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Gary Winick

Highlights

A collection of news and information related to Gary Winick published by this site and its partners.

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    Jan 18, 2002 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  1. A tale of two Hoffmans

    Tribune movie reporter
    The romance of the Sundance Film Festival is simple: It's the place where long-harbored dreams are first exposed to public view and, if favorably received, are launched into the world. Gordy Hoffman had been driving a cab in Chicago for 3 1/2 years...

    Tags: Agnes Bruckner, Sundance Film Festival, Sigourney Weaver, Aaron Stanford, Nicolas Cage

  2. Nov 2, 2011 |Story| WPIX-LTV
  3. Paul & Mira Sorvino - Managing Diabetes

    When diagnosed with type 2 diabetes, Paul Sorvino worked with his doctor to create an overall treatment plan that included diet, exercise, and diabetes medications. He also realized the importance of support, and was thankful for his family and friends to help him manage his diabetes.
    When diagnosed with type 2 diabetes, Paul Sorvino worked with his doctor to create an overall treatment plan that included diet, exercise, and diabetes medications. He also realized the importance of support, and was thankful for his family and friends to...

    Tags: Joaquin Phoenix, Television, Guillermo Del Toro, Entertainment Events, Paul Sorvino

  4. Mar 1, 2011 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  5. Gary Winick dies at 49; director and digital film pioneer

    Gary Winick, a pioneering producer and director of independent digital films who found mainstream success with such movies as "13 Going on 30" and "Letters to Juliet," has died. He was 49.
    Gary Winick, a pioneering producer and director of independent digital films who found mainstream success with such movies as "13 Going on 30" and "Letters to Juliet," has died. He was 49. Winick, who was diagnosed with brain cancer about two years ago,...

    Tags: Academy Awards, Heart Attack, Sundance Film Festival, Ethan Hawke, Physical Conditions

  6. Aug 13, 2010 |Story| Zap2It
  7. 'Letters to Juliet'

    Romeo's true love wasn't a real person, but that doesn't keep women from writing her notes about their own romantic trials ... in this movie, at least, which boasts lovely Italian scenery.
    Zap2It
    Romeo's true love wasn't a real person, but that doesn't keep women from writing her notes about their own romantic trials ... in this movie, at least, which boasts lovely Italian scenery. Amanda Seyfried ( "Mamma Mia!") plays an American in Verona who...

    Tags: DVDs, Movies, Blu-ray Discs, Documentary (genre), Letters to Juliet (movie)

  8. Feb 8, 2007 |Story| Metromix
  9. Fast-Paised review: 'Puccini for Beginners'

    Recently dumped by her girlfriend, writer Allegra (Elizabeth Reaser) creates a love triangle of flexible sexuality by hooking up with college professor Philip (Justin Kirk) and aspiring glass blower Grace (Gretchen Mol). Things get sticky when Allegra...

    Tags: Music Theater, Julianne Nicholson, Elizabeth Reaser, Opera (genre), Justin Kirk

  10. Feb 8, 2007 |Story| Metromix
  11. Movie review: 'Puccini for Beginners'

    <b>2&#189; stars (out of four)</b>
    Tribune movie critic
    2½ stars (out of four) Maria Maggenti's "Puccini for Beginners" is pretty clever indie stuff, a sharp-witted romantic comedy that takes the old Woody Allen screwball style and mood and amusingly applies them to a story about tangled gay and straight...

    Tags: Carole Lombard, Music Theater, Julianne Nicholson, Elizabeth Reaser, Opera (genre)

  12. Mar 31, 2006 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  13. 'Lonesome Jim'

    Newsday
    When you are feeling like a loser, taking a trip to loser-land may not be the most consoling recourse. Such, more or less, is the conclusion reached early on by Jim, the eponymous slacker played by Casey Affleck in Steve Buscemi's low-key comedy...

    Tags: Mary Kay Place, Movies, Kevin Corrigan, Liv Tyler, Comedy (genre)

  14. Dec 15, 2006 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  15. 'Charlotte's Web'

    The new live-action rendering of E.B. White's perennial children's favorite, "Charlotte's Web," is so carefully spun that it's lifeless. Which is ironic because, since it was first published in 1952, the book the movie is based on has been a gentle introduction for children to the harsh realities of the cycle of life.
    Times Staff Writer
    The new live-action rendering of E.B. White's perennial children's favorite, "Charlotte's Web," is so carefully spun that it's lifeless. Which is ironic because, since it was first published in 1952, the book the movie is based on has been a gentle...

    Tags: Cedric the Entertainer, Karey Kirkpatrick, Julia Roberts, Children, Gaming

  16. Jul 29, 2005 |Story| Metromix
  17. Movie review: 'November'

    Special to the Tribune
    2 stars (out of four) Okay, let's get it over with: Courteney Cox—a very seriously de-prettified, de-glamorized, de-"Friends"-ified, almost mousy Courteney Cox—acquits herself quite well in "November," Greg Harrison's atmospheric psycho-thriller. If...

    Tags: Theft, Michelangelo Antonioni, Anne Archer, Death, Nora Dunn

  18. Sep 8, 2006 |Story| Zap2It
  19. Church, Weisz Deemed 'Smart People'

    Zap2It.com
    Film producer Michael London has a few "Smart People" in mind for his next film. "Sideways" actor Thomas Haden Church, Rachel Weisz and Dennis Quaid are set to star in the indie comedy-drama helmed by first-time feature director Noam Murro, according...

    Tags: Spider-Man (fictional character), Vantage Point (movie), Drama (genre), Movies, Thomas Haden Church

  20. Jul 22, 2005 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  21. 'November'

    "November" is not the sleek lady-in-distress thriller that its trailers suggest. More of a psychological mystery, it gets underway with a well-staged opening sequence as a young man (James Le Gros) stops at a corner market in Los Angeles one evening to buy chocolate ice cream for his girlfriend, Sophie (Courteney Cox), only to walk straight into a holdup and wind up shot dead. Writer Benjamin Brand and director-editor Greg Harrison divide their highly stylized and atmospheric 78-minute film into three sections, each dated Nov. 7, the date of that fateful evening, and titled, respectively, "Denial, "Despair" and "Acceptance," which may or may not offer a clue as to what's really going on in this increasingly perplexing film, which is more concerned with being clever than satisfying.
    Times Staff Writer
    "November" is not the sleek lady-in-distress thriller that its trailers suggest. More of a psychological mystery, it gets underway with a well-staged opening sequence as a young man (James Le Gros) stops at a corner market in Los Angeles one evening to...

    Tags: Ice Cream, Anne Archer, Death, Nora Dunn, Courteney Cox

  22. Nov 11, 2005 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  23. 'Land of Plenty'

    Times Staff Writer
    Wim Wenders' "Land of Plenty" offers a thoughtful look at a post-9/11 United States from one of its most caring longtime observers, an artist whose vision of America can record terrible socioeconomic inequity, ignorance and paranoia yet somehow remain...

    Tags: Michelle Williams, Richard Edson, September 11, 2001 Attacks, Death, Vietnam War (1955-1975)

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