Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Paul Schrader"


6 mentions found


David Sanborn, whose fiery alto saxophone flourishes earned him six Grammy Awards, eight gold albums and a platinum one, and who established himself as a celebrity sideman, lending indelible solos to enduring rock classics like David Bowie’s “Young Americans,” died on Sunday. He died after a long battle with prostate cancer, according to a statement on his social media channels. The statement did not say where Mr. Sanborn died. Drawing from jazz, pop and R&B, Mr. Sanborn was highly prolific, releasing 25 albums over a six-decade career. In contrast, he continued, “Hideaway” had a “stripped-down, funky” quality that showed off his “passionate and distinctive saxophone sound.”
Persons: David Sanborn, David Bowie’s “, , Sanborn, “ Hideaway ”, Michael McDonald, Giorgio Moroder, Paul Schrader, Richard Gere, ” Tim Griggs, Hideaway ” Organizations: David Bowie’s “ Young
Movies directed by Francis Ford Coppola, David Cronenberg and Yorgos Lanthimos will compete for the Palme d’Or at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, the event’s organizers announced in a news conference on Thursday. New films by Jacques Audiard, Paul Schrader and Andrea Arnold will also appear in competition at this year’s event, the festival’s 77th edition, which opens May 14 and runs through May 25. The most eagerly anticipated film on the lineup is likely to be Coppola’s “Megalopolis” — the director’s first movie in over 10 years. During Thursday’s news conference, Thierry Frémaux, Cannes’s artistic director, revealed little about that movie’s plot, but Coppola, the director of “The Godfather” trilogy and “Apocalypse Now,” has been talking about his desire to make it for decades. In 2001, Coppola told the The New York Times that “Megalopolis” was “about the future” and “a guy who wants to build a utopian society in the middle of Manhattan.”
Persons: Francis Ford Coppola, David Cronenberg, Yorgos, Palme, Jacques Audiard, Paul Schrader, Andrea Arnold, Thierry Frémaux, Coppola, , Organizations: Cannes, New York Times Locations: Manhattan
‘Master Gardener’ Review: A New Paul Schrader Antihero
  + stars: | 2023-05-19 | by ( Kyle Smith | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Joel Edgerton and Sigourney Weaver Photo: Magnolia PicturesLate in his career, Paul Schrader has completed an evocative trilogy about tightly wound, obsessively focused men yearning for expiation of their sins. The 76-year-old writer-director has returned yet again to some of the same psychological territory he visited in his earliest successful script, “Taxi Driver” (1976), and in many others about loners struggling to maintain their composure in a world of pain and guilt. Following his recent efforts “First Reformed” (2017) and “The Card Counter” (2021), he has rounded out the triptych with another penetrating character study, “Master Gardener.” The title figure is a quiet, rigorously devoted horticulturist with a messy past. In cultivating a gorgeous bounty of flowers in a large botanical garden, he seeks his own renewal.
Part of the kick of “Master Gardener” is that the writer-director Paul Schrader manages to pull off this improbable movie. As has been the case in many of Schrader’s stories, this one centers on a man who’s of this world and apart. That character — “God’s lonely man,” as he’s called in “Taxi Driver,” which Schrader wrote — has appeared repeatedly in his filmography. That lonely man is here again, risen once more in “Master Gardener,” but now named Narvel Roth and played like a clenched fist by Joel Edgerton. In all three movies, a solitary, soul-weary man in crisis — who’s invariably seen alone in a room writing in a journal he shares in voice-over — undergoes a kind of transfiguration.
CNN —Angelo Badalamenti, the composer behind several beloved soundtracks, including David Lynch’s cult hit “Twin Peaks,” has died at 85. Badalamenti and Lynch worked together for decadesBefore he was a film composer, the Brooklyn-born Badalamenti was a musical jack-of-all-trades. “I tried to make the music have a haunting feeling,” Badalamenti said in 2019 of his “Twin Peaks” score. Film writer Scott Tobias remembered the immediate impact of watching “Twin Peaks” for the first time and recognizing it was something special. “One of the greatest.”Kyle MacLachlan, who played the unusual, coffee-loving Agent Dale Cooper on “Twin Peaks,” called Badalamenti a “brilliant and talented maestro who was a master at setting a mood.
Quentin Tarantino’s Greatest Hits of the ’70s
  + stars: | 2022-11-11 | by ( Tom Shone | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
CINEMA SPECULATION, by Quentin TarantinoMost film directors would no more comment on one another’s movies than they would score each other’s performance in bed. Then there is the Quentin Tarantino approach. “When Daryl Hannah walks down the hall of the hospital in ‘Kill Bill Vol. Any film critic would give her left arm to have made that connection. He never sees Reggie again, and whenever young Quentin brings him up, his mother just shrugs her shoulders and says, “Oh, he’s around.”
Total: 6