The Free Space
Let Fury Have the Hour is a social history told not through war and conquest but through street art, literature, music, film, science, labor, public service or what I call creative-response.
Let Fury Have the Hour is a social history told not through war and conquest but through street art, literature, music, film, science, labor, public service or what I call creative-response.
Erica Abeel | Posted 04.21.2012
In a sequel of sorts to his 2003 Yossi and Jagger, Fox follows a dead man walking who returns, spiritually and physically, to the living.
Ramona Diaz | Posted 04.20.2012
Three days before the premiere, my producers and I sat in a dark studio in a post-production house in NY and watched the final color-corrected, sound-mixed version of the film. When the lights went up after the screening, we were all a little shell shocked; we looked at each other as if to say "what now?"
AP | JAKE COYLE | Posted 04.17.2012
NEW YORK -- If there's a keynote performance at the 11th annual Tribeca Film Festival, it may well be Abbie Cornish's riveting portrayal of a Texas si...
Julie Checkoway | Posted 05.25.2011
Waiting for Hockney isn't a film about art. It's more like a cross between American Movie and The Agony and the Ecstasy. It's about how the son of a ...
James Mottern | Posted 05.25.2011
Tribeca understands and fosters the idea that films go beyond the world of sales agents and distributors. Each film is a small miracle in the fact that it even exists at all; and Tribeca knows it.
Jonathan Walls | Posted 05.25.2011
To ponder our path is overwhelming, but when I simplify its core, I realize we are all still humans being and we are all one.
Andrew Lauren | Posted 05.25.2011
I've always felt the projects I gravitate towards are those that are character driven or rather, derived from the drama of the human condition. As a child of the 60's and 70's, I grew up idolizing the work of Frankenheimer and Coppola; directors who I feel best exemplified this style.
Trisha Ziff | Posted 05.25.2011
The world premiere of Chevolution at the Tribeca Film Festival is an important moment! The famous portrait of Che Guevara, "Guerrillero Heroico," was taken in 1960 by Cuban photographer Alberto Korda.
Phedon Papamichael | Posted 05.25.2011
What drew me to From Within? There is great diversity to these characters. It was important to me that each one seemed real ...someone you might identify with.
Antonino D'Ambrosio | Posted 04.22.2012