Tag: You Can't Win

The Conversation: One Never Cannes Tell – The 2016 Edition

Tis the season for fevered wish lists and constantly fluctuating prognostications concerning the soon to be revealed 2016 program at the Cannes Film Festival....

2015 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Robinson Devor’s You Can’t Win

Films gods be damned. After guesstimating its eventual arrival on the film fest circuit and tracking it since it first went into production back...

2014 Cannes Film Festival Predictions: 46th Directors’ Fortnight

Hovering around the twenty-one to twenty-four feature film mark with at least a quarter of those films belonging to first time filmmakers, the Quinzaine...

Top 200 Most Anticipated Films for 2014: #59. Robinson Devor’s You Can’t Win

You Can't Win Director: Robinson Devor Writers: Robinson Devor, Michael Pitt, Barry Gifford and Charles Mudede Producers: Robert Scarff, Zach Sebastian, Michael Pitt U.S. Distributor: Rights Available Cast: Jeremy...

Tracking Shot October: Barthes’ Madame Bovary, Renzi’s Franny, Bonello’s Saint Laurent, Bell’s Shiva & May

“Tracking Shot” is a monthly featurette here on IONCINEMA.com that looks at a dozen or so projects that are moments away from lensing and...

Top 100 Most Anticipated Films of 2013: #35. Robinson Devor’s You Can’t Win

You Can’t Win Director: Robinson Devor Writer(s): Devor, Barry Gifford and Michael Pitt Producer(s): Parts & Labor’s Lars Knudsen and Jay Van Hoy, Robert Scarff, Zach Sebastian,...

2013 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Robinson Devor’s You Can’t Win

Naturally, helmer Robinson Devor is a great fit for Park City - a former lab participant, his entire filmography in The Woman Chaser (Sundance...

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La petite dernière (The Little Sister) | Review

The Lost Daughter: Herzi Passes Up Potency in Standard...

Interview: Marjane Satrapi & Vincent Paronnaud – Persepolis

The thrill of meeting Marjane Satrapi reminded me of being 6 years old at Disney Land when I met the living, breathing Cinderella. Except Cinderella was an actress with a blond wig and Marjane is the real woman behind her autobiographical graphic novel, turned movie, “Persepolis”. The distinctive mole on her nose and her dark sultry eyes rose off the page and appeared in front of me, smoking and speaking with a French accent.