The names in the spotlight at the Ghetto Film School screening at the Paley Center in Beverly Hills on Monday weren’t A-list director David O. Russell or actors like Chris Tucker and the evening’s host, Max Greenfield. Instead, center stage belonged to director Niko Baur, writer Gillian Lyons, cinematographer Eugene Ko and production designer Joyous Herron, who joined comedian Larry Wilmore in a discussion following a screening of their film, Ghost of a Chance, shot in London last summer.
“It’s a very special program and it’s changed a lot of kids’ lives,” Russell, who has been involved with Ghetto Film...
“It’s a very special program and it’s changed a lot of kids’ lives,” Russell, who has been involved with Ghetto Film...
- 4/4/2017
- by Jordan Riefe
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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