I spoke to a writer/director friend last week who lives in Los Angeles, where, at the time, coronavirus case numbers were still escalating. My friend hasn’t shot anything during the pandemic but has been using these months to work on a new script and develop a TV show. But in the last few weeks, this writer/director has been getting urgent calls from execs to board shows and features that are financed and ready to go. It’s a bit of a whiplash, my friend said—trying to remain cautious, to be cognizant that the pandemic is still ongoing, but while grappling with […]
by Scott Macaulay on Feb 10, 2021The following interview appears in Filmmaker‘s current Winter ’21 print edition and, a day after Minari won the Golden Globe for Best Foreign Language Film, appears online for all readers for the first time. “There’s a difference between something having happened or something being true,” says writer/director Lee Isaac Chung about the interplay between memory and creation that graces his fourth dramatic feature, Minari. Based on the filmmaker’s childhood—his family moved to the South, where his father hoped to develop a farm—Minari captures a time of familial change and uncertainty with seemingly effortless poetry and wonder. It’s the early 1980s […]
by Aaron Stewart-Ahn on Feb 10, 2021Empire, Nevada, “felt like a town suspended in the 1950s, as if the postwar economy had never ended,” writes Jessica Bruder in her nonfiction book, Nomadland: Surviving America in the Twenty-First Century. The small mining town consisted of four main roads, lined with homes populated by the workers of United States Gypsum, the manufacturer of Sheetrock. Subsidized rents were as low as $250 a month, the company covered TV and internet and, as one resident told Bruder, there were “no gangs, no sirens, no violence.” But economic forces caught up with Empire. In 2011, U.S. Gypsum, a company with a […]
by Scott Macaulay on Feb 10, 2021