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5 books to read this summer, according to a New York Times bestselling author

5 books to read this summer, according to a New York Times bestselling author
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Rian Johnson s T-Street Launches Emerging Filmmakers Label with MRC

T-Street the production banner run by director Rian Johnson and Ram Bergman and Knives Out studio MRC Films have launched a new label to produce low-budget films from emerging filmmakers. The venture, which was announced by the T-Street principals and MRC s Brye Adler and Jonathan Golfman, will produce three to four features a year from up-and-coming filmmakers, with creative and financial backing from the companies. T-Street s Ben LeClair will oversee day-to-day management on the yet-to-be-named label. Johnson and Bergman, who have worked together since Johnson s 2005 breakout indie,  Brick, said, We ve experienced the importance of having partners like MRC who understand and protect a filmmaker s vision, and that becomes all the more crucial when you re navigating these waters for the first or second time. For us, this is about finding and working with great people as much as it is about making great films.

Rian Johnson T-Street and MRC Film Launch Low Budget Label for Emerging Artists

T-Street’s Ben LeClair will oversee day-to-day management Brian Welk | April 29, 2021 @ 8:45 AM Ram Bergman (Left) and Rian Johnson/Courtesy of T-Street & MRC Film MRC Film and Rian Johnson’s T-Street on Thursday unveiled a new label for low to modestly budgeted films focused on emerging filmmakers. The new venture, which is still untitled, was announced by MRC film co-presidents Brye Adler and Jonathan Golfman along with T-Street founders Rian Johnson and Ram Bergman. The label will be a partnership between the two companies that will focus on rising filmmakers with a singular voice and distinctive point of view. And the companies have named T-Street’s Ben LeClair to oversee the day-to-day management.

Hollywood has overlooked the 50-plus audience Producer Amy Baer aims to change that

LOS ANGELES — Even before the pandemic corralled Americans onto their couches to binge and consume a steady churn of content, producer Amy Baer knew the entertainment industry was missing an opportunity to sate viewers. Hollywood is a fickle, numbers-obsessed business but Baer, who d run CBS Films and was executive vice president of production at Sony, was convinced that the industry had long disregarded one particular area: making movies and TV for the over-50 demographic. I ve always had an affinity for, as I like to call them, people movies as opposed to visual effects or, you know, superhero movies, but movies that speak to a more mature audience that is about a phase of life that everybody reaches but that sometimes get overlooked in the development and production process, Baer said.

Hollywood overlooks 50-plus crowd This label aims to change that

Hollywood overlooks 50-plus crowd This label aims to change that
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