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Highlights

A collection of news and information related to Hoop Dreams (movie) published by this site and its partners.

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    Feb 8, 1998 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  1. 'Divine Trash' Steve Yeager's winning documentary on John Waters could be the start of something big

    While John Waters filmed "Pink Flamingos" a quarter century ago, Steve Yeager, another young moviemaker, filmed him filming "Pink Flamingos."
    While John Waters filmed "Pink Flamingos" a quarter century ago, Steve Yeager, another young moviemaker, filmed him filming "Pink Flamingos." We know what happened to Waters' footage. After its general release in 1973, "Pink Flamingos" became one the...

    Tags: Ken Burns, Independent (Movie Genre), Festive Events, Arts and Culture, National Aquarium Baltimore

  2. Mar 21, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  3. Good Pitch Chicago forum will connect documentary filmmakers with supporters

    Chicago's documentary film industry is getting its own high-profile Demo Day.
    Chicago's documentary film industry is getting its own high-profile Demo Day. Running concurrently with the Chicago International Film Festival, a group of corporate and nonprofit executives will showcase up to eight unfinished documentary films at a...

    Tags: The Invisible War (movie), John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Tribeca, Finance, Chicago International Film Festival

  4. May 3, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  5. CIFF TV Awards tip hat to top creatives

    Luminaries from Chicago's television, advertising and filmmaking communities filled the ballroom at the Radisson Blu Aqua Hotel for the 49th Chicago International Film Festival Television Awards gala April 23. More than 300 people were on hand as advertising agency Leo Burnett received the Commitment to Excellence Award for TV commercials. Steve Levitan, creator of the ABC hit show "Modern Family," introduced Susan Credle (Leo Burnett Chicago's chief creative officer) and Rich Stoddart (president of Burnett North America), who accepted the silver Hugo award.
    Luminaries from Chicago's television, advertising and filmmaking communities filled the ballroom at the Radisson Blu Aqua Hotel for the 49th Chicago International Film Festival Television Awards gala April 23. More than 300 people were on hand as...

    Tags: ESPN (tv network), Arts and Culture, Awards and Prizes, Modern Family (tv program), Culture

  6. Apr 29, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  7. Tribeca 2013: In 'Trials of Muhammad Ali,' a counterpoint to '42'

    NEW YORK--When a championship boxer like Muhammad Ali felt disrespected by another fighter, he might have been expected to do what most boxers would: knock his opponent's lights out. But the icon took a different route when faced with a rival he...

    Tags: Jackie Robinson, Will Forte, Cannes Film Festival, Tribeca, Belief and Faith

  8. Apr 5, 2013 |Story| Daily Pilot
  9. Thanks to Roger Ebert, 1942-2013

    The first time I encountered Roger Ebert, I detested him. The second time I encountered him, I liked him even less. In later years, I learned that Ebert's relationship with Gene Siskel progressed the same way: animosity, then grudging respect, then love and admiration. The last two feelings might not have been as strong without the first two; sometimes one intense reaction begets another.
    The first time I encountered Roger Ebert, I detested him. The second time I encountered him, I liked him even less. In later years, I learned that Ebert's relationship with Gene Siskel progressed the same way: animosity, then grudging respect, then love...

    Tags: Nicole Kidman, Movies, University of California, Irvine, Roger Ebert, Entertainment

  10. Apr 7, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  11. Ebert grew more inspirational with age

    A number that jumps out from the coverage of Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert's death Thursday at age 70: 306.
    A number that jumps out from the coverage of Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert's death Thursday at age 70: 306. That's the number of movie reviews he wrote last year, according to what turned out to be the final entry on his blog Tuesday. "The most of...

    Tags: Politics, Gun Control, ESPN (tv network), The End (movie), Roger Ebert

  12. Apr 4, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  13. Roger Ebert dies at 70; Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic

    Roger Ebert, the Pulitzer Prize-winning movie critic whose gladiatorial "thumbs-up, thumbs-down" assessments turned film reviewing into a television sport and whose passion for independent film helped introduce a new generation of filmmakers to moviegoers, has died. He was 70.
    Roger Ebert, the Pulitzer Prize-winning movie critic whose gladiatorial "thumbs-up, thumbs-down" assessments turned film reviewing into a television sport and whose passion for independent film helped introduce a new generation of filmmakers to...

    Tags: Festive Events, Arts and Culture, Syracuse University, Colleges and Universities, Awards and Prizes

  14. Mar 21, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  15. New documentary highlights North Carolina-Duke basketball rivalry

    In "Duke-Carolina: The Blue Blood Rivalry," writer-director Jason Rem explores the heated basketball feud that has simmered for 93 years. 
    In "Duke-Carolina: The Blue Blood Rivalry," writer-director Jason Rem explores the heated basketball feud that has simmered for 93 years.  The independent documentary from Rem's namesake REM Entertainment and Greatest Fan Films was released via video-...

    Tags: Sports, Chris Duhon, Fox Sports (tv network), Eric Montross, Basketball

  16. Jan 11, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  17. Billy Corgan's salon hopes to inspire conversation

    For an establishment called Madame ZuZu's, the host is pretty dressed down: no flowing silk robe or pointy painted fingernails. And even if Billy Corgan could qualify for madame-hood, he wouldn't be going for extravagance. At least not at 6 p.m. on a winterstruck Thursday, and not in a setting as casual as his new Highland Park tea shop.
    For an establishment called Madame ZuZu's, the host is pretty dressed down: no flowing silk robe or pointy painted fingernails. And even if Billy Corgan could qualify for madame-hood, he wouldn't be going for extravagance. At least not at 6 p.m. on a...

    Tags: Radio Industry, Music Theater, Dave Duerson, Jim McMahon, Peter, Paul, and Mary (music group)

  18. Jul 12, 2012 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  19. It came from Ray Bradbury

    Though known primarily as an author, Ray Bradbury had a fixation with Hollywood. It was inevitable that his skills as a science fiction writer would eventually land him work in the movies.
    Though known primarily as an author, Ray Bradbury had a fixation with Hollywood. It was inevitable that his skills as a science fiction writer would eventually land him work in the movies. His first gig was with Universal Pictures in the early 1950s,...

    Tags: Comedy (genre), England, Fiction, Arts and Culture, Argonne National Laboratory

  20. May 4, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  21. Beastie Boy Adam Yauch was also a force in film world

    Beastie Boys co-founder Adam Yauch has died of cancer at age 47. Yauch is best known for his music career, as the New York hip-hop trio's vocalist and bassist, MCA. But in the last years of his life, Yauch focused his artistic attention on the world of...

    Tags: Drama (genre), Festive Events, Michael Beasley, Arts and Culture, Woody Harrelson

  22. Aug 12, 2011 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  23. Mediators try to make streets a little less mean

    In its charting of a Chicago epidemic and belief in the power of street-level human empathy, the superb documentary "The Interrupters" comes to us at a time when the notion of conflict resolution has been sidelined utterly on the national political level.This is why every member of the U.S. House, the U.S. Senate, the White House and the tea party, let alone anybody simply interested in meeting some complicated and remarkable Chicagoans, should see the film. It chronicles genuine conflict resolution that appears to get results — politically savvy, consensus-building results — one difficult day at a time.
    In its charting of a Chicago epidemic and belief in the power of street-level human empathy, the superb documentary "The Interrupters" comes to us at a time when the notion of conflict resolution has been sidelined utterly on the national political level....

    Tags: Politics, Crimes, Illinois, The New York Times, Crime, Law and Justice

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