In the face of lockdowns and virtual meetings, this year’s Emmy nominees have pushed the limits of TV – from unorthodox costume design to strikingly realistic visual effects. Read more...
Photo: (Biona Hui/Daily Bruin staff)
In the face of lockdowns and virtual meetings, this year’s Emmy nominees have pushed the limits of TV – from unorthodox costume design to strikingly realistic visual effects. Read more...
Photo: (Biona Hui/Daily Bruin staff)
“Dating & New York” tells a tale as old as time – but with a millennial twist. Releasing Sept. 10 in select theaters, the indie rom-com shines light on the tech-filled world of modern dating. Read more...
Photo: (Courtesy of IFC Films)
From powerful performances to freshly authentic writing, this year’s Emmy nominees have certainly earned their place on the ballot. While the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted the production and filming process of numerous projects, it has simultaneously offered more time to watch television. Read more...
Photo: (Katelyn Dang and Nathan Koketsu/Daily Bruin)
With an organic approach to design, Misty Buckley made the Grammys stage as golden as the gramophone. The production designer and alumnus is nominated for an Emmy Award for outstanding production design for a variety special for her work on the 63rd Grammy Awards. Read more...
Photo: As the first to design a Grammys set with no live audience, production designer and alumnus Misty Buckley experimented with new stage layouts and colorful, organic designs in the 63rd Grammy Awards. (Photo courtesy of Misty Buckley. Photo illustration by Katelyn Dang/Illustrations director)
Marvel’s latest legend has arrived, and his name is Shang-Chi. Released Friday in select theaters, including Westwood’s Regency theater, “Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings” centers around lazy hotel valet, Shang-Chi (Simu Liu), as he is forced to return home to fight the demons of his past, including his father and leader of the powerful Ten Rings organization, Xu Wenwu (Tony Chiu-Wai Leung). Read more...
Photo: (Courtesy of Marvel Studios)
This post was updated Sept. 12 at 7:25 p.m. Extravagant Las Vegas mansions paint everything from wealth to weakness in “Hacks.” The HBO Max comedy-drama follows the unexpected relationship between esteemed Las Vegas comedian Deborah Vance (Jean Smart) and her equally sarcastic millennial counterpart Ava (Hannah Einbinder) after the former unwillingly winds up hiring the latter in an attempt to appeal to a younger audience. Read more...
Photo: Jon Carlos, an alumnus and production designer for HBO Max’s drama-comedy “Hacks” was nominated for outstanding production design for a half-hour narrative program. He said the production design reflected everything from the characters’ extravagance to loneliness. (Photo courtesy of Annie McElwain. Photo illustration by Katelyn Dang/Illustrations director)
Marco Williams finds historical writing more intertwined with the present than ever. The writer and alumnus is nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Nonfiction Program for his work on “Tulsa Burning: The 1921 Race Massacre.” The History Channel documentary focuses on the 100th anniversary of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, in which the prosperous Black community of the Greenwood District in Tulsa, Oklahoma, was burned down by a white mob. Read more...
Photo: Alumnus and writer Marco Williams was nominated for outstanding writing for a nonfiction program for his work on the History Channel’s “Tulsa Burning: The 1921 Race Massacre,” which discusses the history of violence against the prosperous Black community in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and the subsequent resilience of the Black residents. (Photo courtesy of Marco Williams. Photo illustration by Katelyn Dang/Illustrations director)