- published: 28 Nov 2016
- views: 15296
Waiting... is a 2005 American workplace comedy film starring Ryan Reynolds, Anna Faris, and Justin Long. It was written and directed by Rob McKittrick. McKittrick wrote the screenplay while working as a waiter. The film is the first effort by McKittrick as a writer-director.
The script was initially sold in a film deal to Artisan Entertainment, but was released by Lions Gate Entertainment (which purchased Artisan in 2003). Producers Chris Moore and Jeff Balis of Live Planet's Project Greenlight fame also took notice of the project and assisted. The film made over US$6,000,000, more than twice the budget of the film, in its opening weekend.
Momentum Pictures is now proudly serving up a delicious dollop of sex, booze and gross out humour on DVD with the 4 September 2006 rental and 25th September 2006 retail release of Waiting.
"The Cardinal Rule: Don't f*** with people that handle your food."
WAITING (2005) 11 minutes Written, Produced and Directed by Jamie M. Dagg Hellranch Pictures Premiered at TIFF in 2005. Selected by TIFF's Film Circuit to be part of the Canadian Short Film Showcase Nominated by the Canadian Society of Cinematographers for Best Cinematography
Ronnog and Ashley Winning perform Ronnog's poems at the Café Medusa, an all women's performance evening at 7 Stages Theater in Atlanta. Both poems deal with the Seabergs' loss of their son, a veteran of the Gulf War. Choregraphy by Steve Seaberg. ONE BODY Standing at the edge of a war waiting for future remarks about sons and daughters who torture others brought back in shopping carts. Women and men fall apart! Weeping through art. Wars are funeral pyres. Tears put out eyes and fires. Ash, freedom and equality in each body bag. One sex, one phone call, and one folded flag. Ronnog Seaberg Atlanta 10.28 2005
How do people act when they are alone, how do they act when they know they are being filmed and how when they are told to be themselves. The film consists of three different parts of the same event - a casting for being yourself. First the participants are filmed with secret cameras in the waiting room, then in casting room sitting in front of the camera and when "the director" enters instead of giving them a normal task for an audition, they are asked to be themselves. Documentary project at European Film College Concieved, directed and edited by Pila Rusjan Production Manager: Anna Michailidis "The Director" performed by David Auby Johansen Camera by Aura Solis Sound by Liv Gunda Skree Set Design by Alexandra Kjerulff Music by Sonic Scientists Production EFC
Choreography by Stacy Grossfield performed at Movement Research at the Judson Church Jan. 2005 Performers: Anna Carapetyan, Natalie Green, Sam Johnson, Daniel Linehan, Leah Morrison, and Miriam Wolf
Second component of "Final Thoughts: Series One." :[Part home-made science (before it became doctrine and law), part animated video reverie, Reinke's brief and episodic compression is an incendiary release which opens by announcing the death of the reader, of any audience capable of pulling its fragments together, or better, of dissolving into its tissues, of allowing the body to change shape, to identify, for instance, with an insect. Or a stone. It begins with the death of the reader and ends with the death of the author, and between he stops along the way to muse on rain falling up, the "useless bio-diversity" of insects (meaning life is mostly decoration), signal deconstruction and beautiful noise, and burning books. His style is abrupt and associative; he jumps and jumps again, produ...
This was part of a 64 second short-film competition back in 2005. The competition was to show what the meaning of "waitlessness" means. (Notice is spelled WAITlessness rather then weightlessness) For purposes of competition, the rules allowed the films to be either about the gravitational term or about waiting less. Mine was a bit more abstract. It made the finalist cut out of over 200 submissions. Arguably, one of my best works so far...
In 2009 rAndom International was commissioned by the Philips Lumiblade team to create an interactive light installation. You Fade To Light captures the unique qualities inherent to their revolutionary new OLEDs. Lumiblade OLEDs are large area diffuse light sources made from extremely thin glass and feature a perfect mirror finish. OLEDs are the closest to the temperature of natural light. "You Fade To Light" by rAndom International allows the audience to engage with the light itself intuitively and in a physical way. With custom software developed by designer Chris O'Shea, it has been built in London with several hundred unique OLEDs from the world’s first-ever production line for OLED lighting at Philips in Aachen, Germany. A total of 8 unique You Fade To Light installations is availa...
a little comforting
you might say
a cause to be bored
how we're all the same
all the same
we're on this theme again
we search through hundreds of pairs of eyes
for those tell-tale signs
of that something, something
a friend for my soul
will that make me feel whole
i'm only half sure you know
hearts are racing
anticipating
scanning the horizon for a change
standing,pacing, sitting, tapping, sighing
you could say that we've been waiting
for anything to happen
tomorrow, tomorrow
you're only a day away
then it'll all be ok
but look at mom and dad
it seems like they're still sad
then every day's a different day
hearts are racing
anticipating
scanning the horizon for any change
standing,pacing, sitting, tapping, sighing
you could say that we've been waiting
for anything to happen
they say
anything could happen
but nothing ever happens here
they say
hearts are racing
anticipating