What do Walter White and Phil Dunphy have in common? They’re both at the center of the TV shows most honored by the Writers Guild of America today. The group just announced the nominees for its annual awards, which will be handed out Feb. 17 at simultaneous ceremonies in Los Angeles and New York. Breaking Bad garnered five nods; Modern Family drew four. Here’s a list of all the primetime and late night series in contention for the event’s biggest prizes:
Drama Series
Boardwalk Empire, Written by Dave Flebotte, Diane Frolov, Chris Haddock, Rolin Jones, Howard Korder, Steve Kornacki,...
Drama Series
Boardwalk Empire, Written by Dave Flebotte, Diane Frolov, Chris Haddock, Rolin Jones, Howard Korder, Steve Kornacki,...
- 12/6/2012
- by Hillary Busis
- EW - Inside TV
By Amanda Natiello
When I heard about last month's screening of Agenda, a film meant to "pay homage to another era of storytelling, the film noir genre," I was thrilled. Film noir offers so much for consideration: the aesthetics, the complex plot structures, hard-boiled detective characters and the debate about what makes a film noir. I see noir as both an aesthetic and a narrative style that evokes a certain era of movies, specifically the period immediately following World War II, and a specific genre of film, usually of the mystery or detective varieties.
In channeling what I knew of film noir and what I had read in James M. Cain's novels, I began to play detective, listening to conversations as patrons trickled in, and piecing together what information I could gather about filmmaker Jonathan de la Luz in the cocktail hour before the screening. He had at least one friend in the audience,...
When I heard about last month's screening of Agenda, a film meant to "pay homage to another era of storytelling, the film noir genre," I was thrilled. Film noir offers so much for consideration: the aesthetics, the complex plot structures, hard-boiled detective characters and the debate about what makes a film noir. I see noir as both an aesthetic and a narrative style that evokes a certain era of movies, specifically the period immediately following World War II, and a specific genre of film, usually of the mystery or detective varieties.
In channeling what I knew of film noir and what I had read in James M. Cain's novels, I began to play detective, listening to conversations as patrons trickled in, and piecing together what information I could gather about filmmaker Jonathan de la Luz in the cocktail hour before the screening. He had at least one friend in the audience,...
- 8/22/2012
- by Contributors
- Slackerwood
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