Monday, October 31, 2011

Marling: Brings experience to 'Earth'

Brit MarlingBefore the Sundance Film Festival, Brit Marling have been butting facing the difficulties facing any youthful actress."After I found L.A., I truly could not decipher it out," she confesses. "Should you did not start whenever you were three years old doing advertisements, how can you begin?"So Marling made the decision to consider matters into her very own hands, co-writing, creating and starring in 2 shoestring indies: "Another Earth" and "Seem of My Voice," which both opened in Park City this season.Although the actress had analyzed theater becoming an adult, if this came time for college, she elected for any broad liberal arts degree over drama school."How may you be an actress and never study theology and physics?" asks Marling, who chosen financial aspects as her major. Then she met Mike Cahill and Zal Batmanglij, fellow Georgetown students who had directed a brief film featured within an on-campus sprocket opera.Impressed, she introduced herself towards the pair, causing a powerful friendship that transported through college (she spent the relaxation of her time at Georgetown juggling econometrics proofs and making short films using the men) and beyond. After graduation, she and Cahill visited Cuba making a documentary known as "Boxers and Ballerinas," while Batmanglij enrolled in the American Film Institute.Then came the disappointment of attempting to make it in Hollywood."I am always annoyed by the concept that a lot of what you can do to rehearse your craft is away from control," Marling states. "I recognized the fastest method of doing things i want, which would be to act, is always to train myself to create.InchSo she made "Earth" (with Cahill) and "Voice" (with Batmanglij). While greatly different in fashion, the 2 projects -Body a portrait of regret set against an ambitious sci-fi premise, another a mind-bender in regards to a beguiling cult leader -- reveal Marling like a unique quantity, more ingenious than ingenue, having a soulful streak which comes through both onscreen as well as in the fabric itself.After Sundance, Fox Searchlight clicked up privileges to both photos and greenlit another, "The East." Marling also stars in Robert Redford's "The Organization You Retain,Inch by which she could act another person's words, at least."The one thing that's most enjoyable and intoxicating would be to lose yourself in another person's imagination," she states.Lucky break: "Visiting the Georgetown Film Festival and meeting Mike and Zal and finding two collaborators for existence. After which Sundance."Favorite film: "'Lust, Caution.' I really like it's an espionage thriller having a female protagonist."Career Let me emulate: "Anthony Hopkins. It's astounding to possess that durability and also to carry on growing.Inch10 Stars To Look At 2011:Benedict Cumberbatch Jean Dujardin Luke Evans Josh Hutcherson Felicity Johnson Taylor Kitsch Brit Marling Elizabeth Olsen Octavia Spencer Shailene Woodley Contact Peter Debruge at peter.debruge@variety.com

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Blumenkrantz takes Ebb award

Composer Rob Blumenkrantz has acquired the 2010 Fred Ebb Award, the legit kudo that is included with a $50,000 cash prize. Blumenkrantz, who began his stage career becoming an actor ("To the Forest," "Damn Yankees"), has composed one-functions "Lady With Pocketbook" and "Precious Little Jewel," because both versions result regionally, additionally to brought for the score of Broadway tuner "Urban Cowboy." His tunes offer been recorded with a couple of musical theater faves including Audra McDonald, Sutton Promote and Victoria Clark. Ebb Award was inaugurated carrying out a 2004 dying of Ebb, who with longtime partner John Kander composed the music activity for tuners including "Cabaret," "Chicago" and "The Scottsboro Boys." Kudo visits a songwriter or songwriting team that has not produced out a considerable commercial profile. With the money, the laurel also offers a 1-evening showcase in the winner's work. Past individuals who win have incorporated John Bucchino ("A Focused Affair") and Adam Gwon ("Regular Days"). Award is administrated every year with the Fred Ebb Foundation in colaboration using the Roundabout Theater Company. Bebe Neuwirth will hands the 2010 kudo inside a November. 28 ceremony within the Roundabout's American Airline carriers Theater. Contact Gordon Cox at gordon.cox@variety.com

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Can The Key Circle's New Bad Boy Go Good?

Chris Zylka And ideas thought Nick was the resident bad boy from the Secret Circle... Last week's arrival of his brother, Mike (Chris Zylka), signaled a brand new danger for that coven. Although they have been unwillingly attempting to recruit this new Remedy brother to exchange the very much departed Nick (RIP!), little do they already know it's really Mike that has introduced the witch predators to Chance Harbor! The Key Circle boss dissects Nick's dying and also the coven's possible alternative Starting with this week's Halloween episode (Thursday, 9/8c around the CW), we'll observe that Mike has trigger a harmful number of occasions stemming from the lengthy-nurtured bitterness and hate.The thing is, he was distraughtover the dying of his parents for the reason that mysterious event 16 years back that stated the endures most of the circle's families and it is going to prevent this kind of incident from ever happening again by getting rid of the coven. "They know where miracle will go,Inch Zylka informs TVGuide.com. "Miracle likely to that dark place required everyone's parents 16 years back and he's comfortable with might is bitter about this.Inch And definitely will his new dealings using the circle result in the bad boy possess a change of heart? "Jake's on the pretty dark path," Zylka states. "He comes here with one factor on his mind, but when you enter into the circle and you're feeling the feelings and attachment, it's almost indisputable. However, Mike might be among individuals people that's sufficiently strong to deny individuals feelings due to all of the hate he's for the people of the town. The Key Circle Exclusive: Hunter's Stepfanie Kramer to experience creepy Charles' mother "I wouldn't count it he could maybe feel an association having a circle, but he's arrived at Chance Harbor having a goal in your mind and that is all he's in the mind unless of course someone or something like that can obvious up,Inch he adds. Cassie (Britt Robertson) might be the main one individual who can stop Mike in the mission for revenge. "She's new and she or he is open to the majority of things,Inch Zylka describes. "She gives Mike the advantage of the doubt. This might be the very first time anybody has given him the advantage of the doubt due to his past. Only the sense of receiving another chance, it's like, 'Why wouldn't you think about that?' This can be a girl he sees a great deal in and recognizes how effective this girl is." Their connection has sparked hurt feelings in Faye (Phoebe Tonkin), his ex, and Adam (Thomas Dekker), whose family Mike stole from before departing Chance Harbor. "Knowing Faye, she's not really too happy about this,Inch Zylka states about Mike and Cassie's new bond. "She is going to try her best to go into between that." The Key Circle Love Triangular Scoop: Diana is losing belief! Zylka adds the coven continues to be awaiting Adam to eventually snap, thinking about his history with Mike. "We have touched a little on Mike stealing form Adam's father (Adam Harrington), there is however another thing there, and we'll observe how that originates using what really did happen between the pair of them,Inch he states. "There's likely to be that tension attracted out whenever possible before each one people really explodes." With this particular growing camaraderie with Cassie, however, Mike will have to choose sides. "He's certainly going to try and fight [his loyalties between] each family,Inch Zylka states. "The witch predators required him in, and it is just like a boy elevated by baby wolves. The circle is clearly his new family, so which will have the higher influence?" The Key Circle airs Thursdays at 9/8c around the CW. Do you consider Mike will pick the witch predators or Cassie and also the circle?

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Its Official: Starz Orders David Goyer/BBC Worldwides Da Vincis Devils To Series

David Goyers Da Vincis Devils Eyes Eco-friendly Light At Starz EXCLUSIVE: Starz has given a straight-to-series order to Da Vincis Devils, a journey series fromThe Dark Dark night/Guy Of Steel co-author David S. Goyer and BBC Worldwide Prods. Da Vinci’s Devils has gotten an eight-episode order and it is slated to begin filming at the begining of 2012 for any 2013 premiere. This is actually the first project to go in production underneath the multi-year agreement Starz signed with BBC Worldwide Prods. in August. Compiled by Goyer, Da Vinci’s Devils is referred to like a historic fantasy that follows the “untold” story around the globe’s finest genius throughout his raucous youth in Renaissance Florence. Brash and brilliant, the 25-year-old da Vinci is definitely an artist, inventor, swordsman, lover, dreamer and idealist. Like a free thinker, with intellect and skills which are almost superhuman, he struggles to reside in their own reality and time. He starts not only to begin to see the future, but invent it. “Da Vinci was the initial Renaissance guy — a near-mythic figure which has world-wide appeal,” Goyer stated. “This is a show about secret histories, genius, madness, and all sorts of things profane. And That I’m particularly excited which i get to get it done on premium cable, in which the story is often as dark and challenging and irreverent because it warrants to become.” Goyer assists as showrunner around the series, executive creating alongside Julie Gardner and BBC Worldwide Prods. mind Jane Tranter. “David has reimagined probably the most legendary superheroes ever, and it is again building an remarkable prism by which to find the mobile phone industry's finest genius and many mysterious guy,” Starz Media Controlling Director Carmi Zlotnik stated. “If present day has Tony Stark, the Renaissance had da Vinci.” Da Vinci’s Devils began warming up at the end of August when produces started delivering out feelers to authors about potential staffing jobs. Which has now switched to firm staffing offers. BBC Worldwide will distribute the series worldwide. The organization is deficit financing the shows underneath the cope with Starz, mainly from worldwide sales, therefore the series are developed using the global marketplace in mind. Da Vincis Devils fits that bill having a protagonist who is among the most identifiable figures in mobile phone industry's science and art history. What’s more, the youthful existence of the incredibly complex and brilliant guy has not been investigated,” Tranter stated. Da Vincis Devils may be the latest straight-to-series project to become listed on Starz’s selection which includes new drama Boss starring Kelsey Grammer, which opened on FridaySpartacus: Vengeance, which returns in The month of january 2012 and also the approaching period drama Miracle City, which debuts in April. CAA reps Goyer and BBC Worldwide Prods.

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Warner Bros Ready For A Virtual Detective 3

EXCLUSIVE: Warner Bros has set Came Pearce to create A Virtual Detective 3, ongoing the man Ritchie-directed series that stars Robert Downey Junior. and Jude Law. The offer will quickly be sealed with Pearce, who's presently writing Iron Guy 3, that will also star Downey. This development comes before the outlet from the second installment from the franchise, A Virtual Detective: A Game Title of Shadows, which bows December 16. The film concentrates on the fight between Holmes, Watson, as well as their enemy, Professor Moriarty. Jared Harris plays that role, and Noomi Rapace joins Rachel McAdams within the follow up. Pearce also did some writing on Off-shore Rim, the large alien invasion film that Guillermo del Toro is going to begin shooting in Toronto for Legendary Pictures and Warner Bros. Pearce is repped by WME and Warren Dern.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Costume designer Aghayan dies

Emmy-winning and Oscar-nominated costume designer Ray Aghayan, whose work appeared on Oscarcasts, at the 1984 Summer Olympics and draping the likes of Barbra Streisand, Judy Garland, Julie Andrews and Diana Ross, died Monday of natural causes in Los Angeles. He was 83.Ray Aghayan dies at 83; award-winning costume designerIn a career that spanned TV, film and Broadway, Ray Aghayan designed costumes for such stars as Judy Garland, Barbra Streisand, Diana Ross, Julie Andrews and Doris Day. He was the lifetime partner of costume designer Bob Mackie.October 14, 2011Ray Aghayan, an Emmy Award-winning and Academy Award-nominated costume designer whose credits included more than a dozen Oscar shows and the opening and closing ceremonies of the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, has died. He was 83.Aghayan, the lifetime partner of costume designer Bob Mackie, died Monday of natural causes at his home in Los Angeles, said a spokeswoman for the Costume Designers Guild.In a career that spanned television, film and Broadway, the Iranian-born Aghayan designed costumes for such stars as Judy Garland, Barbra Streisand, Diana Ross, Dinah Shore, Julie Andrews, Carol Channing and Doris Day."He was a darling man, and I loved working with him on my films," Day said Thursday in a statement to the Los Angeles Times. "He designed some beautiful gowns for me in classic, timeless styles."A onetime stage actor, director and producer, Aghayan launched his career as a television costume designer for "Matinee Theatre" in 1957 and went on to design the costumes for two Fred Astaire TV specials and other shows.Aghayan, who was also costume designer for Garland's 1963-64 musical variety show, was instrumental in persuading the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences to recognize the contributions of costume designers -- and he and Mackie shared the first Emmy ever awarded for costume design, in 1967 for "Alice Through the Looking Glass."Aghayan received six more Emmy nominations and shared an Emmy in 1987 with Ret Turner for "Diana Ross: Red Hot Rhythm and Blues." He won his third Emmy in 1992 for the 64th Annual Academy Awards.After establishing himself in television, Aghayan moved into films in the mid-1960s, with credits including "Do Not Disturb," "The Glass Bottom Boat," "In Like Flint," "Caprice" and "Doctor Dolittle."For his work in films, he received three Oscar nominations: for "Gaily, Gaily" in 1970, for "Lady Sings the Blues" in 1973 (shared with Mackie and Norma Koch) and for "Funny Lady" in 1976 (shared with Mackie).Aghayan also worked as a costume designer for Broadway productions and received a Tony Award nomination in 1970 for "Applause."As costume designer for the opening and closing ceremonies of the 1984 Summer Olympics, Aghayan created 50 designs multiplied, as The Times reported at the time, "into some 11,000 costumes, most of which will be unveiled at Saturday's three-hour [opening] extravaganza in the Coliseum."Aghayan said the spirit he wanted his costumes to convey was "as American as possible and at the same time as California and as sporty as possible." For that reason, he said, the predominant color in the costumes was white."White is just happy," he explained. "And it's very summer. I don't think there's anything better."In 2008, Aghayan was honored by the Costume Designers Guild Local 892 with a Career Achievement in Television Award."There was nobody better in a fitting room," Rachael Stanley, executive director of the guild, said Thursday. "Whenever there was a problem trying to make something work during a fitting, Ray could come in and take a look at it and say, 'Oh, the problem is....' He had a very keen eye for details."Stanley, who worked with Aghayan on three Academy Awards presentations, described him as "brilliant" and "versatile.""He was just a visionary, and he was right, down to the smallest detail," she said. "Everything mattered to him, that it be just right."Aghayan was also executive producer of the 1979 TV movie "The Tenth Month" and a producer of the 1985 TV movie "Consenting Adult."Of Armenian descent, Aghayan was born July 28, 1928, in Tehran, where his mother was a designer of haute couture."So, naturally, I learned about fashion and construction as I was growing up," he recalled in a 1968 interview with The Times. "But I wanted to go into the theater, to be a director or an actor."Aghayan, who began working for his mother after impressing her by designing a line of costumes when he was 14, told Hollywood columnist Hedda Hopper in 1965 that his family sent him to Los Angeles to study architecture but that after a few weeks in L.A. he enrolled in drama school."I acted in and directed plays for quite a while," he said in the 1968 Times interview. "I became a costume designer by happenstance."I was directing a play and found we didn't have enough money to hire a designer. So I designed the costumes. I've been a designer ever since."Aghayan, who is survived by Mackie, continued to work and recently completed several costumes for Diana Ross' concert appearances. Contact the Variety newsroom at news@variety.com

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Hatchery, Jane Startz option 'Angel' book series

Los Angeles-based production company the Hatchery and Gotham-based Jane Startz Prods. have teamed to option scribe L.A. Weatherly's book trilogy, "Angel." The series follows the complicated love affair of Willow, a half-angel and half-human character, and Alex, a CIA assassin assigned to hunt her down. "Angel Burn," the first book in the "Angel" series, was released domestically by Candlewick Press in May and landed a top ten spot on the American Assn. of Booksellers' Indie Next List. "Angel Fire," the second book in the series, will released in the U.K. this month, and is slated for a U.S. release in January 2012. The final book in the "Angel" trilogy is expected to be published in fall 2012. Startz, known for producing book-to-film adaptations such as "Ella Enchanted" and "The Baby-Sitters' Club," described "Angel" as "one of the most thrilling, romantic and imaginative books I have read in a very, very long time," while Hatchery partner Dan Angel dubbed the trilogy a "rare property that hits on all cylinders." Candlewick Press topper Karen Lotz added, "We simply cannot wait to see how (the book) translate for audiences in what promises to be a thrill ride feature film." Contact the Variety newsroom at news@variety.com

Monday, October 10, 2011

Drive Faces Dumbest Lawsuit Ever, and 5 Other Stories You'll Be Talking About Today

Happy Monday! Also in today’s edition of The Broadsheet: A Pixar alum gets the closest of close reads… Tortured Oscar logic… Awesomely ridiculous new reality stars… The $24 million Korean humanist marathoner WWII film you have (or haven’t) been waiting for… and more. · Reportedly some idiot woman outside Detroit is actually suing distributor FilmDistrict for misleading her into watching Drive. Apparently Sarah Deming of Keego Harbor, Mich., saw the trailer and expected something “very similar to the Fast and Furious, or similar, series of movies.” Instead, she alleges, she got mood-driven splatter and even “extreme gratuitous defamatory dehumanizing racism directed against members of the Jewish faith.” What? But for that last part I’d have just chalked all this up to another stroke of genius by FilmDistrict boss and marketing wizard Bob Berney. Anyway, feel free to go back to bed; the day isn’t going to get any better. [WDIV via MCN] · It’s currently behind the paywall, but this week’s NYer profile of Oscar-winning Pixar director Andrew Stanton’s transition to live-action for John Carter is endlessly interesting reading. [The NYer] · “Will Marilyn Monroe Finally Win An Oscar Nod If Michelle Williams Does?” Huh? Anyway, just throwing it out there. [Deadline] · Speaking of redoutable, immutable logic, let headhunter Stephen Viscusi breaks down the philosophy guiding his new A&E reality series The Job Whisperer: “If this person that you just saw on TV can get a job, get off your ass and get a job, too.” Sigh. [NY Post] · I’m not sure the world is quite ready for a “humanist” movie about Korean and Japanese marathoners who take a detour into WWII to fight for Japan and the Soviet Union and eventually, as prisoners of war, Germany. On the other hand, the director promises “visual effects that haven’t been seen before in a war movie,” so hey. Can’t wait? [THR] · “Can I get cancer from oral sex?” Guys in particular might want to brace themselves before checking out this helpful, terrifying infograph. [The Daily Beast]

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Warners Buys Spec 'The Envoy' for Joel Silver to create (Exclusive)

Jason Merritt/Getty Images Warner Bros has acquired an action thriller spec entitled The Envoy by Robert Lynn. Silver Pictures' Joel Silver and Andrew Rona are affixed to produce. The storyline focuses on youthful diplomatic courier whose routine delivery turns deadly when it is discovered the sensitive information he carries consists of stolen plans to have an attack on American interests. He or she must reach the American embassy in Vienna while various forces attempt to stop him. Silver's Sarah Meyer introduced the project in and can act inside a producer capacity. Silver and Rona have experienced success within the worldwide thriller arena, using the Liam Neeson thriller Unknown being the newest example. Silver is creating A Virtual Detective: A Game Title of Shadows, which opens December, and also the duo have comedy Project X being released the coming year. Lynn would be a scribe contestant on Project: Greenlight who continued to create and direct several low-budget movies. This really is his initial purchase. He's repped by UTA, Kaplan/Perrone Entertainment and attorney Owen Seitel. Warner Bros. Pictures Group

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

George Harrison: Residing in the fabric World: Telluride Film Review

It's a question how he is doing it, but in some way between making The Departed and Shutter Island and Boardwalk Empire and Hugo and all sorts of his assorted other projects, Martin Scorsese finds time for you to create another epic music documentary. Similar to his 2005 No Direction Home: Bob Dylan long, scope and comprehensiveness, George Harrison: Residing in the fabric World proves nearly equally rewarding, even when its subject doesn't always compel exactly the same kind of automatic anticipatory excitement. Remarkable footage from both Beatles era and publish-ླྀs period, together with revelatory, frequently beguiling commentary from a number of intimates along with a treasure chest of musical delights, mix to produce a personality portrait of welcome depth in regards to a musical giant who frequently appeared to face a little within the shadows of his more exuberant peers. After festival exposure in Telluride and NY, this highly satisfying, two-part, experience is going to be open to audiences on Cinemax beginning March. 5.our editor recommendsCANNES: Martin Scorsese and Olivia Harrison discuss their in-progress documentary about George HarrisonTelluride Selection Features 'A Harmful Method,' 'The Descendants' and 'Shame' Scorsese doesn't try to create a situation because of Harrison being being an important a painter as Dylan or his band mates John Lennon and Paul McCartney, or his getting been somewhat neglected. But the film entirely instructions full attention for 209 minutes is itself testimony not just to its quality but to the concept that the general public might have undervalued this old schoolmate of Paul's whose voice wasn't exceptional, who wasn't as cute because the other two original Beatles, didn't lead many tunes in the beginning and also got into that strange Indian sitar stuff but had possibly probably the most different and unusual existence journey of them. PHOTOS: Telluride Film Festival: 12 Movies to understand Opening with fantastic The Second World War British victory celebration footage that's new a minimum of to American eyes, the film zooms with the subject's Liverpool youth ("He was cocky," among his siblings avers) to the stage where George, at 17, visited play in divey Hamburg clubs using the original configuration of the items ended up being to get to be the Beatles. Wonderfully intimate interviews with Klaus Voorman and, especially, his then-girlfriend Astrid Kirchherr, who required striking early photographs from the lads, bring individuals grubby, heady days poignantly alive. Then Beatlemania hits, with first-hands explanations by Ringo Starr supplying an internal feel to some cascade of the items, again, isn't excessively familiar footage. Joan Taylor, wife from the group's press officer, amusingly describes the boys' first acidity trip-done, per Paul, within an atmosphere of "controlled weirdness"--although George claims with an excerpted Dick Cavett Show appearance they didn't know these were taking LSD the very first time they'd it. Whereas India, Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and also the sitar were basically passing fancies for that other Beatles, for George they grew to become staples of his existence, with Taylor recommending that, for him, spirituality and meditation provided a path to meaning and also the inner self beyond chemicals. Musically, the Eastern diversion, which occupies a reasonable quantity of screen time, still appears exactly that, a kind of experimental stalemate when grafted onto Western pop, but George's sincere dedication into it is unquestionable. The Beginning, which runs 94 minutes, finishes with Yoko Ono making her entrance upon the scene and tension mounting to some extent that, per Harrison, "was stifling us. It needed to self-destruct." Nothing under "My Guitar Lightly Weeps" would caused by bring this chapter to some close. For a while, George had silently been stockpiling tunes (most of which have been declined by John and Paul), which describes how, following the Beatles split up, he could so rapidly come forth with a triple album, "Everything Must Pass," packed with great material. Below within the 115-minute Part Two is variously exhilarating (the Concert for Bangladesh, The Traveling Wilburys), bizarre (Eric Clapton's dependence on George's wife Pattie, whom he eventually married, an interlude referred to by Clapton in rather defensively jokey fashion), idiosyncratic (George's acquisition of a massive Victorian estate) and illustrative of his progressively diverse interests (his outlay of $4 million to save Monty Python's Existence of John from cancellation and the roll-out of the enterprising Hand crafted Films, his close friendship with Formula 1 driver Jackie Stewart). PHOTOS: Venice Film Festival: 10 Movies to understand One major coup is really a rare, nicely tried interview with Phil Spector, clearly made before his 2009 murder conviction. A producer on "Allow It To Be," "EverythingInch and "A Concert for Bangladesh," Spector may also be amusing and much more frequently informative, a genuine plus for that documentary. George's second wife Olivia progressively makes its way into the frame (she's one the film's three producers), then comes the troubled finish, with recurring ailments irritated through the shocking home invasion and physical assault that could have substantially reduced his existence. Editor David Tedeschi, who also cut the Dylan film, surely shouldered a massive share from the responsibility for organizing the voluminous and diverse material that comprises this huge tapestry, for an finish result that's consistently engaging and vital. Some construction appears puzzling--no sooner would be the youngsters in Liverpool introduced in the start compared to film jumps momentarily towards the Beatles splitting up, there's scarce reference to the lads' film work (might this not have access to assisted spur George's later entry in to the film business?) and family along with other personal particulars are sketchily presented at best. But, then, if you would like every i dotted and t entered, you need to read a biography this is actually the guy themself, reticent, cagey but available to existence, his mind occupied with lots of things, and the music and buddies too, all on the screen. It's not really a film one particularly likely to be produced however it's a greatly welcome one. Venue: Telluride Film Festival Opens: October 5-6 (Cinemax) Production: Spitfire Prods., Sikelia Prods., Grove Street Prods. Sales: Exclusive Films Intl. Cast: Eric Clapton, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, George Martin, Paul McCartney, Yoko Ono, Tom Petty, Phil Spector, Ringo Starr, Jackie Stewart, Harry Harrison, Pete Harrison, Klaus Voorman, Astrid Kirchherr, Joan Taylor, Pattie Boyd, Ken Scott, Jane Birkin, Neil Aspinall, Mukunda Soswami, Billy Preston, Jim Keller, Olivia Harrison, Ray Cooper, Dhani Harrison Director: Martin Scorsese Producers: Olivia Harrison, Nigel Sinclair, Martin Scorsese Executive Producer: Margaret Bodde Editor: David Tedeschi Running time, 209 minutes Martin Scorsese Worldwide Telluride Film Festival George Harrison: Residing in the fabric World