Breaking Glass Pictures plans to tug at your heartstrings with the release of their latest drama, “Last Summer,” on DVD and VOD (iTunes, Amazon Instant) Dec. 2. The film, directed Mark Thiedeman, stars Samuel Pettit and Sean Rose as boyfriends Luke and Jonah, respectively. The film, which as been described as a “masterpiece” by Filmmaker Magazine, focuses Luke and Jonah who struggle with their futures while spending their last months together before starting their adult lives. “‘Last Summer’ tells the story of two high school sweethearts, Luke and Jonah, who spend their final months together over the course of a long, quiet summer in the rural South, contemplating their uncertain [ Read More ]
The post Breaking Glass Pictures’ Last Summer Coming to DVD and VOD This December appeared first on Shockya.com.
The post Breaking Glass Pictures’ Last Summer Coming to DVD and VOD This December appeared first on Shockya.com.
- 10/6/2014
- by monique
- ShockYa
Lgbt sales company with Rotterdam/Gothenburg film and further four titles
French Lgbt distributor Outplay’s fledgling sales arm Outplay Films is making its first appearance at this year’s Efm with a line-up including Ester Martin Bergsmark’s Something Must Break straight from playing in competition in Rotterdam - where it won a Tiger - and Gothenburg.
The new outfit’s head of international acquisitions and sales Philippe Tasca also has lined up Moroccan writer-director Abdellah Taia’s Salvation Army; Argentinian film-maker Rodrigo Guerrero’s third feature The Third One; Yannick Delhaye’s documentary Hands Untied - Looking For Gay Cinema; and Mark Thiedeman’s debut Last Summer, which won the award for Best Director at last year’s Little Rock Film Festival.
Before coming onboard Outplay Films, Tasca had headed up his own sales company Rendez-vous Pictures for the last eight years.
Rendez-vous will no longer be acquiring new titles, although sales and...
French Lgbt distributor Outplay’s fledgling sales arm Outplay Films is making its first appearance at this year’s Efm with a line-up including Ester Martin Bergsmark’s Something Must Break straight from playing in competition in Rotterdam - where it won a Tiger - and Gothenburg.
The new outfit’s head of international acquisitions and sales Philippe Tasca also has lined up Moroccan writer-director Abdellah Taia’s Salvation Army; Argentinian film-maker Rodrigo Guerrero’s third feature The Third One; Yannick Delhaye’s documentary Hands Untied - Looking For Gay Cinema; and Mark Thiedeman’s debut Last Summer, which won the award for Best Director at last year’s Little Rock Film Festival.
Before coming onboard Outplay Films, Tasca had headed up his own sales company Rendez-vous Pictures for the last eight years.
Rendez-vous will no longer be acquiring new titles, although sales and...
- 2/9/2014
- by screen.berlin@googlemail.com (Martin Blaney)
- ScreenDaily
It's that time of year again -- or what used to be that time of year. NewFest is here (September 6-11). Yes, the celebration of gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, and what-have-you cinema is back for its 25th anniversary. The main venue will be the Film Society of Lincoln Center's Walter Reade Theater, considered by some to be the best cinema in Manhattan, one that boasts a truly superior sound system.
(Anyone who ever attended NewFest when it was held at the New School with its second-rate visuals and third-rate resonance will rejoice.)
In the past, this deliciously raucous event has screened a mixed bag of semi-brilliant to much-less-so offerings, many you'll never ever get to see anywhere else on a "big" screen whether you reside in the Big Apple or in Idaho. On the plus side, watching a woefully dreadful movie with a roomful of knowing Glbtq cinephiles is often a hoot.
(Anyone who ever attended NewFest when it was held at the New School with its second-rate visuals and third-rate resonance will rejoice.)
In the past, this deliciously raucous event has screened a mixed bag of semi-brilliant to much-less-so offerings, many you'll never ever get to see anywhere else on a "big" screen whether you reside in the Big Apple or in Idaho. On the plus side, watching a woefully dreadful movie with a roomful of knowing Glbtq cinephiles is often a hoot.
- 8/26/2013
- by Brandon Judell
- www.culturecatch.com
The top stories of the week from Toh! Reviews: "Pacific Rim" Review: Del Toro's Monster-Scale Epic Needs You! Don't Miss the New 35mm Restoration of Antonioni's "L'Avventura," Starting July 12 in New York and La Review: In Vinterberg's Riveting "The Hunt," Mikkelsen Plays a Man Wrongly Accused of Society's Worst Crime Features: Rinko Kikuchi: Actress on Fire in "Pacific Rim" Outfest: Review: Young Lovers Go Asunder in Mark Thiedeman's Lyrical Debut "Last Summer" Review: David Sedaris Adaptation "C.O.G." a Charming Coming-of-Age Picaresque Outfest Weekend Preview: What Films to See and Why We Need the Festival Television: "The Newsroom" 2.1: "First Thing We Do, Let's Kill All the Lawyers" News: Studios Sticking with Hulu Read This: Harvey Weinstein Calls Errol Morris "Boring" in 1988 Letter About "Thin Blue Line" Interview In the Works: Ava DuVernay to Direct Martin Luther King Biopic "Selma" Box Office: Will "Pacific Rim" Open Better Than Predicted?...
- 7/15/2013
- by TOH!
- Thompson on Hollywood
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