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Roger Corman
The Onion AV Club interviews the legendary B-movie producer and director on his long and storied career.
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John Frankenheimer and the Playing of Reindeer Games
This is the Official Website of the Directors Guild of America. The DGA is here to serve and protect member rights in the arena of filmmaking
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Conversation with Robert Wise
Harry Kreisler interviews Robert Wise on his film career.
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Robert Rodriguez, A God Among Directors
A comprehensive Robert Rodriguez site, loaded with the most up to date information about Robert Rodriguez and his films.
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A Conversation with John Frankenheimer
Reindeer Games - John Frankenheimer has been making movies for over thirty years, and yet he remains passionate about his work. He started his career in the 1950s, working an assistant director on You Are There (hosted by Walter Cronkite) and Edward R. Murrow's Person to Person. He then directed live tv dramas (The Last Tycoon with Jack Palance, The Turn of the Screw with Ingrid Bergman). Frankenheimer directed his first theatrical release film in 1956, The Young Stranger, and then made a name for himself with psychological thrillers and action pictures, including The Manchurian Candidate (1962), Birdman of Alcatraz (1962), Seven Days in May (1964), Seconds (1966), French Connection II (1975), and Ronin (1998). Recently, he has turned to cable television, directing Against the Wall (for which he won 1994's Best Director Emmy), The Burning Season (1995's Best Director Emmy), and George Wallace (1997's Best Director Emmy).
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10 Minute Film School
Robert Rodriguez's 10 minute film school. All you ever need to know about making a movie.
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John Frankenheimer
John Frankenheimer on IMDb: Movies, TV, Celebs, and more...
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IMDb: Larry Wachowski
Larry Wachowski on IMDb: Movies, TV, Celebs, and more...
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Bright Lights Film Journal: Robert Wise
Robert Wise: The Oscar-winning director discusses his films and his work with Orson Welles
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It's an Ed Wood World After All
In the '70s, while Ed Wood was still (barely) alive in the back alleys and seedy bars of Hollywood, his films were canonized as camp, adored for their wide-eyed ineptness. Atlanta Bars
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