“Aaron wrote the film as a dramatization of the events from the 1960s, but he didn’t want to tilt it into the world of the ’60s exclusively. His intention was …
Peter Tonguette
Peter Tonguette
Peter Tonguette is a freelance writer whose work has appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Sight & Sound, Film Comment and Cineaste. He can be reached at [email protected].
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It’s an after-hours conversation between actor Dennis Hopper and director Orson Welles in November 1970.
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Ken Burns did it. So did Michael Moore. But a lot of documentary filmmakers don’t go union. Is that about to change?
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“Dean called me and said, ‘Don, you’ve got to do this.'”
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The heroine of Amazon’s stylish comedy “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” has a talented support team in post-production.
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You don’t have to be a rabid consumer of 1980s-era popular culture to work on the Netflix science-fiction series “Stranger Things.” But it doesn’t hurt.
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“When the shutdown happened, we called all of our clients and talked to them and said: ‘We’re in uncharted territory.'”
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Web Exclusives
Amid a Real-Life Pandemic, Stephen Mirrione Recalls Editing the Terror of ‘Contagion’
“Your brain is trying to keep up and fill in the blanks, and you realize this thing is going faster than you can keep control of in your head.”
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Music Editor Sally Boldt recalls the making of ‘Groundhog Day,’ again and again and…
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“I really rely on my editors to have a story brain and to be co-writers with me.”