, 2017)— Today the La Film Festival, produced by Film Independent, the nonprofit arts organization that also produces the Film Independent Spirit Awards, announced the Gala Screening of New Line Cinema’s Annabelle: Creation, directed by David F. Sandberg and starring Stephanie Sigman, Talitha Bateman, Lulu Wilson with Anthony Lapaglia and Miranda Otto. Also unveiled today, the panels for Diversity Speaks and the Global Media Makers.
Award-winning film company Focus Features will commemorate its 15th anniversary at the La Film Festival with five movies including revival programming and a newly added advance screening of Sofia Coppola’s The Beguiled starring Colin Farrell,...
Press Release: Los Angeles (May 23, 2017)— Today the La Film Festival, produced by Film Independent, the nonprofit arts organization that also produces the Film Independent Spirit Awards, announced the Gala Screening of New Line Cinema’s Annabelle: Creation, directed by David F. Sandberg and starring Stephanie Sigman, Talitha Bateman, Lulu Wilson with Anthony Lapaglia and Miranda Otto. Also unveiled today, the panels for Diversity Speaks and the Global Media Makers.
Award-winning film company Focus Features will commemorate its 15th anniversary at the La Film Festival with five movies including revival programming and a newly added advance screening of Sofia Coppola’s The Beguiled starring Colin Farrell,...
- 5/23/2017
- by Derek Anderson
- DailyDead
Jay and Mark Duplass will continue to work alongside HBO for a new anthology comedy series, “Room 104.” The filmmaking brothers will serve as executive producers and showrunners of the upcoming project.
Set in a single room of an average American hotel, “Room 104” tells a different story of the assorted characters who pass through it in each episode.
Read More: ‘The League’: Mark Duplass, Nick Kroll Pull One Final Prank in Exclusive Video
“We’ve all seen stories set in seedy motels and high-class international resorts, but for years we’ve been fascinated by the funny, weird, sad, scary, absurd things going down in that corporate chain hotel near the airport,” said the Duplass brothers in a statement. “That’s what ‘Room 104’ is after… finding some magic in the seemingly mundane.”
HBO president of programming Casey Bloys added, “Jay and Mark Duplass are two of the most inventive talents in TV today.
Set in a single room of an average American hotel, “Room 104” tells a different story of the assorted characters who pass through it in each episode.
Read More: ‘The League’: Mark Duplass, Nick Kroll Pull One Final Prank in Exclusive Video
“We’ve all seen stories set in seedy motels and high-class international resorts, but for years we’ve been fascinated by the funny, weird, sad, scary, absurd things going down in that corporate chain hotel near the airport,” said the Duplass brothers in a statement. “That’s what ‘Room 104’ is after… finding some magic in the seemingly mundane.”
HBO president of programming Casey Bloys added, “Jay and Mark Duplass are two of the most inventive talents in TV today.
- 8/4/2016
- by Liz Calvario
- Indiewire
Jay and Mark Duplass are returning to HBO. The pay cabler has ordered a comedy anthology series from the brothers, who were behind the now-canceled comedy Togetherness, it was announced Thursday. Titled Room 104, the project is set in a single room of an average American hotel and tells a different story of the assorted characters who pass through the room in each episode. Production begins later this year for a 2017 debut. The Duplass brothers will serve as showrunners on the comedy, and also exec produce with Xan Aranda. Sydney Fleischmann is attached to produce. “Jay and Mark Duplass
read more...
read more...
- 8/4/2016
- by Kate Stanhope
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Here's your daily dose of an indie film in progress; at the end of the week, you'll have the chance to vote for your favorite. In the meantime: Is this a movie you’d want to see? Tell us in the comments. "Mormon Movie" Tweetable Logline: Former Mormon revisits the religion through lens of religious educational films her mother starred in while a student at Byu during 1960s. Elevator Pitch: Inspired by religious educational films her mother starred in while a student at Brigham Young University during the 1960s, director Xan Aranda revisits her ancestral religion (The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints) through the lens of two classics: a black-and-white Western portraying an historic clash between Mormon colonists and Pancho Villa in Mexico, and a jewel-toned yet tragic cautionary tale about marriage and doubt. As deeper threads of “Lds” beliefs are revealed, Xan explores the...
- 9/13/2012
- by Indiewire
- Indiewire
Raindance have just announced their line-up for their 20th annual film festival. The 2012 festival will, like every year showcase some of the best independent movies that we can expect in the coming year and beyond. Raindance 2012 will take place 26th September to 7th October at the Apollo Cinema, Piccadilly Circus in London. This year we can expect to see 105 features, more than 138 shorts, 64 UK Premieres, 13 International Premieres, 5 European Premieres, 19 World Premieres and 24 Directorial Debuts from 38 countries.
Scroll down to see the full press release as well as all the feature films that will be showing at the festival. To find out more, click here to visit their official site.
Opening the festival on Wednesday 26th September is the International Premiere of Here Comes The Devil a powerful fantasy horror from Mexico. Shot in Tijuana, a married couple lose their children while on a family trip near some caves in Tijuana.
Scroll down to see the full press release as well as all the feature films that will be showing at the festival. To find out more, click here to visit their official site.
Opening the festival on Wednesday 26th September is the International Premiere of Here Comes The Devil a powerful fantasy horror from Mexico. Shot in Tijuana, a married couple lose their children while on a family trip near some caves in Tijuana.
- 9/4/2012
- by David Sztypuljak
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
By Rachel Hudson
I have the Bird Flu. But rather than a cough, fever, sore throat and muscle aches, my symptoms include tapping feet, rhythmical swaying and a huge obnoxious grin. The onset was acute, and it came with my viewing of the Austin Film Festival screening of Andrew Bird: Fever Year at the Alamo Drafthouse on Monday, June 25. You see, it seems that Andrew Bird has a fever, and it’s catching.
Knowing practically nothing about the musician Andrew Bird, I can’t fathom what motivated me to go see a documentary about him at Alamo Drafthouse. Yet there I was, circling the block downtown looking for parking and having virtually no idea what to expect. I found my seat and sat through the ever-entertaining previews for the Drafthouse, then an employee came on stage and introduced the director of the film, Xan Aranda. She was quiet, sarcastic and...
I have the Bird Flu. But rather than a cough, fever, sore throat and muscle aches, my symptoms include tapping feet, rhythmical swaying and a huge obnoxious grin. The onset was acute, and it came with my viewing of the Austin Film Festival screening of Andrew Bird: Fever Year at the Alamo Drafthouse on Monday, June 25. You see, it seems that Andrew Bird has a fever, and it’s catching.
Knowing practically nothing about the musician Andrew Bird, I can’t fathom what motivated me to go see a documentary about him at Alamo Drafthouse. Yet there I was, circling the block downtown looking for parking and having virtually no idea what to expect. I found my seat and sat through the ever-entertaining previews for the Drafthouse, then an employee came on stage and introduced the director of the film, Xan Aranda. She was quiet, sarcastic and...
- 7/3/2012
- by Contributors
- Slackerwood
Having been around for eighteen years, the Chicago Underground Film Festival has continually changed what it defines as “underground.”
So its 19th annual edition, which will be held on May 31 to June 7 at the Gene Siskel Film Center, feels like its most experimental edition in recent years.
While things kick off on the 31st with the Vice-produced anthology film The Fourth Dimension by Alexsei Fedorchenko, Harmony Korine and Jan Kwiecinski, the rest of the fest is packed with feature-length and short experimental work, documentaries and alternative narratives.
Some of the experimental feature highlights include the vastly prolific Robert Todd‘s Master Plan, which examines theories of modern housing from private residences to prisons; Australia’s two-person art collective Soda_Jerk’s epic rip on media piracy, Hollywood Burn; Michael Kosakowski’s compendium on murder fantasies, Zero Killing; L.A. filmmaker Daniel Martinico’s meditation on the acting process, Ok, Good...
So its 19th annual edition, which will be held on May 31 to June 7 at the Gene Siskel Film Center, feels like its most experimental edition in recent years.
While things kick off on the 31st with the Vice-produced anthology film The Fourth Dimension by Alexsei Fedorchenko, Harmony Korine and Jan Kwiecinski, the rest of the fest is packed with feature-length and short experimental work, documentaries and alternative narratives.
Some of the experimental feature highlights include the vastly prolific Robert Todd‘s Master Plan, which examines theories of modern housing from private residences to prisons; Australia’s two-person art collective Soda_Jerk’s epic rip on media piracy, Hollywood Burn; Michael Kosakowski’s compendium on murder fantasies, Zero Killing; L.A. filmmaker Daniel Martinico’s meditation on the acting process, Ok, Good...
- 5/8/2012
- by Mike Everleth
- Underground Film Journal
What drives an artist? How about a musician? Those are questions without simple answers, but for Andrew Bird, the drive to evolve and constantly challenge himself seems essential to what makes him tick. Most musicians write down their progressions and chords. Notes for future reference so they can replicate songs, riffs, and more. Bird doesn’t. Instead he relies on his ability to recreate the mindset and situation of a song and find the notes again. However, he isn’t afraid of it changing and becoming something else. He enjoys the pursuit, what he calls “chasing ghosts”. In Xan Aranda‘s Andrew Bird: Fever Year, we get a glimpse behind the curtain and the wonderful pursuit of ghosts.
For those unaware of who Andrew Bird is, the documentary makes no bones about introducing you to his music, interesting personality, and unique style. Entire songs from his catalog are played in...
For those unaware of who Andrew Bird is, the documentary makes no bones about introducing you to his music, interesting personality, and unique style. Entire songs from his catalog are played in...
- 4/24/2012
- by jpraup@gmail.com (thefilmstage.com)
- The Film Stage
The 2012 Vail Film Festival will kick off on March 29th with the U.S. premiere of Fred Schepisi's family drama "The Eye of the Storm" starring Geoffrey Rush, Charlotte Rampling and Judy Davis. The festival will close April 1st with Kat Coiro's comedy "L!fe Happens" starring Krysten Ritter, Kate Bosworth and Rachel Bilson. Also screening will be Blayne Weaver's "6 Month Rule," Adam and Mark Kassen's "Puncture" and Xan Aranda's "Andrew Bird: Fever Year." Currently, 58 films are scheduled to show at this year's festival, including 20 feature-length films and 38 shorts, student, adventure and animated films. Full press release and line-up below: 2012 Vail Film Festival Announces Film Program Line-Up Includes 58 Films From Around the World, Including the U.S. Premiere of ‘The Eye of the Storm.’ Vail, Co., March 6, 2012 – The 2012 Vail Film Festival...
- 3/7/2012
- by Devin Lee Fuller
- Indiewire
Xan Aranda's debut, "Andrew Bird: Fever Year," was one of few world premieres at the New York Film Festival and it feels like a discovery. It isn't a concert film and it certainly isn't a personal documentary. However, it's a music documentary that's entertaining, lyrical and oddly revealing. It's definitely worth seeing--if you can. Bird is a musician with a devoted fanbase and he spent a year on the road--much ...
- 10/25/2011
- Indiewire
This year's New York Film Festival seems to have fulfilled its brief so well you have to wonder what the programmers will come up with for its 50th anniversary edition next year. 2012 will also mark Richard Peña's 25th year as programming director of the Film Society of Lincoln Center and chairman of the Nyff selection committee — and, as he's just announced, his last. "It's been a terrific ride," he told the New York Times' Larry Rohter on Saturday, "but I've had other interests, and it got to the point where I got to thinking about what I want to do with the rest of my working life. It's a good thing for me personally, and also for the organization, because change is good, and it will be good for the organization to have fresh eyes and ideas and new ways of doing things."
For now, though, the 49th edition.
For now, though, the 49th edition.
- 10/17/2011
- MUBI
Created to celebrate the contributions that female writers and directors continue to make to film around the world, the REELwomen program at the 47th Chicago International Film Festival will introduce Chicago audiences to the works of first-time women filmmakers and documentarians.
More than half of the documentaries featured in this year.s Docufest competition are directed by women, most of them focusing on the arts. First-time filmmakers like Yasemin Samderelli, Alice Rohrwacher and Julia Leigh explore issues of identity – whether national or sexual – while others, like Susan Jacobson are staking a claim on genre films. The program also welcomes the return of Festival alumni filmmakers Mia Hansen-Løve and Lynne Ramsay.
All Me: The Life and Times of Winfred Rembert USA (Director: Vivian Ducat) . If there was ever a case for designating a person a National Treasure, Winfred Rembert is that person. Though he lived through segregation and the civil rights era in the Deep South,...
More than half of the documentaries featured in this year.s Docufest competition are directed by women, most of them focusing on the arts. First-time filmmakers like Yasemin Samderelli, Alice Rohrwacher and Julia Leigh explore issues of identity – whether national or sexual – while others, like Susan Jacobson are staking a claim on genre films. The program also welcomes the return of Festival alumni filmmakers Mia Hansen-Løve and Lynne Ramsay.
All Me: The Life and Times of Winfred Rembert USA (Director: Vivian Ducat) . If there was ever a case for designating a person a National Treasure, Winfred Rembert is that person. Though he lived through segregation and the civil rights era in the Deep South,...
- 10/11/2011
- by Michelle McCue
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Chicago, Il - Cinema/Chicago announced that the 47Th Chicago International Film Festival will spotlight a diverse group of actors and filmmakers with Illinois and Chicago connections through two unique Festival programs: City & State and Chicago Connections.
From the Opening Night Presentation of The Last Rites of Joe May starring longtime Chicago thespian Dennis Farina to Xan Aranda.s look into the inner world of Chicago-bred musician Andrew Bird (Andrew Bird: Fever Year), and a short film program featuring promising new Illinois filmmakers (Shorts 1: City & State), this year.s City & State picks showcase the best features, documentaries and short films with roots in Chicago or Illinois. A Festival jury will select the best film in this category, which will be presented with the Chicago Award.
Chicago Connections, a ticketed series of screenings, discussions and Q&A.s, will honor notable native Chicagoans John C. Reilly, Haskell Wexler, Joe Swanberg,...
From the Opening Night Presentation of The Last Rites of Joe May starring longtime Chicago thespian Dennis Farina to Xan Aranda.s look into the inner world of Chicago-bred musician Andrew Bird (Andrew Bird: Fever Year), and a short film program featuring promising new Illinois filmmakers (Shorts 1: City & State), this year.s City & State picks showcase the best features, documentaries and short films with roots in Chicago or Illinois. A Festival jury will select the best film in this category, which will be presented with the Chicago Award.
Chicago Connections, a ticketed series of screenings, discussions and Q&A.s, will honor notable native Chicagoans John C. Reilly, Haskell Wexler, Joe Swanberg,...
- 9/29/2011
- by Michelle McCue
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Andrew Bird: Fever Year
Directed by Xan Aranda
2011, USA
Andrew Bird’s music has been described as “unclassifiable.” Likewise, the movie that chronicles the last couple concerts of what Bird playfully names his “Fever Year” is also hard to categorize. An intriguing amalgamation of documentary and concert film, Andrew Bird: Fever Year provides incredible insight into the creative process of a truly unique musical talent and studies the immeasurable passion of an obsessive performer.
In 2009, Andrew Bird set for himself a grueling tour schedule comprised of 165 shows. The work that goes into such an intensive experience takes its toll on the performer. For much of the year, he suffers chills, sweats, and a persistent fever (giving the film its evocative title), but it’s a testament to his relentlessness that Bird interprets his fever not as a weakness but as his body’s attempt to evolve into “a different kind...
Directed by Xan Aranda
2011, USA
Andrew Bird’s music has been described as “unclassifiable.” Likewise, the movie that chronicles the last couple concerts of what Bird playfully names his “Fever Year” is also hard to categorize. An intriguing amalgamation of documentary and concert film, Andrew Bird: Fever Year provides incredible insight into the creative process of a truly unique musical talent and studies the immeasurable passion of an obsessive performer.
In 2009, Andrew Bird set for himself a grueling tour schedule comprised of 165 shows. The work that goes into such an intensive experience takes its toll on the performer. For much of the year, he suffers chills, sweats, and a persistent fever (giving the film its evocative title), but it’s a testament to his relentlessness that Bird interprets his fever not as a weakness but as his body’s attempt to evolve into “a different kind...
- 9/26/2011
- by Kenneth
- SoundOnSight
The 49th New York Film Festival has announced their Masterworks and Special Anniversary screenings that will show between the festival’s seventeen days, September 30th – October 16th. The Masterworks program and the festival’s additional programming will provide audiences with exciting opportunities to explore new film-making styles and storytelling events. To learn more about the Masterworks and Anniversary films, please check out below for full synopsis and details.
Masterworks And Special Anniversary Screenings
Masterworks: The Gold Rush
Chaplin’s personal favorite among his own films, The Gold Rush (1925), is a beautifully constructed comic fable of fate and perseverance, set in the icy wastes of the Alaskan gold fields. Re-released by Chaplin in 1942 in a recut version missing some scenes, and with added narration and musical score, The Gold Rush will be presented in a new restoration of the original, silent 1925 version. In this frequently terrifying and always unpredictable universe of...
Masterworks And Special Anniversary Screenings
Masterworks: The Gold Rush
Chaplin’s personal favorite among his own films, The Gold Rush (1925), is a beautifully constructed comic fable of fate and perseverance, set in the icy wastes of the Alaskan gold fields. Re-released by Chaplin in 1942 in a recut version missing some scenes, and with added narration and musical score, The Gold Rush will be presented in a new restoration of the original, silent 1925 version. In this frequently terrifying and always unpredictable universe of...
- 8/28/2011
- by Christopher Clemente
- SoundOnSight
25 special programs and screenings have been added to the lineup for this year's New York Film Festival, running September 30 through October 26. The only secrets left are the 2011 Views from the Avant Garde lineup and a few free forums in the works.
Because this round is so heavy on the documentaries, I want to first revisit the lineup for Toronto's Real to Reel program in another entry and then return here to add further notes and linkage. For now, the Film Society of Lincoln Center's Eugene Hernandez has a few more details, but here's the gist of today's announcement:
Masterworks Screenings
Charlie Chaplin's The Gold Rush (1925), restored.
Hugo Santiago's Invasión (1969), restored.
Sara Driver's You Are Not I (1981), restored.
Special Presentations: Documentaries
Xan Aranda's Andrew Bird: Fever Year.
Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky's Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory.
Nelson Pereira dos Santos's Music According to Tom Jobim.
Because this round is so heavy on the documentaries, I want to first revisit the lineup for Toronto's Real to Reel program in another entry and then return here to add further notes and linkage. For now, the Film Society of Lincoln Center's Eugene Hernandez has a few more details, but here's the gist of today's announcement:
Masterworks Screenings
Charlie Chaplin's The Gold Rush (1925), restored.
Hugo Santiago's Invasión (1969), restored.
Sara Driver's You Are Not I (1981), restored.
Special Presentations: Documentaries
Xan Aranda's Andrew Bird: Fever Year.
Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky's Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory.
Nelson Pereira dos Santos's Music According to Tom Jobim.
- 8/24/2011
- MUBI
The 30th annual Vancouver International Film Festival (Viff) is starting to finally announce their roster of films with an outstanding line-up of documentaries that celebrate the power of cinema and the arts across the Dance, Music, Theatre and the Visual Arts mediums. Legendary filmmakers Wim Wenders , Frederick Wiseman, and Mike Figgis are among the talent presenting films at the festival this year which runs from September 29-October 14th. Here is a taste of what to expect so far:
Pina
Germany/France/UK | Director: Wim Wenders
One German master more than does justice to another as Wim Wenders fashions a kinetic and gorgeous tribute to the singular German choreographer and dancer Pina Bausch. “Entertainment that will send culture vultures swooning… the film lets the artist’s work speak for itself via big, juicy slabs of performance.” — Variety
Flamenco, Flamenco
Spain | Director: Carlos Saura
Carlos Saura continues to mine a rich vein...
Pina
Germany/France/UK | Director: Wim Wenders
One German master more than does justice to another as Wim Wenders fashions a kinetic and gorgeous tribute to the singular German choreographer and dancer Pina Bausch. “Entertainment that will send culture vultures swooning… the film lets the artist’s work speak for itself via big, juicy slabs of performance.” — Variety
Flamenco, Flamenco
Spain | Director: Carlos Saura
Carlos Saura continues to mine a rich vein...
- 8/18/2011
- by Gregory Ashman
- SoundOnSight
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