Christmas with Art the Clown: DP George Steuber on Terrifier 3

A clown in a Santa suit wields a chainsaw.

Movies are a uniquely collaborative art form. A painting, a novel or a song can be created in solitude, but you can’t make a commercial narrative film by yourself. That said, the original Terrifier came about as close as you can get: Writer-director Damien Leone is also credited for producing, editing, special make-up effects, visual effects, sound design and props. In addition to putting up money, producer Phil Falcone served as UPM, AD and stunt driver and also assisted with the effects. As for cinematographer George Steuber, he was the entirety of the camera department. He operated, pulled his own […]

The post Christmas with Art the Clown: DP George Steuber on Terrifier 3 first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.

Christmas with Art the Clown: DP George Steuber on Terrifier 3 Read More »

The Ten Best Undistributed Films of 2024

A bicycle messenger wearing a mask sets out on his trip at night.

This year was a peak travel year for me, mostly festival-enabled, and I was pleased by the number of good films I was privileged to see along the way that I wouldn’t have otherwise. While the globalization of film via the internet has improved access all round, it’s a mistake to think that everything good winds up somewhere legally accessible, even if only as an obscure VOD option. Some films remain unaccounted for, which is both unfortunate and a reminder of how many good films there remain to see. Here are ten of the year’s best, with links to their longer […]

The post The Ten Best Undistributed Films of 2024 first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.

The Ten Best Undistributed Films of 2024 Read More »

“Another Guy, Another Wig,” Alessandro Nivola Returns to Talk about Almodóvar, The Brutalist, and The Rhino: Back To One, Episode 322

Alessandro Nivola returns to the podcast (Ep. 37 and Ep.170) to discuss three performances he gives in three different films out at the same time this week—Pedro Almodóvar’s The Room Next Door, The Brutalist, and Kraven The Hunter. He gifts us with a detailed peek into what it took to build each of these characters. He talks about the interesting way he received a “green light” from Almodóvar in terms of his approach to the role of an Upstate New York policeman, the challenge of balancing adherence to period authenticity with a modern accessibly as Attila in Brady Corbet’s epic, […]

The post “Another Guy, Another Wig,” Alessandro Nivola Returns to Talk about Almodóvar, The Brutalist, and The Rhino: Back To One, Episode 322 first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.

“Another Guy, Another Wig,” Alessandro Nivola Returns to Talk about Almodóvar, The Brutalist, and The Rhino: Back To One, Episode 322 Read More »

Cinema is Not a Sport: My End of the Year List, 2024

At the end of each year comes the excitement of listing my favorite released films. This is a moment where I like to reflect on the status of modern cinema. When great films populate my list, ones that make my heart pound, I become alit with hope. Great is the desire to believe in the work being made today, especially as the gems of today’s moviemaking are often found on the deeper pages of Letterboxd.com’s most popular movies. In the 1950s, for example, the most critically lauded films are ranked at the top of page #1, sorted by the most popular […]

The post Cinema is Not a Sport: My End of the Year List, 2024 first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.

Cinema is Not a Sport: My End of the Year List, 2024 Read More »

Creating Composed Chaos: DP Jasper Wolf on Babygirl 

A woman drinks a glass of milk.

Just as its characters shift roles in their erotic game of cat and mouse, Halina Reijn’s third feature Babygirl fluently shifts between erotic thriller, existential melodrama and corporate satire. At the center is Nicole Kidman role as Romy, a successful CEO of a high-powered New York-based e-commerce company who relinquishes her sense of control when a chance encounter with a new company intern (Harris Dickinson) plunges Romy into the erotic chaos of a BDSM-charged relationship. Babygirl carefully traces how the seismic shifts of this newfound dom-sub dynamic open up an emotional rift in Romy, resulting in an explosive and messy […]

The post Creating Composed Chaos: DP Jasper Wolf on Babygirl  first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.

Creating Composed Chaos: DP Jasper Wolf on Babygirl  Read More »

“Apple Changed the Whole Landscape of How You Market a Product”: Sebastian Pardo on Crafting Graphic Design for The Brutalist

In late October, A24 dropped a teaser for their highly anticipated The Brutalist, where glimpses of Brady Corbet’s epic flash by as credits and review pullquotes horizontally crawl across the screen like the VistaVision-format celluloid that ran through the camera to capture the picture. It’s a sharp piece of trailer design that formally evokes the experience of the film as much as it serves as a piece of marketing. The design of the scroll also summons the Bauhaus stylings that inspire the architecture of The Brutalist’s subject, László Tóth (Adrien Brody), highlighting the words on screen around evocations of the […]

The post “Apple Changed the Whole Landscape of How You Market a Product”: Sebastian Pardo on Crafting Graphic Design for The Brutalist first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.

“Apple Changed the Whole Landscape of How You Market a Product”: Sebastian Pardo on Crafting Graphic Design for The Brutalist Read More »

“The Process of Dehumanization that Happened to the Palestinians”: Kamal Aljafari on A Fidai Film

The red silhouettes of two young boys stand in a black-and-white doorway.

It’s been a busy year for Kamal Aljafari.  One of the most innovative voices working in contemporary found footage cinema, the Palestinian filmmaker’s latest feature, A Fidai Film (which premiered this past spring at Visions du Reel in Nyon, Switzerland, where it won the Jury Award of the Burning Lights section) has propelled him to a wholly new level of fame – and deservedly so. Often traveling alongside his latest short film, UNDR (which premiered at IFFR), A Fidai Film has been screened in almost three dozen festivals, while Aljafari has been the subject of two major retrospectives at Anthology […]

The post “The Process of Dehumanization that Happened to the Palestinians”: Kamal Aljafari on A Fidai Film first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.

“The Process of Dehumanization that Happened to the Palestinians”: Kamal Aljafari on A Fidai Film Read More »

The Animals Around Us: Amalia Ulman Visits Isabella Rossellini

A woman and a sheep.

In the first of a series on filmmakers and their relationship to the animal world, artist, director, writer and actress Amalia Ulman visits with actress, director (of the short film series Green Porno, among others), model and animal behaviorist Isabella Rossellini at her regenerative farm, Mama Farm. Rossellini can currently be seen on screen in Edward Berger’s Conclave playing Vatican nun Sister Agnes, while El Planeta director Ulman’s newest film is Magic Farm, premiering at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival. Photographs by Amalia Ulman.  On October 2, I visited Isabella Rossellini’s farm with Gabriella. We took the train from Penn […]

The post The Animals Around Us: Amalia Ulman Visits Isabella Rossellini first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.

The Animals Around Us: Amalia Ulman Visits Isabella Rossellini Read More »

Hits & Misses 2024: Case Studies of Six Sundance 2024 Premieres

In September, Variety declared, “Indie Films Are Staging a Box Office Comeback,” touting the success of the films Longlegs, Thelma and Late Night with the Devil as signs of life for a segment of the industry “crushed by COVID, strikes and streaming,” as reporter Brent Lang wrote. “And while it’s a long way from the arthouse heyday of the 1990s and early aughts, the turnaround is impressive.”  Maybe not that impressive.  Citing the more than $100 million global gross of Longlegs, a NEON-produced wide-release serial-killer movie, as some kind of indie darling misses the point. Thelma and Late Night are […]

The post Hits & Misses 2024: Case Studies of Six Sundance 2024 Premieres first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.

Hits & Misses 2024: Case Studies of Six Sundance 2024 Premieres Read More »

“Don’t Expect to Like ‘Em:” The Making of Elaine May’s Mikey and Nicky

Entering to a standing ovation at a Friday-night screening of Mikey and Nicky at New York’s Metrograph on December 6, Elaine May looked out at the full house. “I was told this entire audience is made up of editors,” she said. And then, mock-anticipating their first question, she declared “Steenbeck,” name-checking the flatbed editing table on which her 1976 film was cut. The event was organized by the American Cinema Editors as part of their ongoing Filmcraft series at the Lower East Side Theater, and May was accompanied onstage by two editors; series moderator Phillip Schopper, and Jeffrey Wolf, who […]

The post “Don’t Expect to Like ‘Em:” The Making of Elaine May’s Mikey and Nicky first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.

“Don’t Expect to Like ‘Em:” The Making of Elaine May’s Mikey and Nicky Read More »

Scroll to Top