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The Auteurs Film & Cast Member Database

Commie Bee

about 1 year ago

still suggestion for :
The Harem

or

Commie Bee

about 1 year ago

Still for :
Papal Audience

Etsuko

about 1 year ago

A still for http://mubi.com/films/a-west-lake-moment

Etsuko

about 1 year ago

Same thing that for Zhou Xun. Please remove this page http://mubi.com/cast_members/253976 and films from this page to this page http://mubi.com/cast_members/2652

+ Stills for http://mubi.com/films/a-soul-haunted-by-painting

http://mubi.com/films/god-of-gamblers-iii-back-to-shanghai

http://mubi.com/films/the-empress-dowager

Commie Bee

about 1 year ago

Still for :
The Wedding March

Thrift Store Junkie

about 1 year ago

Sunny Hartnett

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Quote:

“All I do is wear nice clothes and get paid big money for doing it.”

Bio:

Sunny Harnett, born in 1924, as Annemarie Margot Harnett in Brooklyn, was a model in the 1950s. She can be found in fashion magazines throughout that era. After becoming an assistant to Eileen Ford of Ford Models she soon quit modeling. Due to health concerns, she was later placed in a home for long term care. She died in a fire at the home in May 1987.—Wikipedia

g legs

about 1 year ago

Still suggestions for The Panic in Needle Park

Edit: Sorry I forgot to trim them.

Ale/M

about 1 year ago

Thomas Turgoose (born 11 February 1992) is an English actor.
In his first film role in 2006, aged 14, he played the lead character, Shaun, in This Is England, written and directed by Shane Meadows. On television he played the character Dizzy, a young boy mentored by Adam Solomons (Luke Treadaway), in the 2006 BBC drama series The Innocence Project. The programme was cancelled after eight episodes due to poor ratings and negative reviews. Turgoose’s character was in six of the eight episodes. But, in 2008 he was again in a Shane Meadows film, Somers Town, where he co-starred in a comedy role with young Polish actor Piotr Jagiello. Both young actors shared the “Best Actor in a Narrative Feature” award at New York’s Tribeca Film Festival.He is in the current film The Scouting Book For Boys, and appeared in This Is England ’86, a 4-part TV series for Channel 4 looking at characters from This is England three years on. A year later, he appeared in the three-part series This is England 88, aired just before Christmas 2011, and during 2012 is set to appear in a further series This is England 90.
He also featured in the TV advertising campaign for Coca-Cola running with the London 2012 olympic torch.

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Ale/M

about 1 year ago

Thomas Aiden Turgoose (born 11 February 1992) is an English actor.
In his first film role in 2006, aged 14, he played the lead character, Shaun, in This Is England, written and directed by Shane Meadows. On television he played the character Dizzy, a young boy mentored by Adam Solomons (Luke Treadaway), in the 2006 BBC drama series The Innocence Project. The programme was cancelled after eight episodes due to poor ratings and negative reviews. Turgoose’s character was in six of the eight episodes. But, in 2008 he was again in a Shane Meadows film, Somers Town, where he co-starred in a comedy role with young Polish actor Piotr Jagiello. Both young actors shared the “Best Actor in a Narrative Feature” award at New York’s Tribeca Film Festival.He is in the current film The Scouting Book For Boys, and appeared in This Is England ’86, a 4-part TV series for Channel 4 looking at characters from This is England three years on. A year later, he appeared in the three-part series This is England 88, aired just before Christmas 2011, and during 2012 is set to appear in a further series This is England 90.
He also featured in the TV advertising campaign for Coca-Cola running with the London 2012 olympic torch.

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Ale/M

about 1 year ago

Thomas Aiden Turgoose (born 11 February 1992) is an English actor.
In his first film role in 2006, aged 14, he played the lead character, Shaun, in This Is England, written and directed by Shane Meadows. On television he played the character Dizzy, a young boy mentored by Adam Solomons (Luke Treadaway), in the 2006 BBC drama series The Innocence Project. The programme was cancelled after eight episodes due to poor ratings and negative reviews. Turgoose’s character was in six of the eight episodes. But, in 2008 he was again in a Shane Meadows film, Somers Town, where he co-starred in a comedy role with young Polish actor Piotr Jagiello. Both young actors shared the “Best Actor in a Narrative Feature” award at New York’s Tribeca Film Festival.He is in the current film The Scouting Book For Boys, and appeared in This Is England ’86, a 4-part TV series for Channel 4 looking at characters from This is England three years on. A year later, he appeared in the three-part series This is England 88, aired just before Christmas 2011, and during 2012 is set to appear in a further series This is England 90.
He also featured in the TV advertising campaign for Coca-Cola running with the London 2012 olympic torch.

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DT

about 1 year ago

A better pic for James Gray:

Commie Bee

about 1 year ago

Commie Bee

about 1 year ago

Still for :

The Flesh

Thrift Store Junkie

about 1 year ago

Anita Louise

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Bio:

Born Anita Louise Fremault in New York, New York, she made her acting debut on Broadway at the age of six, and within a year was appearing regularly in Hollywood films. By her late teens she was being cast in leading and supporting roles in major productions, and was highly regarded for her delicate features and blonde hair.

As her stature in Hollywood grew, she was named as a WAMPAS Baby Star, and was frequently described as one of cinema’s most fashionable and stylish women. Her reputation was further enhanced by her role as Hollywood society hostess, with her parties attended by the elite of Hollywood, and widely and regularly reported in the news media.

Among her film successes were Madame Du Barry (1934), A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1935), The Story of Louis Pasteur (1935), Anthony Adverse (1936), Marie Antoinette (1938), The Sisters (1938), and The Little Princess (1939).

By the 1940s, she was reduced to minor roles and acted very infrequently until the advent of television in the 1950s provided her with further opportunities. In middle age she played one of her most widely seen roles as the gentle mother, Nell McLaughlin, in the CBS television series My Friend Flicka from 1956–1957, with co-stars Johnny Washbrook, Gene Evans, and Frank Ferguson.

Louise virtually retired after My Friend Flicka, which was rebroadcast thereafter for a generation. Her husband of twenty years, the film producer Buddy Adler, died in 1960. Anita Louise died from a stroke in Los Angeles, California, at the age of fifty-five and was interred next to Adler at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California.

She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in recognition of her contribution to Motion Pictures at 6801 Hollywood Boulevard.—Wikipedia

Rock and Bull

about 1 year ago

Errors on the page for this film: The Tragedy of Man.

The film was only fully released in 2011, and it is 160 minutes long.

DT

about 1 year ago

Better stills for Aladdin:

An alternative still for The Bad Sleep Well:

And Since Otar Left is missing country credits in Georgia and Belgium.

Waterlo​o Sunset

about 1 year ago

Ale/M

about 1 year ago

Corso Salani (9 September 1961, Florence – 16 June 2010, Ostia) was an Italian director, screenwriter and actor
After being assistant director of Carlo Mazzacurati on the set of his first feature Italian Night (1987), he moved to Rome and made ​​his first film, Voices of Europe (1989), which enabled him to undertake the career of actor , but always remained secondary compared to the preferred director. However he is remembered for the role of the journalist Rocco Ferrante in The rubber wall (1991) by Marco Risi, about the tragedy of Ustica.
The style of his films is the blend between documentary and fiction, observation of reality and poetic reworking, report author and film narrative themes focused on planning the trip as a means of disorientation and lack of communication, made ​​through the estrangement between language the characters of different nationalities.
In his films, always written with Monica Rametta, Corso Salani always interprets a kind of alter ego named Alberto, who represents his point of view of history: in the mockumentary The tired eyes, however, one of the actors at some point addresses him as a Corso rather than Albert, and the error was deliberately left in the film.
He died on the evening of June 16, 2010 for a heart attack that took him as he walked with his wife on the Capitoline promenade of Ostia (Rome district).
In November 2010 was formed the Association Corso Salani, with the task of restoring and disseminate the work of the Tuscan director.
The Association, from January 2011 in collaboration with the Festival of Trieste, has established the Corso Salani Award for the best independent project, a phase of work in progress. From November 2011 is on the official website of the Corso Salani. In 2011 the festival has awarded the gold halberd an award to the memory.__Wikipedia

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DT

about 1 year ago

Swap the current title and subtitle of Kurosawa’s Dreams.

Polyglo​t

about 1 year ago

Colleen Camp

Bio:
She began working as a juvenile actress at the age of 3 and was eventually ‘discovered’ while working as a bird trainer at Busch Gardens. She appeared on “The Dean Martin Comedy Hour” (1965) and made her film debut in Battle for the Planet of the Apes (1973). She has since gone on to appear in over 100 major motion pictures and television productions. –IMDb

L.

about 1 year ago

http://mubi.com/films/lordre

This was submitted longer than a year ago… how much longer will it take? Shall I re-submit?

Nikhil Jayakri​shnan

about 1 year ago

Sreenivasan (born 6 April 1956, Thalassery, Kerala, India)
Actor, Writer, Director

http://www.hindu.com/fr/2006/10/20/images/2006102001170101.jpg
http://www.filmglitz.com/malayalam/wp-content/gallery/sreenivasan/sreenivasan-stills-9_01.jpg

“I lived with friends who loved humour. We used to poke fun at each other while we were all in the process of learning films and it must have left an indelible impression in our minds”.

Sreenivasan was born in the village of Patyam, to the east of Thalassery in Kannur, North Malabar region of Kerala State, India on 6 April 1956. He completed his formal education in Government High School, Kathiroor and Pazhassi Raja N.S.S. College Mattannur. He enrolled for a diploma in film acting from the Adayar Film Institute, Chennai, where the yet-to-be superstar Rajinikanth was his senior by a year.

Sreenivasan entered the film industry in the 1977 P. A. Backer movie ‘Manimuzhakam’ after finishing a course in acting from the Film Chamber Institute. At the film institute he was coached by the then vice principal A. Prabhakaran, who later gave him a role in his movie ‘Mela’. A few movie roles later, he wrote his first film, ‘Oodarathuammava Aalariyam’, in 1984, which was directed by Priyadarshan, besides playing one of the lead roles. The director and screenwriter team of Sathyan Anthikkad and Sreenivasan, one of the most acclaimed in Malayalam cinema, made their first film together, ‘T.P.Balagopalan M.A’ in 1986. After the huge success of their first collaboration the duo made a number of movies together in the 80’s, notably ‘Welcome’, ‘Gandhinagar 2nd Street’ (1986), ‘Peace Comes to the Kindhearted’ (1986), ‘Country Winds’ (1987) and ‘Welcome’ (1989). The actor and screenwriter, who had by then made his reputation with his unique style of deadpan comedy, made his debut as director with ‘Compass’ in 1989, which won the Kerala State Award for the best film. The only other film he would direct was ‘Pensive Shyamala’ in 1998, which won the Indian National Film Award for the Best Film tackling social issues.

Many of Sreenivasan’s films as writer and director were lighthearted depictions of Keralan society and handled themes like unemployment, political rivlary and middle-class morality. But some of his films also have their hard hitting moments as in ‘Land of White Elephants’ (1988), ’Let’s Build a Nest Far, Far Away’ (1986) and ‘The Message’ (1991). Excellent characterization, witty (often deadpan) dialogue and self-deprecating humour are trademarks of Sreenivasan movies. He is also known for his style of self-deprecating humour, where he pokes fun at his own unglamourous appearance, especially his being dark-skinned and short. From a technical point of view, his films are rather austere in terms of camerawork and editing, with much being left to the actors to deliver. But he did seem to have some grasp over the basic grammar of the medium. He also formed a popular team with the Malayalam superstar Mohanlal, with whom he acted in umpteen films. Unlike much of mainstream Indian cinema, songs are used very minimally in his films, and yet they met with commercial success within the state. He also made a brief stint on television with a programme called ‘Little Sreeni (short for Sreenivasan) in a Big World’.

- Wikipedia

Nikhil Jayakri​shnan

about 1 year ago

Can anyone tell me how I can post a picture through this?

Thrift Store Junkie

about 1 year ago

Vera Zorina

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Quote:

“I NEVER saw her or heard her. Yet I continually bless the name of Ida Rubinstein for, because of her, I’ve had a whole second career.”

Bio:

Vera Zorina (January 2, 1917 – April 9, 2003) was a Norwegian ballerina, musical theatre actress and choreographer.

Vera Zorina was born Eva Brigitta Hartwig in Berlin, Germany. Her father Fritz was a German and her mother Billie Hartwig was Norwegian. Both were professional singers. Zorina was brought up in Kristiansund where she debuted as a dancer at the Festiviteten, the oldest opera house in Norway. She received her education at the Lyceum for Girls in Berlin but was trained in dance by Olga Preobrajenska and Nicholas Legat.

She was presented to Max Reinhardt at age 12 who cast her in his A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1929) and Tales of Hoffman (1931). A performance at London’s Gaiety Theatre led to her entrance into the company of the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo in 1933. She changed her stage name to Vera Zorina when she joined the Ballet Russe. She won a lead role in the London company of On Your Toes (1937) and was seen by American film producer Samuel Goldwyn, who signed her to a seven year film contract. Between 1938 and 1946, she would appear in a number of Hollywood movie productions.

One of her most iconic stage roles was the title character in the 1938 Rodgers and Hart musical I Married an Angel, in which she played an exquisite angel who descends from heaven to marry Hungarian banker Dennis King, but whose complete lack of human guile presents him with a whole new set of problems. Her role in the film version was played by Jeannette MacDonald.

Starting in 1948, Zorina was associated with Arthur Honegger’s Joan of Arc at the Stake, in which she played the title role in the first American performance with the New York Philharmonic under Charles Münch. She subsequently played the role many times, notably in the recorded performance from the Royal Festival Hall in June 1966 with the London Symphony Orchestra under Seiji Ozawa.

In the 1970s, Vera Zorina was appointed director with the Norwegian National Opera and Ballet (Den Norske Opera & Ballet). In later years, she was active with the Lincoln Center as an adviser and director and for several seasons directed operas at the Santa Fe Opera in New Mexico. In 1986, Vera Zorina completed her autobiography entitled Zorina (New York: Farrar Straus & Giroux. 1986).

She was George Balanchine’s second wife; they were married from 1938 to 1946. She danced in productions he choreographed, both on the stage and screen, including On Your Toes, a Broadway hit later adapted for the screen by Lawrence Riley.

She was also married to Columbia Records president Goddard Lieberson from 1946 until his death on May 29, 1977, by whom she had two sons: Peter Lieberson, a composer, and Jonathan Lieberson. Her final marriage was to harpsichordist Paul Wolfe from 1991 until her death at age 86.—Wikipedia

Issey Miyaki

about 1 year ago

Still and Synopsis for Bloody Che Contra

A good old fashioned story about the Third-World’s attempt to rip off their colonial shackles. Thus far, no satisfactory roles of Che have made it to the screen (with the possible exception of Bernal in Motorcycle Diaries) and sadly no decent biopic has come out about the 20th century’s most (in)famous guerilla.Francisco Rabal’s depiction of Che isn’t as schizhophrenic and inconsistent as Omar Sharif’s rendition in CHE! (1969) but Rabal radiates with the romanticized version of Che that derives from his mythos and empire of kitcshy posters and t-shirts; not reality.While he does a pretty decent job as Che, he’s still just a cardboard cut-out of the real thing. This film was made right after Che was executed in Bolivia. Names and events were largely unknown to the world and Che’s own Bolivian diary wasn’t published yet. All the screenwriter had to go one were sanitized newspaper clippings.

ramosba​rajas

about 1 year ago

the current image for Susana / The devil and the flesh is not really a still. Here is a still from the film.

Also the stills for The Great Madcap and Daughter of Deceit should be switched, as they are currently mixed up..

DT

about 1 year ago

This is a duplicate of the real thing.

Rock and Bull

about 1 year ago

Still for Facing the Giants

Still for Flywheel

Josef Kupka

about 1 year ago

Tatiana Papamoschou
actress

biography
Tatiana Papamoschou (Greek: Τατιάνα Παπαμόσχου; born 1964 in Athens, Greece) is a Greek actress who has starred in numerous Greek theatrical, film and television productions. She is best known for her role as the title character in the 1977 Oscar-nominated film Iphigenia (her first film role), for which she earned the Best Leading Actress Award at the 1977 Thessaloniki Film Festival.

Tatiana was only 13 years old when she was cast as Iphigenia. In addition to Greek, she speaks fluent English and French.

g legs

about 1 year ago

The running time for Stuart Little 2 is 77 minutes according to imdb