Award-winning filmmakers are helpin filmmakers develop their projects at the Doha Film Institute’s Qumra event.
International filmmakers Talal Derki, Tala Hadid and Annemarie Jacir are among the lead mentors at this year’s edition of the Doha Film Institute’s talent and project incubator Qumra, running online March 18 to 25.
They reveal their own career breakthrough moments and the lessons learned that they now pass onto a new generation of filmmakers.
Syrian documentarian Talal Derki
What got you into film?
I belong to the generation that grew up with film as an art and way of giving a story meaning...
International filmmakers Talal Derki, Tala Hadid and Annemarie Jacir are among the lead mentors at this year’s edition of the Doha Film Institute’s talent and project incubator Qumra, running online March 18 to 25.
They reveal their own career breakthrough moments and the lessons learned that they now pass onto a new generation of filmmakers.
Syrian documentarian Talal Derki
What got you into film?
I belong to the generation that grew up with film as an art and way of giving a story meaning...
- 3/21/2022
- by Melanie Goodfellow
- ScreenDaily
A German producer’s hopes to attend Sunday’s Academy Awards ceremony, where his film is up for an Oscar, look likely to be dashed by tightened U.S. Department of Homeland Security restrictions and increased bureaucracy.
Hans Robert Eisenhauer is one of the producers of “Of Fathers and Sons,” director Talal Derki’s film about a radical Islamist family in Syria, which is nominated for best documentary feature.
Eisenhauer, managing director of Berlin-based production shingle Ventana Film, produced the film with Ansgar Frerich, Eva Kemme and Tobias N. Siebert of Basis Berlin Filmproduktion. While Derki and the other producers will be in Los Angeles for the Oscars, it looks increasingly likely that Eisenhauer’s past travels will keep him from entering the U.S.
Eisenhauer, a former senior commissioning editor at German pubcaster Zdf as well as deputy program director of Arte, spent three days in Iraq in 2016 as...
Hans Robert Eisenhauer is one of the producers of “Of Fathers and Sons,” director Talal Derki’s film about a radical Islamist family in Syria, which is nominated for best documentary feature.
Eisenhauer, managing director of Berlin-based production shingle Ventana Film, produced the film with Ansgar Frerich, Eva Kemme and Tobias N. Siebert of Basis Berlin Filmproduktion. While Derki and the other producers will be in Los Angeles for the Oscars, it looks increasingly likely that Eisenhauer’s past travels will keep him from entering the U.S.
Eisenhauer, a former senior commissioning editor at German pubcaster Zdf as well as deputy program director of Arte, spent three days in Iraq in 2016 as...
- 2/21/2019
- by Ed Meza
- Variety Film + TV
Exclusive: Cinema Eye Honors said that Eyes on the Prize, the landmark civil rights docuseries that first aired on public television in 1987, will receive the group’s 2019 Legacy Award. The honor will be bestowed January 10 during the 12th annual Cinema Eye Honors awards ceremony in New York.
“For me and so many others, Eyes on the Prize was a transformational cinematic experience, artfully crafting the history of a nation into an unforgettable story,” Cinema Eye board co-chair Dawn Porter said Thursday. “Countless filmmakers have been inspired by this elegant body of work.”
Created and by the late Henry Hampton’s Blackside, the 14-part Eyes on the Prize is considered the definitive documentary record of the American civil rights era, tracing the country’s long and brutal march toward equality and the fight to end decades of discrimination and segregation. It aired in two parts, the first covering the years 1954–1965 and...
“For me and so many others, Eyes on the Prize was a transformational cinematic experience, artfully crafting the history of a nation into an unforgettable story,” Cinema Eye board co-chair Dawn Porter said Thursday. “Countless filmmakers have been inspired by this elegant body of work.”
Created and by the late Henry Hampton’s Blackside, the 14-part Eyes on the Prize is considered the definitive documentary record of the American civil rights era, tracing the country’s long and brutal march toward equality and the fight to end decades of discrimination and segregation. It aired in two parts, the first covering the years 1954–1965 and...
- 12/20/2018
- by Patrick Hipes
- Deadline Film + TV
The Cinema Eye Honors, which annually presents awards to “celebrate outstanding artistry and craft in nonfiction film,” has revealed its nominees in 10 categories, including Outstanding Nonfiction Feature and Outstanding Nonfiction Short. Multiple nominees include Robert Greene’s ”Bisbee ‘17,” Sandi Tan’s “Shirkers,” and RaMell Ross’ ”Hale County This Morning, This Evening,” with five nods each. While Greene is a Cinema Eye Honors vet, both Tan and Ross are first-time filmmakers.
Another first-time filmmaker on the rise: Bing Liu, whose autobiographical skateboarding doc “Minding the Gap,” leads the nominees with a total of seven nominations. That’s good enough to put the newbie filmmaker into rarefied territory, tying his film with lauded documentaries like Louie Psihoyos’ ”The Cove,” Lixin Fan’s ”Last Train Home,” and Ari Folman’s “Waltz With Bashir” for most Cinema Eye Honors nods ever. As Liu is a named nominee for six of those awards, he’s...
Another first-time filmmaker on the rise: Bing Liu, whose autobiographical skateboarding doc “Minding the Gap,” leads the nominees with a total of seven nominations. That’s good enough to put the newbie filmmaker into rarefied territory, tying his film with lauded documentaries like Louie Psihoyos’ ”The Cove,” Lixin Fan’s ”Last Train Home,” and Ari Folman’s “Waltz With Bashir” for most Cinema Eye Honors nods ever. As Liu is a named nominee for six of those awards, he’s...
- 11/8/2018
- by Kate Erbland
- Indiewire
“Minding the Gap,” a documentary that mixes stories of skateboarding teens with a dark family story, led all films in nominations for the Cinema Eye Honors, one of the top awards devoted to all facets of nonfiction filmmaking.
Bing Liu’s highly personal film tied a Cinema Eye record by receiving seven nominations overall, one in a previously announced category and six in the 10 categories that Cinema Eye announced on Thursday. Those included nominations for directing, editing, cinematography and music, as well as one in the marquee category, Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Feature Filmmaking.
Other nominees in that category were Robert Greene’s “Bisbee ’17,” RaMell Ross’ “Hale County This Morning, This Evening,” Talal Derki’s “Of Fathers and Son,” Tim Wardle’s “Three Identical Strangers” and the 12th highest-grossing documentary of all time, Morgan Neville’s “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?”
Also Read: 'Minding the Gap' Film Review: Powerful...
Bing Liu’s highly personal film tied a Cinema Eye record by receiving seven nominations overall, one in a previously announced category and six in the 10 categories that Cinema Eye announced on Thursday. Those included nominations for directing, editing, cinematography and music, as well as one in the marquee category, Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Feature Filmmaking.
Other nominees in that category were Robert Greene’s “Bisbee ’17,” RaMell Ross’ “Hale County This Morning, This Evening,” Talal Derki’s “Of Fathers and Son,” Tim Wardle’s “Three Identical Strangers” and the 12th highest-grossing documentary of all time, Morgan Neville’s “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?”
Also Read: 'Minding the Gap' Film Review: Powerful...
- 11/8/2018
- by Steve Pond
- The Wrap
“Dark Money,” “Free Solo,” “Minding the Gap,” “The Silence of Others” and “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?” have been nominated for the top film award at the International Documentary Association’s 2018 Ida Documentary Awards, the Ida announced on Wednesday.
Those five films will be joined in the feature category by another five: “Crime + Punishment,” “Hale County This Morning, This Evening,” “Of Fathers and Sons,” “Sky and Ground” and “United Skates.”
The 10 Ida Documentary Awards feature nominees is the largest number ever nominated in the category, which has typically consisted of five films. Half of the films were directed by women.
Also Read: 'Free Solo' Leads Critics' Choice Documentary Awards Nominations
Missing from the list are a few of the most successful docs of the year, including “Rbg,” “Three Identical Strangers” and “Fahrenheit 11/9.”
In the television categories, nominees include “American Masters,” “Pov” and “Independent Lens” in Curated Series,...
Those five films will be joined in the feature category by another five: “Crime + Punishment,” “Hale County This Morning, This Evening,” “Of Fathers and Sons,” “Sky and Ground” and “United Skates.”
The 10 Ida Documentary Awards feature nominees is the largest number ever nominated in the category, which has typically consisted of five films. Half of the films were directed by women.
Also Read: 'Free Solo' Leads Critics' Choice Documentary Awards Nominations
Missing from the list are a few of the most successful docs of the year, including “Rbg,” “Three Identical Strangers” and “Fahrenheit 11/9.”
In the television categories, nominees include “American Masters,” “Pov” and “Independent Lens” in Curated Series,...
- 10/24/2018
- by Steve Pond
- The Wrap
With the sprawling number of high-caliber documentaries flooding every platform and clamoring for attention, the International Documentary Association Awards are a crucial curator pointing other awards groups in the direction of what they need to see. Academy documentary branch members, who are inundated with hundreds of movies to watch, aren’t necessarily keeping track of which movies won awards at festivals along the way.
So far, the influential Doc NYC shortlist and the Critics Choice Documentary Award nominees also included many of the Ida’s feature picks: On all three lists are Stephen Maing’s NYPD expose “Crime + Punishment,” fall box office hit E. Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin’s vertiginous “Free Solo,” rookie filmmaker Bing Liu’s “Minding the Gap,” and Morgan Neville’s summer box office phenomenon “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?,” an emotionally wrenching portrait of the late TV star Fred Rogers.
Making two out...
So far, the influential Doc NYC shortlist and the Critics Choice Documentary Award nominees also included many of the Ida’s feature picks: On all three lists are Stephen Maing’s NYPD expose “Crime + Punishment,” fall box office hit E. Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin’s vertiginous “Free Solo,” rookie filmmaker Bing Liu’s “Minding the Gap,” and Morgan Neville’s summer box office phenomenon “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?,” an emotionally wrenching portrait of the late TV star Fred Rogers.
Making two out...
- 10/24/2018
- by Anne Thompson
- Indiewire
The International Documentary Assn. announced nominees for the 34th annual Ida Awards Wednesday, spotlighting the best in documentary filmmaking.
Among the feature nominees were mainstays on the circuit so far this year like Hulu’s “Crime + Punishment” and “Minding the Gap,” as well as National Geographic’s “Free Solo” and Focus Features’ “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?”
In recognition of another banner year for non-fiction cinema, which has been reflected in box office spikes around key titles this year, the Ida expanded the number of nominees in the best feature and short films categories to 10 films.
In “creative recognition” fields, winners and nominees were announced. “Distant Constellation” won the cinematography prize, while “Minding the Gap” took editing. “The Other Side of Everything” won the writing award, and the music category saw a tie, between “Bisbee ’17” and “Hale County This Morning, This Evening.”
Additionally, the Ida’s Courage Under...
Among the feature nominees were mainstays on the circuit so far this year like Hulu’s “Crime + Punishment” and “Minding the Gap,” as well as National Geographic’s “Free Solo” and Focus Features’ “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?”
In recognition of another banner year for non-fiction cinema, which has been reflected in box office spikes around key titles this year, the Ida expanded the number of nominees in the best feature and short films categories to 10 films.
In “creative recognition” fields, winners and nominees were announced. “Distant Constellation” won the cinematography prize, while “Minding the Gap” took editing. “The Other Side of Everything” won the writing award, and the music category saw a tie, between “Bisbee ’17” and “Hale County This Morning, This Evening.”
Additionally, the Ida’s Courage Under...
- 10/24/2018
- by Kristopher Tapley
- Variety Film + TV
The International Documentary Association is out with the nominees for its 2018 Ida Documentary Awards. Winners of the 34th edition will be announced December 8 duyring a ceremony hosted by Ricki Lake at Paramount Studios in Los Angeles. See the full list of nominees below.
Up for Best Feature — which has been expanded to 10 nominees this year — are Stephen Maing’s Crime + Punishment, Kimberly Reed’s Dark Money, E. Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin’s Free Solo, RaMell Ross’ Hale County This Morning, This Evening, Bing Liu’s Minding the Gap, Talal Derki’s Of Fathers and Sons, Talya Tibbon and Joshua Bennett’s Sky and Ground, Almudena Carracedo and Robert Bahar’s The Silence of Others, Dyana Winkler and Tina Brown’s United Skates and Morgan Neville’s Won’t You Be My Neighbor.
“This year’s nominees and winners of the Ida Awards reflects that 2018 has been a remarkable...
Up for Best Feature — which has been expanded to 10 nominees this year — are Stephen Maing’s Crime + Punishment, Kimberly Reed’s Dark Money, E. Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin’s Free Solo, RaMell Ross’ Hale County This Morning, This Evening, Bing Liu’s Minding the Gap, Talal Derki’s Of Fathers and Sons, Talya Tibbon and Joshua Bennett’s Sky and Ground, Almudena Carracedo and Robert Bahar’s The Silence of Others, Dyana Winkler and Tina Brown’s United Skates and Morgan Neville’s Won’t You Be My Neighbor.
“This year’s nominees and winners of the Ida Awards reflects that 2018 has been a remarkable...
- 10/24/2018
- by Erik Pedersen
- Deadline Film + TV
Simon Lereng Wilmont’s ‘The Distant Barking Of Dogs’ took the award for best international film.
Israeli documentary festival Docaviv has awarded prizes at its 20th anniversary edition, with Simon Lereng Wimont’s The Distant Barking Of Dogs taking the award for best international film
The film, which follows the life of a ten-year old who grows up on the frontline of a war in Ukraine, was described as “highly accomplished” by jury members Hans Robert Eisenhauer, Anna Zamecka and Avida Livny.
Full list of winners below
It receives a prize of 20,000 Ils. An honourable mention went to Ruth Beckermann’s The Waldheim Waltz.
Israeli documentary festival Docaviv has awarded prizes at its 20th anniversary edition, with Simon Lereng Wimont’s The Distant Barking Of Dogs taking the award for best international film
The film, which follows the life of a ten-year old who grows up on the frontline of a war in Ukraine, was described as “highly accomplished” by jury members Hans Robert Eisenhauer, Anna Zamecka and Avida Livny.
Full list of winners below
It receives a prize of 20,000 Ils. An honourable mention went to Ruth Beckermann’s The Waldheim Waltz.
- 5/24/2018
- by Ben Dalton
- ScreenDaily
Simon Lereng Wilmont’s film took the award for best international film.
Israeli documentary festival Docaviv has awarded prizes at its 20th anniversary edition, with Simon Lereng Wimont’s The Distant Barking Of Dogs taking the award for best international film
The film, which follows the life of a ten-year old who grows up on the frontline of a war in Ukraine, was described as “highly accomplished” by jury members Hans Robert Eisenhauer, Anna Zamecka and Avida Livny.
Full list of winners below
It receives a prize of 20,000 Ils. An honourable mention went to Ruth Beckermann’s The Waldheim Waltz.
Israeli documentary festival Docaviv has awarded prizes at its 20th anniversary edition, with Simon Lereng Wimont’s The Distant Barking Of Dogs taking the award for best international film
The film, which follows the life of a ten-year old who grows up on the frontline of a war in Ukraine, was described as “highly accomplished” by jury members Hans Robert Eisenhauer, Anna Zamecka and Avida Livny.
Full list of winners below
It receives a prize of 20,000 Ils. An honourable mention went to Ruth Beckermann’s The Waldheim Waltz.
- 5/24/2018
- by Ben Dalton
- ScreenDaily
Kino Lorber has acquired U.S. rights to the Talal Derki-directed documentary Of Fathers and Sons, which picked up the World Cinema Grand Jury Prize Award earlier this year at Sundance. The film will be released in theaters in the Fall of 2018 followed by VOD and home video releases are scheduled for early 2019. In the doc, Derki returns to his homeland where he gained the trust of Abu Osama, one of the founders and front members of Al-Nusra, the Syrian arm of Al-Qaeda. He spent two and a half years documenting Osama and his eight young sons who are on the path to becoming Jihadi fighters. Producers are Hans Robert Eisenhauer, Ansgar Frerich, Eva Kemme, and Tobias Siebert. Richard Lorber and Wendy Lidell of Kino negotiated the deal with Nick Shumaker of UTA, Dan Cogan of Impact Partners and Tobias Siebert from Basis Berlin.
Grasshopper Film has obtained the U.
Grasshopper Film has obtained the U.
- 5/7/2018
- by Amanda N'Duka
- Deadline Film + TV
by Peter BelsitoThis was the most shocking film I saw at Sundance.A documentary about a Syrian family, a father and his young sons, over a few years where the father is a committed fanatic Jihadist fighter as he raises several of his boys to follow his lead.
No female appears in the film at all here even though they are obviously living in the house with family during the protracted filming.
Syrian filmmaker Talal Derki was most recently at the Sundance Film Festival in 2014 with The Return to Homs, which won the World Cinema Documentary Grand Jury Prize.
Once again, Derki returns to his homeland, upping the ante of danger to new heights by posing as a pro-jihadist photojournalist making a documentary on the rise of the caliphate.
The result is an unfettered vérité portrait of al-Nusra general Abu Osama — a radical Islamist leader and loving father — and the...
No female appears in the film at all here even though they are obviously living in the house with family during the protracted filming.
Syrian filmmaker Talal Derki was most recently at the Sundance Film Festival in 2014 with The Return to Homs, which won the World Cinema Documentary Grand Jury Prize.
Once again, Derki returns to his homeland, upping the ante of danger to new heights by posing as a pro-jihadist photojournalist making a documentary on the rise of the caliphate.
The result is an unfettered vérité portrait of al-Nusra general Abu Osama — a radical Islamist leader and loving father — and the...
- 2/5/2018
- by Sydney Levine
- Sydney's Buzz
With the 2018 Sundance Film Festival concluding this weekend, the award winners have now been unveiled. Leading the pack of jury prize winners are Desiree Akhavan’s The Miseducation of Cameron Post on the dramatic side and Derek Doneen’s Kailash on the documentary side. Ahead of our picks for our favorite films (update: see here), check out the winners below, with links to our coverage where available.
The U.S. Grand Jury Prize: Documentary was presented by Simon Chin to:
Kailash / U.S.A. (Director: Derek Doneen, Producers: Davis Guggenheim, Sarah Anthony) — As a young man, Kailash Satyarthi promised himself that he would end child slavery in his lifetime. In the decades since, he has rescued more than eighty thousand children and built a global movement. This intimate and suspenseful film follows one man’s journey to do what many believed was impossible.
The U.S. Grand Jury Prize: Dramatic...
The U.S. Grand Jury Prize: Documentary was presented by Simon Chin to:
Kailash / U.S.A. (Director: Derek Doneen, Producers: Davis Guggenheim, Sarah Anthony) — As a young man, Kailash Satyarthi promised himself that he would end child slavery in his lifetime. In the decades since, he has rescued more than eighty thousand children and built a global movement. This intimate and suspenseful film follows one man’s journey to do what many believed was impossible.
The U.S. Grand Jury Prize: Dramatic...
- 1/28/2018
- by Jordan Raup
- The Film Stage
Further reminding us that the Academy Awards are irrelevant in year-end discussions for the best in documentary film, according to the experts at the Cinema Eye Honors’ voting committee, Laura Poitras’ Citizenfour, Steve James’ Life Itself and Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard’s 20,000 Days on Earth would be among the best docu films of the year, leading the pack in almost all categories. Not to be overlooked, Jesse Moss’ The Overnighters and Robert Greene’s Actress received kudos in Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Feature Filmmaking and Outstanding Achievement in Direction while the major surprise of the noms belongs to Orlando von Einsiedel’s Virunga (presented at the Tribeca and Hot Docs Film Fests) grabbing a total of three. Left completely off the scorecard, Manakamana failed to produce a single nom. The Cinema Eye Honors winners will be announced on Wednesday, January 7 at New York’s Museum of the Moving Image.
- 11/13/2014
- by Eric Lavallee
- IONCINEMA.com
London-based firm acquires Sundance winning documentary; secures sales.
Journeyman Pictures has picked up worldwide distribution rights for Talal Derki’s Syrian conflict doc Return to Homs, which won the Grand Jury Prize for World Cinema Documentary at the Sundance Film Festival last month.
The deal was negotiated with producers Proaction Film and Ventana Film.
The documentary, which opened Idfa last November, charts the journey of two close friends whose lives had been upended by the battle raging in the Syrian city of Homs.
It has already been sold for TV to France/Germany (Arte), Japan (Nhk), Switzerland (Rts), Sweden (Svt) and Radio Canada. Producers are Orwa Nyrabia and Hans-Robert Eisenhauer.
The film was acquired by Edward Caffrey, Journeyman’s head of documentary acquisitions and sales, who said: “Following the film’s success at Sundance there has been significant interest from theatrical, digital and broadcast buyers around the world, and in the coming weeks we expect to have...
Journeyman Pictures has picked up worldwide distribution rights for Talal Derki’s Syrian conflict doc Return to Homs, which won the Grand Jury Prize for World Cinema Documentary at the Sundance Film Festival last month.
The deal was negotiated with producers Proaction Film and Ventana Film.
The documentary, which opened Idfa last November, charts the journey of two close friends whose lives had been upended by the battle raging in the Syrian city of Homs.
It has already been sold for TV to France/Germany (Arte), Japan (Nhk), Switzerland (Rts), Sweden (Svt) and Radio Canada. Producers are Orwa Nyrabia and Hans-Robert Eisenhauer.
The film was acquired by Edward Caffrey, Journeyman’s head of documentary acquisitions and sales, who said: “Following the film’s success at Sundance there has been significant interest from theatrical, digital and broadcast buyers around the world, and in the coming weeks we expect to have...
- 2/13/2014
- ScreenDaily
Feature documentary is about two Syrian friends in devastated city of Homs.
Idfa will open on Nov 20 with Return to Homs by Syrian diretor Talal Derki.
The documentary follows two Syrian friends in the devastated city of Homs, who move from peaceful protest to armed resistance. It was filmed from August 2011 to August 2013.
The Idfa Bertha Fund backed the project, which is produced by Orwa Nyrabia (Syria) and Hans Robert Eisenhauer (Germany). It was presented at Idfa Forum in 2012.
Derki studied film in Athens and his past work includes A Full Line of Trees (2005), Hero of all Seas (2010) and Lajat (2012).
Idfa runs Nov 20-Dec 1. More on the lineup here.
Idfa will open on Nov 20 with Return to Homs by Syrian diretor Talal Derki.
The documentary follows two Syrian friends in the devastated city of Homs, who move from peaceful protest to armed resistance. It was filmed from August 2011 to August 2013.
The Idfa Bertha Fund backed the project, which is produced by Orwa Nyrabia (Syria) and Hans Robert Eisenhauer (Germany). It was presented at Idfa Forum in 2012.
Derki studied film in Athens and his past work includes A Full Line of Trees (2005), Hero of all Seas (2010) and Lajat (2012).
Idfa runs Nov 20-Dec 1. More on the lineup here.
- 10/15/2013
- by wendy.mitchell@screendaily.com (Wendy Mitchell)
- ScreenDaily
HBO has picked up the U.S. TV rights to the feature documentary "Sins of My Father," an official selection in the World Documentary competition at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival.
It is slated to premiere on the pay cable network this year, possibly in the fall.
"Sins," directed and produced by New York-based Argentinean filmmaker Nicolas Entel, tells the inside story of Pablo Escobar, the most notorious drug lord in Colombian history, through the eyes of his son, Sebastian Marroquin, who changed his name and fled Colombia after his father's death.
The documentary features interviews with Marroquin and his mother, Maria Victoria, as well as never before seen pictures and home movies from the Escobar archive. It also has Marroquin meeting the sons of prominent political figures, including Luis Carlos Galan Sarmiento, killed by Escobar and his men 20 years ago.
"Sins" took four years to make, said Entel, who came to the U.
It is slated to premiere on the pay cable network this year, possibly in the fall.
"Sins," directed and produced by New York-based Argentinean filmmaker Nicolas Entel, tells the inside story of Pablo Escobar, the most notorious drug lord in Colombian history, through the eyes of his son, Sebastian Marroquin, who changed his name and fled Colombia after his father's death.
The documentary features interviews with Marroquin and his mother, Maria Victoria, as well as never before seen pictures and home movies from the Escobar archive. It also has Marroquin meeting the sons of prominent political figures, including Luis Carlos Galan Sarmiento, killed by Escobar and his men 20 years ago.
"Sins" took four years to make, said Entel, who came to the U.
- 1/7/2010
- by By Nellie Andreeva
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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