The Hollywood Reporter thanks the following 322 members of the global film community — listed alphabetically — for taking the time to cast a ballot to help us determine the 100 greatest film books of all time.
Seth Abramovitch
The Hollywood Reporter journalist/It Happened in Hollywood podcast host
Jo Addy
Soho House group film and entertainment director
Casey Affleck
Oscar-winning actor
Rutanya Alda
Author/actress
Stephanie Allain
Filmmaker
Victoria Alonso
Filmmaker/executive
Tony Angellotti
Publicist
Bonnie Arnold
Filmmaker/executive
Miguel Arteta
Filmmaker
Chris Auer
Filmmaker/film professor
John Badham
Filmmaker/film professor
Amy Baer
Executive
Matt Baer
Filmmaker
Lindsey Bahr
Journalist
Ramin Bahrani
Oscar-nominated filmmaker
Cameron Bailey
Toronto International Film Festival CEO/former film critic
John Bailey
Cinematographer/former Academy president
Bela Bajaria
Executive
Sean Baker
Filmmaker
Alec Baldwin
Oscar-nominated actor/author
Tino Balio
Author/film professor
Jeffrey Barbakow
Executive
Michael Barker
Executive
Mike Barnes
The Hollywood Reporter journalist
Jeanine Basinger
Author/film...
Seth Abramovitch
The Hollywood Reporter journalist/It Happened in Hollywood podcast host
Jo Addy
Soho House group film and entertainment director
Casey Affleck
Oscar-winning actor
Rutanya Alda
Author/actress
Stephanie Allain
Filmmaker
Victoria Alonso
Filmmaker/executive
Tony Angellotti
Publicist
Bonnie Arnold
Filmmaker/executive
Miguel Arteta
Filmmaker
Chris Auer
Filmmaker/film professor
John Badham
Filmmaker/film professor
Amy Baer
Executive
Matt Baer
Filmmaker
Lindsey Bahr
Journalist
Ramin Bahrani
Oscar-nominated filmmaker
Cameron Bailey
Toronto International Film Festival CEO/former film critic
John Bailey
Cinematographer/former Academy president
Bela Bajaria
Executive
Sean Baker
Filmmaker
Alec Baldwin
Oscar-nominated actor/author
Tino Balio
Author/film professor
Jeffrey Barbakow
Executive
Michael Barker
Executive
Mike Barnes
The Hollywood Reporter journalist
Jeanine Basinger
Author/film...
- 10/12/2023
- by Scott Feinberg
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
You might have thought that you didn’t really need to consume any more content about Andy Warhol. After all, the New York artist has been ubiquitous throughout pop culture for more than half a century. In fact, he kind of invented pop culture. But viewers who devour all six episodes of Netflix’s “The Andy Warhol Diaries” will realize that Warhol’s life had a lot more dimensions than a flat silkscreen of a Campbell’s soup can.
I thought I had a passing knowledge of Warhol and his life. Like most admirers of the groundbreaking music of the ‘60s and ‘70s, I had luxuriated in Todd Haynes’ “Velvet Underground” feature documentary last year. At Moca’s massive 2002 retrospective in Los Angeles, I developed an appreciation for Warhol’s early illustrations and figurative paintings, and over the years, I watched Jared Harris being ambushed by Lili Taylor in “Who...
I thought I had a passing knowledge of Warhol and his life. Like most admirers of the groundbreaking music of the ‘60s and ‘70s, I had luxuriated in Todd Haynes’ “Velvet Underground” feature documentary last year. At Moca’s massive 2002 retrospective in Los Angeles, I developed an appreciation for Warhol’s early illustrations and figurative paintings, and over the years, I watched Jared Harris being ambushed by Lili Taylor in “Who...
- 6/17/2022
- by Pat Saperstein
- Variety Film + TV
In the new documentary series “The Andy Warhol Diaries,” the late pop artist’s re-created voice sounds eerie and uncanny — human but not. It’s aesthetically jarring, and a fitting tribute.
Director Andrew Rossi, with the permission of Warhol’s estate, used an artificial-intelligence program to reproduce his speaking voice, so that “Warhol” can read aloud from the diaries he kept. The result is a flat, almost robotic recapitulation of observations and events, narrating a vivid stream of footage from his life and career without emotion or intonation. “The Andy Warhol Diaries,” executive produced by Ryan Murphy, builds, over six well-structured episodes, a sense of its subject as intelligent, but alienated from his feelings and even from his own talent.
Warhol reigned in a 1970s and ’80s milieu in which all kinds of personalities rubbed up against each other and the divisions between high and low culture were collapsing. His...
Director Andrew Rossi, with the permission of Warhol’s estate, used an artificial-intelligence program to reproduce his speaking voice, so that “Warhol” can read aloud from the diaries he kept. The result is a flat, almost robotic recapitulation of observations and events, narrating a vivid stream of footage from his life and career without emotion or intonation. “The Andy Warhol Diaries,” executive produced by Ryan Murphy, builds, over six well-structured episodes, a sense of its subject as intelligent, but alienated from his feelings and even from his own talent.
Warhol reigned in a 1970s and ’80s milieu in which all kinds of personalities rubbed up against each other and the divisions between high and low culture were collapsing. His...
- 3/8/2022
- by Daniel D'Addario
- Variety Film + TV
Truman Capote, Martha Graham, Betty Ford, Halston, and Elizabeth Taylor on the scene at Steve Rubell's Studio 54 Photo: Dustin Pittman
Halston, by Dior And I director Frédéric Tcheng, shines light on the designer's crowning achievements and attempts to come to grips with his eventual fall. The first thought of Halston might be of Studio 54 with Andy Warhol or of Jackie Kennedy's pillbox hat and cloth coat for JFK's inauguration at a time when wives in the public eye wrapped themselves in furs.
There is footage from the Nineties of a tipsy interview with Elsa Peretti, recent interviews including Liza Minnelli, Marisa Berenson, Pat Cleveland, Bob Colacello, and Joel Schumacher, and glimpses of the infamous Battle of Versailles Fashion Show that put American fashion on the map, and is documented on film in Deborah Riley Draper's Versailles '73: American Runway Revolution.
Frédéric Tcheng on Liza Minnelli in...
Halston, by Dior And I director Frédéric Tcheng, shines light on the designer's crowning achievements and attempts to come to grips with his eventual fall. The first thought of Halston might be of Studio 54 with Andy Warhol or of Jackie Kennedy's pillbox hat and cloth coat for JFK's inauguration at a time when wives in the public eye wrapped themselves in furs.
There is footage from the Nineties of a tipsy interview with Elsa Peretti, recent interviews including Liza Minnelli, Marisa Berenson, Pat Cleveland, Bob Colacello, and Joel Schumacher, and glimpses of the infamous Battle of Versailles Fashion Show that put American fashion on the map, and is documented on film in Deborah Riley Draper's Versailles '73: American Runway Revolution.
Frédéric Tcheng on Liza Minnelli in...
- 5/26/2019
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
James Crump on Antonio Lopez seen at work with Karl Lagerfeld in admiration: "He has this magnetic aura that draws people in."
In the final installment of my New York conversation with James Crump at the Mercer Hotel in SoHo we discuss Bill Cunningham's relationship to the world of Antonio Lopez, Luca Guadagnino and Call Me By Your Name, Francis Bacon and the "void of the mouth", and Charles James as inspiration for Daniel Day-Lewis's character in Paul Thomas Anderson's Phantom Thread.
Antonio Lopez 1970: Sex Fashion & Disco, the magnetic documentary on the famed fashion illustrator, executive produced by Ronnie Sassoon, features Jessica Lange, Grace Jones, Jerry Hall, Bill Cunningham, Yves Saint Laurent, Donna Jordan, Pat Cleveland, Jane Forth, Corey Tippin, Grace Coddington, Patti D’Arbanville, Karl Lagerfeld, Joan Juliet Buck, Bob Colacello, Paul Caranicas, Juan Ramos, Tina and Michael Chow.
James Crump: "I like the magic...
In the final installment of my New York conversation with James Crump at the Mercer Hotel in SoHo we discuss Bill Cunningham's relationship to the world of Antonio Lopez, Luca Guadagnino and Call Me By Your Name, Francis Bacon and the "void of the mouth", and Charles James as inspiration for Daniel Day-Lewis's character in Paul Thomas Anderson's Phantom Thread.
Antonio Lopez 1970: Sex Fashion & Disco, the magnetic documentary on the famed fashion illustrator, executive produced by Ronnie Sassoon, features Jessica Lange, Grace Jones, Jerry Hall, Bill Cunningham, Yves Saint Laurent, Donna Jordan, Pat Cleveland, Jane Forth, Corey Tippin, Grace Coddington, Patti D’Arbanville, Karl Lagerfeld, Joan Juliet Buck, Bob Colacello, Paul Caranicas, Juan Ramos, Tina and Michael Chow.
James Crump: "I like the magic...
- 3/25/2018
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Bill Cunningham's last interview is in Antonio Lopez 1970: Sex Fashion & Disco Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
Greg Barker's The Final Year (documenting members of Barack Obama's administration, including Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power, Secretary of State John Kerry and speechwriter Ben Rhodes in 2016) opened Doc NYC last night. Tiffany Bartok's Larger Than Life: The Kevyn Aucoin Story (with Paulina Porizkova, Kate Moss, Brooke Shields, Cher, Isabella Rossellini, Naomi Campbell, Isaac Mizrahi, Tori Amos, Christy Turlington, Linda Evangelista, Linda Wells); James Crump's Antonio Lopez 1970: Sex Fashion & Disco (Jessica Lange, Grace Jones, Jerry Hall, Juan Ramos, Yves Saint Laurent, Donna Jordan, Karl Lagerfeld, Grace Coddington, Bob Colacello, Bill Cunningham); Bobbi Jo Hart's Rebels on Pointe, and Samuel D Pollard's Sammy Davis, Jr.: I've Gotta Be Me are four more of this year's Doc NYC highlights.
Larger Than Life: The Kevyn Aucoin Story
Larger Than Life: The Kevyn Aucoin Story...
Greg Barker's The Final Year (documenting members of Barack Obama's administration, including Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power, Secretary of State John Kerry and speechwriter Ben Rhodes in 2016) opened Doc NYC last night. Tiffany Bartok's Larger Than Life: The Kevyn Aucoin Story (with Paulina Porizkova, Kate Moss, Brooke Shields, Cher, Isabella Rossellini, Naomi Campbell, Isaac Mizrahi, Tori Amos, Christy Turlington, Linda Evangelista, Linda Wells); James Crump's Antonio Lopez 1970: Sex Fashion & Disco (Jessica Lange, Grace Jones, Jerry Hall, Juan Ramos, Yves Saint Laurent, Donna Jordan, Karl Lagerfeld, Grace Coddington, Bob Colacello, Bill Cunningham); Bobbi Jo Hart's Rebels on Pointe, and Samuel D Pollard's Sammy Davis, Jr.: I've Gotta Be Me are four more of this year's Doc NYC highlights.
Larger Than Life: The Kevyn Aucoin Story
Larger Than Life: The Kevyn Aucoin Story...
- 11/10/2017
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
James Crump on Antonio Lopez: "Helmut Newton, Guy Bourdin, Chris von Wangenheim, you know, Avedon, Penn - he's working at the same level, yet he is an illustrator." Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
Another highlight of this year's Doc NYC is James Crump's Antonio Lopez 1970: Sex Fashion & Disco screening in the Metropolis competition. The film on the famed fashion illustrator features Jessica Lange, Grace Jones, Jerry Hall, Bill Cunningham, Yves Saint Laurent, Donna Jordan, Pat Cleveland, Jane Forth, Corey Tippin, Grace Coddington, Patti D’Arbanville, Karl Lagerfeld, Joan Juliet Buck, Bob Colacello, Paul Caranicas, Juan Ramos, Tina and Michael Chow with film clips including Bertrand Bonello's Saint Laurent, Pierre Thoretton's L'Amour Fou, and Andy Warhol's L'Amour.
Antonio Lopez: "He was embracing this idea of diversity and inclusivity in the mid-Sixties when today people are taking credit for the diversity of the runway."
James Crump (director...
Another highlight of this year's Doc NYC is James Crump's Antonio Lopez 1970: Sex Fashion & Disco screening in the Metropolis competition. The film on the famed fashion illustrator features Jessica Lange, Grace Jones, Jerry Hall, Bill Cunningham, Yves Saint Laurent, Donna Jordan, Pat Cleveland, Jane Forth, Corey Tippin, Grace Coddington, Patti D’Arbanville, Karl Lagerfeld, Joan Juliet Buck, Bob Colacello, Paul Caranicas, Juan Ramos, Tina and Michael Chow with film clips including Bertrand Bonello's Saint Laurent, Pierre Thoretton's L'Amour Fou, and Andy Warhol's L'Amour.
Antonio Lopez: "He was embracing this idea of diversity and inclusivity in the mid-Sixties when today people are taking credit for the diversity of the runway."
James Crump (director...
- 11/6/2017
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Another day, another sighting of what many believe to be an engagement ring. Mary-Kate Olsen, once again, was spotted wearing the now all-too-familiar sparkler as she joined rumored fiancé Olivier Sarkozy at a launch party for Bob Colacello's book Holy Terror: Andy Warhol Close Up in New York City on Monday. Olsen, 27, has yet to confirm all the speculation that she is engaged to her 44-year-old beau, but continues to add fuel to the fire by repeatedly sporting the same exact ring on that finger. But if they lovebirds are ready to say "I do," it seems that the pair is still on a different timeline with regards to how soon the twosome plan to walk down the aisle. E! News learned...
- 3/12/2014
- E! Online
Here come the future Monsieur et Madame Sarkozy! For the first time since Us Weekly exclusively broke the news of their February engagement, Mary-Kate Olsen and fiancé Olivier Sarkozy attended an event together on Monday, March 10. The newly-engaged duo was spotted at the book launch party for Bob Colacello's Holy Terror: Andy Warhol Close Up at the Diane Von Furstenberg Studio in New York City. Olsen, 27, and Sarkozy, 44, posed together for photos as the former child star showed off her giant vintage engagement ring. [...]...
- 3/12/2014
- Us Weekly
Mary-Kate Olsen's massive diamond sparkler has been making the rounds across multiple countries since her engagement to Olivier Sarkozy late last month, but we haven't seen the couple together until now. They stayed close at a Diane von Furstenberg-hosted release party for author Bob Colacello's new book on Monday in NYC, both wearing black ensembles; in fact, they wore very similar-looking lace-up dress shoes to the bash as well. During the party, Mary-Kate stopped to chat with the author as he signed a copy of his book, Holy Terror: Andy Warhol Close Up, for her as she showed off her ring. Though Mary-Kate and Olivier haven't spoken out about their wedding plans yet, they may be planning another big step in their relationship - a baby. The couple is reportedly already trying to get pregnant, in spite of Mary-Kate rejecting Olivier's first proposal a year ago...
- 3/11/2014
- by Alyse Whitney
- Popsugar.com
Olivia Wilde channeled her inner vamp when she posed as a showgirl for the newest issue of Vanity Fair magazine.
Wilde looks gorgeous as a sexy showgirl, dressed in a glittering, bejeweled bra top and feathers, inside the pages of Vanity Fair's "Hollywood" issue.
Visit Vanity Fair for more on the "19th Hollywood Portfolio."
The portfolio, shot by famed photographer Bruce Weber, features 75 of today's biggest celebrities, including Halle Berry, Tom Hanks, Bradley Cooper, Selena Gomez, Ben Affleck and Emma Stone. Weber's vision for “Bruce Weber’s Adventures in Hollywood," is described by Vanity Fair's Bob Colacello as: “a place where Old Hollywood glamour is filtered through the lens of postwar Italian neo-realism, and Norman Rockwell wholesomeness is given an antic Fellini edge.”
Wilde's showgirl spread may have something do with her upcoming role opposite Steve Carrell and Steve Buscemi in "The Incredible Burt Wonderstone," a comedy about a Vegas...
Wilde looks gorgeous as a sexy showgirl, dressed in a glittering, bejeweled bra top and feathers, inside the pages of Vanity Fair's "Hollywood" issue.
Visit Vanity Fair for more on the "19th Hollywood Portfolio."
The portfolio, shot by famed photographer Bruce Weber, features 75 of today's biggest celebrities, including Halle Berry, Tom Hanks, Bradley Cooper, Selena Gomez, Ben Affleck and Emma Stone. Weber's vision for “Bruce Weber’s Adventures in Hollywood," is described by Vanity Fair's Bob Colacello as: “a place where Old Hollywood glamour is filtered through the lens of postwar Italian neo-realism, and Norman Rockwell wholesomeness is given an antic Fellini edge.”
Wilde's showgirl spread may have something do with her upcoming role opposite Steve Carrell and Steve Buscemi in "The Incredible Burt Wonderstone," a comedy about a Vegas...
- 2/1/2013
- by Cavan Sieczkowski
- Huffington Post
Vanity Fair’s 19th Hollywood Portfolio, shot by Bruce Weber, includes 75+ stars, from Tom Hanks and Amy Adams to Quvenzhané Wallis and Eddie Redmayne. The cover stars Ben Affleck, Emma Stone and Bradley Cooper. Vf, wanting to do something different for this year's Hollywood edition, call it "a celebration of the friendships that thrive among the people who call it home." The collection of photos is titled "Bruce Weber's Adventures in Hollywood," and includes a number of historic Hollywood locations. Vf's Bob Colacello describes Weber's work as "more Cinecittà than Disney, a place where Old Hollywood glamour is filtered through the lens of postwar Italian neo-realism, and Norman Rockwell wholesomeness is given an antic Fellini edge.”...
- 1/29/2013
- by Sophia Savage
- Thompson on Hollywood
Review by Sam Moffitt
I love anything about Andy Warhol! I must say that right out of the gate, I love Andy Warhol! I have followed Warhol since the Sixties. Growing up near St. Louis, Missouri in the Sixties my family had a subscription to Life Magazine and they seemed to always be running articles about Op Art, Pop Art, the emerging youth and drug cultures and underground films made by people like the Kuchar Brothers, Jonas Mekas, Taylor Mead and Andy Warhol. It seemed like Warhol was in the news constantly, especially the question of whether his stuff was really art or even had any real value.
I read avidly about his ‘Factory’. in New York and his crew of strange underground people who helped him turn out art works, like….well like a factory!
I have three documentaries about Warhol himself, and have read every book by and about him I could find.
I love anything about Andy Warhol! I must say that right out of the gate, I love Andy Warhol! I have followed Warhol since the Sixties. Growing up near St. Louis, Missouri in the Sixties my family had a subscription to Life Magazine and they seemed to always be running articles about Op Art, Pop Art, the emerging youth and drug cultures and underground films made by people like the Kuchar Brothers, Jonas Mekas, Taylor Mead and Andy Warhol. It seemed like Warhol was in the news constantly, especially the question of whether his stuff was really art or even had any real value.
I read avidly about his ‘Factory’. in New York and his crew of strange underground people who helped him turn out art works, like….well like a factory!
I have three documentaries about Warhol himself, and have read every book by and about him I could find.
- 12/18/2012
- by Movie Geeks
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Tribeca Film will expand to commercially release 26 films over the next year, more than double the number of titles released in 2010, it was announced Monday. The distribution label for independent film also said it acquired U.S. rights to nine new titles to be released across multiple platforms. The curated selection of films includes stars including Zach Braff, Vincent Gallo and Zoe Kravitz and filmmakers such as Peter Mullan, Jerzy Skolimowski and Vincent D’Onofrio.
Titles to be released theatrically on video-on-demand and via other platforms throughout the coming year include:
“Beware the Gonzo”: From director and writer Brian Gobuloff comes a teen-angst comedy about an underground newspaper aiming to give voice to high school misfits. The film stars Zoe Kravitz, Ezra Miller, Jesse McCartney, Amy Sedaris, Campbell Scott, and James Urbaniak.
“The Bleeding House”: Written and directed by comic-book writer and first-time filmmaker Philip Gelatt, this taut...
Titles to be released theatrically on video-on-demand and via other platforms throughout the coming year include:
“Beware the Gonzo”: From director and writer Brian Gobuloff comes a teen-angst comedy about an underground newspaper aiming to give voice to high school misfits. The film stars Zoe Kravitz, Ezra Miller, Jesse McCartney, Amy Sedaris, Campbell Scott, and James Urbaniak.
“The Bleeding House”: Written and directed by comic-book writer and first-time filmmaker Philip Gelatt, this taut...
- 2/28/2011
- by admin
- Moving Pictures Magazine
Tribeca Film will expand to commercially release 26 films over the next year, more than double the number of titles released in 2010, it was announced Monday. The distribution label for independent film also said it acquired U.S. rights to nine new titles to be released across multiple platforms. The curated selection of films includes stars including Zach Braff, Vincent Gallo and Zoe Kravitz and filmmakers such as Peter Mullan, Jerzy Skolimowski and Vincent D’Onofrio.
Titles to be released theatrically on video-on-demand and via other platforms throughout the coming year include:
“Beware the Gonzo”: From director and writer Brian Gobuloff comes a teen-angst comedy about an underground newspaper aiming to give voice to high school misfits. The film stars Zoe Kravitz, Ezra Miller, Jesse McCartney, Amy Sedaris, Campbell Scott, and James Urbaniak.
“The Bleeding House”: Written and directed by comic-book writer and first-time filmmaker Philip Gelatt, this taut...
Titles to be released theatrically on video-on-demand and via other platforms throughout the coming year include:
“Beware the Gonzo”: From director and writer Brian Gobuloff comes a teen-angst comedy about an underground newspaper aiming to give voice to high school misfits. The film stars Zoe Kravitz, Ezra Miller, Jesse McCartney, Amy Sedaris, Campbell Scott, and James Urbaniak.
“The Bleeding House”: Written and directed by comic-book writer and first-time filmmaker Philip Gelatt, this taut...
- 2/28/2011
- by admin
- Moving Pictures Network
By Sean O’Connell
Hollywoodnews.com: Expansion is the word out of New York City this morning as Tribeca Film ramps up its distribution plans and announces U.S. deals for nine new titles.
Tribeca Enterprises announced that its distribution label, Tribeca Film, will expand to commercially release 26 films over the next year, more than double the number of titles released in 2010. In addition, the label acquired U.S. rights to nine titles it plans to release across multiple platforms.
The curated selection of films includes many genres and features stars including Zach Braff, Vincent Gallo and Zoe Kravitz and filmmakers such as Peter Mullan, Jerzy Skolimowski and Vincent D’Onofrio.
Here’s information we received on the films. They will be released theatrically, on video-on-demand and via other platforms throughout 2011:
· Beware the Gonzo. From director and writer Brian Gobuloff (writer of The Basketball Diaries) comes a teen-angst comedy...
Hollywoodnews.com: Expansion is the word out of New York City this morning as Tribeca Film ramps up its distribution plans and announces U.S. deals for nine new titles.
Tribeca Enterprises announced that its distribution label, Tribeca Film, will expand to commercially release 26 films over the next year, more than double the number of titles released in 2010. In addition, the label acquired U.S. rights to nine titles it plans to release across multiple platforms.
The curated selection of films includes many genres and features stars including Zach Braff, Vincent Gallo and Zoe Kravitz and filmmakers such as Peter Mullan, Jerzy Skolimowski and Vincent D’Onofrio.
Here’s information we received on the films. They will be released theatrically, on video-on-demand and via other platforms throughout 2011:
· Beware the Gonzo. From director and writer Brian Gobuloff (writer of The Basketball Diaries) comes a teen-angst comedy...
- 2/28/2011
- by Sean O'Connell
- Hollywoodnews.com
Tribeca Film Sets Expansion Of Slate In 2011, More Than Doubling Annual Output To 26 Films And Announcing U.S. Distribution Rights To Nine New Titles.
Newly Acquired Films Starring Zach Braff, Vincent Gallo and Zoe Kravitz and Featuring Filmmakers Including Jerzy Skolimowski, Vincent D’Onofrio and Peter Mullan.
Slate to Premiere On Multiple Platforms, Including National Video-on-Demand and Theatres Across the Country, Supported by Founding Partner American Express.
From the Press Release:
New York, NY February 28, 2011 – Tribeca Enterprises today announced that Tribeca Film will expand to commercially release 26 films over the next year, more than double the number of titles released in 2010. The comprehensive distribution label for independent film also announced that it acquired U.S. rights to nine new titles to be released across multiple platforms. The curated selection of films includes many genres and features stars including Zach Braff, Vincent Gallo and Zoe Kravitz and filmmakers such as Peter Mullan,...
Newly Acquired Films Starring Zach Braff, Vincent Gallo and Zoe Kravitz and Featuring Filmmakers Including Jerzy Skolimowski, Vincent D’Onofrio and Peter Mullan.
Slate to Premiere On Multiple Platforms, Including National Video-on-Demand and Theatres Across the Country, Supported by Founding Partner American Express.
From the Press Release:
New York, NY February 28, 2011 – Tribeca Enterprises today announced that Tribeca Film will expand to commercially release 26 films over the next year, more than double the number of titles released in 2010. The comprehensive distribution label for independent film also announced that it acquired U.S. rights to nine new titles to be released across multiple platforms. The curated selection of films includes many genres and features stars including Zach Braff, Vincent Gallo and Zoe Kravitz and filmmakers such as Peter Mullan,...
- 2/28/2011
- by brians
- GeekTyrant
The Obamas welcome President Hu Jintao of China at the North Portico of the White House prior to last night’s state dinner in his honor. Official White House photo by Lawrence Jackson. In the June 2010 issue of Vanity Fair, Bob Colacello wrote an authoritative article on the history of White House state dinners. Vf Daily spoke to him this morning to get his take on last night’s affair in honor of President Hu Jintao of China. Highlights:...
- 1/20/2011
- Vanity Fair
Please excuse my ignorance if you have heard of avant-garde artist Robert Wilson and his Voom portraits before, but I was just today made aware of their existence, and I must say it's one of the coolest things I've seen in some time, at least that is if looked at with the right perspective.
I'm not at all familiar with Wilson outside of stumbling onto his Voom portraits today so I won't attempt to give you some grandiose, all-knowing background piece on him, but I did search out some information on just what exactly these portraits are and how they came about and found a Vanity Fair piece from 2006 titled "The Subject as Star" that gives more than enough information on what I've featured below.
Described by Vanity Fair's Bob Colacello as the "king of the avant-garde", Wilson's Voom portraits are commissioned by private clients, asking for life-size, high-definition-video renditions of themselves.
I'm not at all familiar with Wilson outside of stumbling onto his Voom portraits today so I won't attempt to give you some grandiose, all-knowing background piece on him, but I did search out some information on just what exactly these portraits are and how they came about and found a Vanity Fair piece from 2006 titled "The Subject as Star" that gives more than enough information on what I've featured below.
Described by Vanity Fair's Bob Colacello as the "king of the avant-garde", Wilson's Voom portraits are commissioned by private clients, asking for life-size, high-definition-video renditions of themselves.
- 11/3/2010
- by Brad Brevet
- Rope of Silicon
For decades, the Prince of Wales has been chastised for his unorthodox views. In his new book, Harmony: A New Way of Looking At Our World (HarperCollins, November 2)—discussed by Bob Colacello in the November issue of the U.S. edition of Vanity Fair—the heir to the British throne definitively, and fervently, vocalizes his thoughts about the planet and its future. Examining everything from architecture to organic farming to sustainable economics, His Royal Highness presents a compelling case that modern industrialization has led to a state of disharmony with nature. In the excerpt below, Prince Charles outlines his environmental manifesto for a “Sustainable Revolution.”...
- 10/6/2010
- Vanity Fair
“I am absolutely determined to be the defender of nature. Full stop. That’s what the rest of my life is going to be concerned with,” Prince Charles tells Vanity Fair special correspondent Bob Colacello, in an exclusive interview at his estate, Highgrove, in Gloucestershire. “I think people don’t quite understand how much it requires to put your head above the parapet,” he says. “It’s no fun having your head shot off all the time. But I just feel deeply I know perfectly well this book is going to bring all of my critics out of their lairs. It’s probably just as well ”...
- 10/6/2010
- Vanity Fair
In what would be his last interview, Dennis Hopper tells Vanity Fair contributing editor Bob Colacello that his greatest career achievement was Easy Rider. “Easy Rider and The Last Movie were the only films that I made totally on my own,” he says. When asked if he had to make Easy Rider again whether he would make it differently, Hopper replies, “Would I make it now? It was about then. And I think a filmmaker’s responsibility is to show his time. Brueghel, I think, was the first artist to show his time.” Hopper says his greatest achievement as an actor was “Blue Velvet, probably. But I’ve been in such incredible movies. I think at one point I’d been in the five most expensive movies ever made—not that I had large parts in them. Apocalypse Now was one.”...
- 6/30/2010
- Vanity Fair
On Wednesday night in Manhattan, as waiters dashed about the Four Seasons restaurant carrying sterling-silver bowls of cotton candy to diners celebrating birthdays and promotions, the city’s most devoted philanthropists gathered in the Pool Room’s private screening room for a special debut of Robin Baker Leacock’s documentary A Passion for Giving. “We often get lost in our pursuit of survival. My movie is a discussion of worth. What is the true meaning of success? Is it how much money we’ve made in a lifetime or how much we’ve done to help others?” In her efforts to create a film about altruism and the importance of compassion through giving, Leacock spent three years interviewing people from all walks of life—a street poet nicknamed Mr. Smiley, Vanity Fair’s own Bob Colacello, and, in attendance on Wednesday night, Henry Buhl, a longtime community activist and leading patron of the arts.
- 11/20/2009
- Vanity Fair
The Polaroids that fashion designer Stephen Sprouse took of his friends in his heyday look a lot like the scene at Allison Sarofim's "1980s downtown New York City"-themed party last weekend at the socialite's West Village home. Partygoers were decked out in everything from Day-Glo, graffiti-print outfits (Marc Jacobs and Lorenzo Martone) to Keith Haring–inspired fashions, to a very convincing Tama Janowitz getup. Even Interview-magazine veterans Bob Colacello and Glen O'Brien were there—in person. Herewith, a sampling of the ensembles that Vanity Fair photographer Todd Eberle captured at the Halloween party of the year.
- 11/2/2009
- Vanity Fair
Fifteen years after Ronald Reagan’s diagnosis of Alzheimer’s, and five years after his death, Nancy Reagan has triumphed over loneliness, grief, and a bad fall last year. At the former First Lady’s house, in Bel Air, California, the author gets her to sit down for a rare in-depth interview, covering the part she played in her husband’s White House, her dealings with the Bushes and Obamas, and her fight for stem-cell research.
- 6/25/2009
- Vanity Fair
1. Tony Blair. 2. Orlando Bloom. 3. Lou Reed. From PatrickMcMullan.com. Vf Daily’s picks for the top three parties around the globe last night. British Invasion What: Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter interviews British prime minister Tony Blair. Where: The Museum of Modern Art, New York City. Who: Tony Blair; Graydon Carter and his wife, Anna Carter; Ben Bradlee and Sally Quinn; Vanity Fair writers Fran Lebowitz, Dominick Dunne, Bob Colacello, and Christopher Hitchens and V.F. photographer Mario Testino; Diane von Furstenberg, Matt Lauer, Oscar de la Renta, Barbara Walters, Stephen Schwartzman, Vernon Jordan, Maria Bartiromo, and David Lauren. Why: Because the conversation ran the gamut from the Iraq war to the Queen's sex appeal, while the diverse crowd ranged from Brian Williams to Vivienne Westwood. Talking Points: Lots.
- 6/24/2009
- Vanity Fair
Former first lady Nancy Reagan shakes hands with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid in the Capitol Rotunda in Washington, Wednesday, June 3, 2009. Photo By J. Scott Applewhite/A.P. Images. The guiding light of modern Republicanism was bronzed and immortalized today, as a Ronald Reagan statue was unveiled in Washington, at a weepy ceremony in the Capitol rotunda. After paying your proper respects by gazing at this photo, read Bob Colacello’s story on Nancy Reagan in the June issue of Vanity Fair.
- 6/3/2009
- Vanity Fair
From the “social strategy” by which Nancy Reagan conquered the Georgetown elite to her role in Ronald Reagan’s daring “fireside chat” with Mikhail Gorbachev, part two of this intimate chronicle of the Reagans reveals her as perhaps the most influential First Lady in recent history. Margaret Thatcher, Michael Deaver, Richard Helms, and Nancy herself, among others, share memories of the secret lunches with Katharine Graham, the power struggle between Reagan’s California “Kitchen Cabinet” and the Washington establishment, and the trauma of the assassination attempt, for a portrait of the marriage that shaped a presidency—and an era.
- 5/29/2009
- Vanity Fair
The famous love story had a rocky start. Ronald Reagan was still pining for his ex-wife, Jane Wyman, in 1949, running up $750-a-month nightclub bills and throwing himself into his job as president of the Screen Actors Guild. Nancy Davis, proper Chicago debutante, was struggling to launch her own movie career while tongues wagged about her friendship with an MGM executive. In an excerpt from his new book, Bob Colacello lifts the veil on a courtship that was sparked by Hollywood’s anti-Communist frenzy and would change the political map forever.
- 5/29/2009
- Vanity Fair
As Ronald and Nancy Reagan struggle with his Alzheimer’s disease, surviving members of the powerful, wealthy inner circle that propelled them to the White House—which included Alfred and Betsy Bloomingdale, Earle and Marion Jorgensen, William and Betty Wilson, Walter and Lee Annenberg, Holmes Tuttle, and Justin Dart—open diaries and memories for the author. Part one of this two-part intimate history takes the Reagans from a 50s world of ranch outings and potluck picnics to the triumphal $16 million inauguration of 1981.
- 5/29/2009
- Vanity Fair
What’s it like being young and beautiful, with a 24-karat pedigree and inherited wealth, in populist, economically perilous 2009? The 38 heirs and heiresses who posed for Bruce Weber are making privilege count—many, like Ivanka Trump and Antoine Arnault, in the family business; some, like Mercedes-Benz scion Alex Flick, in areas of their own choosing. Checking out the C.V.’s of Kick Kennedy, Georgina Bloomberg, and Lapo Elkann, among others, V.F. surveys the next generation of some of the world’s greatest fortunes.
- 5/8/2009
- Vanity Fair
1. Josh Hartnett. 2. Paris Hilton and Doug Reinhardt. 3. Elle Macpherson. From PatrickMcMullan.com. Vf Daily’s picks for the top three parties around the globe last night. Raining Socials What: The New Yorkers for Children dinner dance. Where: Mandarin Oriental, New York City. Who: Josh Hartnett, Stephen Schwarzman, Serena Williams, Joy Bryant, Diane Kruger and Joshua Jackson, Vanity Fair special correspondent Bob Colacello, André Balazs, Olivia Palermo, Cat Deeley and Jack Huston, Rachel Zoe, Byrdie Bell, Fabiola Beracasa, Tinsley Mortimer, Gillian Hearst-Simonds, Rachel Roy, Coco Rocha, Zac Posen, Carson Kressley, Emmy Rossum, Lauren Santo Domingo, Poppy Delevigne, Eugenia Silvia, Andrew Saffir, Daniel Benedict, Robert Buckley, Selita Ebanks, Arlenis Sosa, Geraldo Rivera, Hana Soukupova, Brian Reyes, Maggie Betts, Maggie Rizer, Peggy Siegal, and the guy who writes about them all, Richard Johnson. Why: Because April showers brought out the society types for one of the biggest events in the spring social calendar.
- 4/16/2009
- Vanity Fair
Christopher Buckley - whose famous parents, William F. and Pat Buckley, died within months of each other after 57 years of marriage - is coming out with a book about them, "Losing Mom and Pop," in May - and it isn't going to be all sweetness and light.
"Writing this book may have been simply a way of spending more time with my parents before finally letting them go," Buckley, 56, tells Vanity Fair's Bob Colacello in the magazine's January issue.
"I honestly had no intention of writing about them.
"Writing this book may have been simply a way of spending more time with my parents before finally letting them go," Buckley, 56, tells Vanity Fair's Bob Colacello in the magazine's January issue.
"I honestly had no intention of writing about them.
- 12/1/2008
- NYPost.com
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