New World Order and Digital Movies
New World Order and Digital Movies. Glance at any page of news about the movie business, and you’ll spot a headline announcing that Hollywood is dumbing down.
New World Order and Digital Movies Read MoreThe Ultimate Movie Resource
New World Order and Digital Movies. Glance at any page of news about the movie business, and you’ll spot a headline announcing that Hollywood is dumbing down.
New World Order and Digital Movies Read MoreHere they are: the finest films of the 21st Century so far, as voted for by 177 critics from around the world. Topped by a surreal Hollywood neo-noir that was intended as a pilot for a television series, the top 10 includes a Japanese cartoon about a girl who works in a bath house for monsters (Spirited Away: number four on the list), a plotless overview of a Texan boy’s adolescence (Boyhood: five), a chaste love story spanning several years in 1960s Hong Kong (In the Mood for Love: two), and a melancholy romantic comedy involving a memory-erasing machine (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind: six).
Are we living in a new golden age of cinema? Read MoreA sensitive teenager learns to navigate the soaring highs and perilous lows of adolescence in The Perks of Being a Wallflower, a powerful and affecting coming‐of‐age story based on the wildly popular young adult novel by Stephen Chbosky. Starring Logan Lerman (Percy Jackson and the Olympians), Emma Watson (the Harry Potter franchise) and Ezra Miller (We Need to Talk About Kevin, Another Happy Day), The Perks of Being a Wallflower captures the complexities of growing up with uncommon grace, humor and compassion.
The Perks of Being a Wallflower Production Notes Read MoreIn 1987, a then‐17‐year‐old Stephen Chbosky (pronounced sha‐bos‐key) attended a film festival at the Fulton Theater in Pittsburgh where he met one of the city’s most famous citizens—horror king George Romero. The aspiring screenwriter and director asked Romero to sign a poster for him that now hangs in his office. The inscription reads: “Steve, stay scared. I hope you get your first script produced. George Romero.”
The Perks: A Book for Very Personal Reasons Read MoreChbosky felt an enormous sense of accountability toward his multitudes of fans as he adapted the popular novel into a screenplay. “In the 13 years since Perks was first published, I’ve received hundreds of letters and emails,” he explains. “Some of them would break your heart. You realize that a lot of kids feel terribly alone. They think that that no one is listening, that no one cares. Some of them say they were thinking about ending it, but then they read the book and chose not to. When that happens, it changes you, and you realize what a responsibility you have.”
The Perks: Banning is a Badge of Honor Read MoreHearing that Chbosky was working on an adaptation of his novel, Lianne Halfon, Russell Smith and John Malkovich, partners in Mr. Mudd Productions, reached out to him. The company is responsible for films including the Oscar‐nominated Juno, Ghost World, Art School Confidential, Abel and Jeff Who Lives at Home, as well as acclaimed documentaries including Which Way Home. The partners agreed that Chbosky was the only director they would consider for the project, even if that made putting together a deal a bit more difficult.
The Perks: An Unconventional Love Story Read MoreFinding the right actors for any film is a delicate process, but filling the shoes of characters beloved by a generation presents unique challenges. Chbosky meticulously put together an extraordinary cast for his directing debut, including a gifted trio of young actors playing the central characters of Charlie, Sam and Patrick: Logan Lerman, Emma Watson and Ezra Miller.
The Perks: Charlie and Company Read More