The 17th annual Boston Underground Film Festival is set to explode all over the Brattle Theater in Harvard Square on March 25-29.
Opening Night: The fun kicks off on the 25th at 7:30 p.m. with the exciting new flick from the always amazing Astron-6 collective, The Editor, an homage to the brutal Giallo movies of the ’70s and ’80s directed by Adam Brooks and Matthew Kennedy. This will be followed by the restored version of the legendary cult classic Gone With the Pope by the notorious Duke Mitchell.
Closing Night: Goodnight Mommy the debut feature film by Severin Fiala and Veronika Franz, will screen at 8:30 p.m. on the 29th and is a nightmarish vision of familial dread when twin brothers believe their cosmetically altered mother is literally not the woman she used to be.
Other features include a mix of horror, like Matt O’Mahoney’s...
Opening Night: The fun kicks off on the 25th at 7:30 p.m. with the exciting new flick from the always amazing Astron-6 collective, The Editor, an homage to the brutal Giallo movies of the ’70s and ’80s directed by Adam Brooks and Matthew Kennedy. This will be followed by the restored version of the legendary cult classic Gone With the Pope by the notorious Duke Mitchell.
Closing Night: Goodnight Mommy the debut feature film by Severin Fiala and Veronika Franz, will screen at 8:30 p.m. on the 29th and is a nightmarish vision of familial dread when twin brothers believe their cosmetically altered mother is literally not the woman she used to be.
Other features include a mix of horror, like Matt O’Mahoney’s...
- 3/12/2015
- by Mike Everleth
- Underground Film Journal
Last night, Lifetime premiered its destined to be Peabody-, Emmy-, Golden Globe-, and (why not?) Nobel Prize-winning film Anna Nicole. A prestigious (and I must add, courageous) group of EW staffers convened at my apartment to see whether the biopic could give Citizen Kane a run for its money. Read on for a sampling of our reactions to Anna Nicole.
8 p.m.: Any movie that starts with a dead woman defining herself as a “balls-to-the-wall party girl” is my kind of movie.
8:01 p.m.: The credits begin to roll, in Brush Script Mt font no less (classy!
8 p.m.: Any movie that starts with a dead woman defining herself as a “balls-to-the-wall party girl” is my kind of movie.
8:01 p.m.: The credits begin to roll, in Brush Script Mt font no less (classy!
- 6/30/2013
- by Lanford Beard
- EW.com - PopWatch
Dave Vescio is one of Hollywood’s most talented up-and-coming actors and has achieved much recognition through his mastery of playing villainous and evil roles. Dave, having been featured in over two dozen short films in the past 2 years, including, “Blue Hour” and “Q for Death,” is currently focusing on his newest role as a villain in 2012’s Hick. This coming of age story about a 13 year olds life on the road, stars Alec Baldwin, Blake Lively, Juliette Lewis, Chloe Moretz, Eddie Redmayne and Rory Culkin. Hick, produced by the very talented Derick Martini, was just recently unveiled to buyers at this years’ Cannes Film Festival which we'll get deeper into. Check out my latest Versus with actor Dave Vescio.
Brian S- First off, tell me how you got into acting.
Dave Vescio- I actually didn’t start acting until the age of 32. Before that, I was a TV photojournalist for CBS News.
Brian S- First off, tell me how you got into acting.
Dave Vescio- I actually didn’t start acting until the age of 32. Before that, I was a TV photojournalist for CBS News.
- 6/18/2011
- by brians
- GeekTyrant
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