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‘The End of Oak Street’ Trailer: The Dinosaurs Are Just the Beginning

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There’s no one quite so adept at navigating the mundane horror of suburbia than filmmaker David Robert Mitchell, who has turned his camera on both the gentle pains and pleasures of a summer spent noodling around the ‘hood (with “The Myth of the American Sleepover”) and the visceral terror of being stalked through the sorts of spaces that should feel safe (“It Follows”).

Following his polarizing neo-noir “Under the Silver Lake,” Mitchell is back strolling and trolling the streets of a cozy neighborhood in Anywhere, USA. Except, well, as the first teaser for his upcoming “The End of Oak Street” showed us when it was released at the end of March, things are very much not what they seem. For one thing, there are dinosaurs in this seemingly normal suburban enclave, which appears to have suddenly been displaced into a different time and place.

The Warner Bros. film, Mitchell’s first studio outing, is produced by J.J. Abrams through his Bad Robot production label. An official synopsis for the film reads: “After a mysterious cosmic event rips Oak Street from suburbia and transports their neighborhood to someplace unknown, the Platt family soon discovers that their very survival depends on them sticking together as they navigate their now unrecognizable surroundings.”

Top of the list of “unrecognizable surroundings”: dinosaurs, and lots of them! Early marketing for the film has not been shy about the dino pals stomping around our central family’s seemingly normal suburban enclave, nor have the teaser and today’s new trailer played coy about the entirety of Oak Street “moving” to a new location. But there has to be more to it, right? Dinosaurs, splashy, scary, yes, but what is the meaning behind all of it? Hopefully, we’ll find out soon.

The film, previously announced as “Flowervale Street,” stars Anne Hathaway, Ewan McGregor, Maisy Stella, Christian Convery, Jordan Alexa Davis, P.J. Byrne, and Chris Coy. Other executive producers include Hannah Minghella, Jon Cohen, Matt Jackson, and Tommy Harper.

Warner Bros. will release “The End of Oak Street” in theaters on Friday, August 14. Catch up with its first teaser, which you can watch right here.

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Reiser Brothers Making ‘Anglers’ For Amplify & Rough House

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EXCLUSIVE: The latest series from Amplify Pictures is ‘Anglers‘, an unscripted series from indie filmmakers and wildlife photographers Owen and Quentin Reiser.

Danny McBride’s Rough House Pictures is serving as an executive producer on the show, which Amplify has greenlit as part of its strategy to independently-finance TV shows. As such, L.A.-based Amplify will finance the eight-part, half-hour series.

The Reiser brothers, whose YouTube birdwatching series Listers first made their name, are the creators, directors, executive producers and stars of Anglers. Per the synopsis, it “tells the story of two eager brothers who hit the road with a Craigslist boat and more confidence than skill, stumbling through America’s many fishing subcultures as they try to become real anglers before entering a bass fishing tournament.”

The Reiser Brothers said: “We’re making a gonzo road trip doc piece on what it means to be an angler in America.” 

Production will begin this summer in the Pacific Northwest, with the Reisers, Amplify’s Joe Lewis, Luke Esselen, Rachel Eggebeen and Colin Miller and Rough House’s Danny McBride, David Gordon Green and Brandon James serving as executive producers.

Anglers is proof that TV can still be authentic, surprising and wonderful,” said Lewis, Amplify’s CEO. “It’s the story of two brothers chasing fishing glory, told with emotion, absurdity, incredible filmmaking and a voice that could only come from Owen and Quentin.

“This is the kind of story and independent series we built Amplify Pics to support – bold, personal and deeply funny with the power to surprise and take you into a world you’ve never seen before.”

The series marks 100 Foot Wave maker Amplify’s latest independently-made series, coming after the likes of mockumentary series Mt. Mystic from Jeremiah Dunlap and Cory Quintard and comedic crime-thriller Sleep King from the Duplass brothers.

Rough House’s James said: “Owen and Quentin have a filmmaking voice that feels completely their own. They’re wildly funny, deeply committed and genuinely unpredictable. We were blown away by what they accomplished with Listers, and this series only expands on that originality and ambition.

“Their pursuit of fishing glory is hilarious on its face, but it also promises to become a surprisingly cinematic, deeply American and totally surreal adventure that’s unexpectedly moving. We’re thrilled to be in the boat with them and Amplify on this one.”
 
The Reiser Brothers are represented by Anonymous Content and Vainshtein Law. Rough House is repped by UTA. 
 

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‘Macho Dancer’ 4K Trailer: Gay Philippine Cult Classic Is Restored

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The rising swell of LGBTQ films from the Philippines in the last few decades — in one of the Southeast Asian countries most friendly to queer storytelling — owes much to Lino Brocka’s 1988 “Macho Dancer.”

A vividly told and hyper-stylized melodrama, the film centers on a young gay man, barely 18, who leaves the country to try his hand at sex work in Manila to support his family. He falls into a demimonde of desire and police corruption in this surprisingly explicit (but never exploitative) rediscovery, which has played the Museum of Modern Art’s To Save and Project and the Los Angeles Festival of Movies, and will soon head to Frameline in San Francisco. IndieWire debuts the exclusive trailer for the 4K restoration, arriving courtesy of Kani Releasing, below and in time for Pride Month.

More on the film courtesy of Kani Releasing’s synopsis: “Upon losing a reliable American client, 18-year-old gigolo Pol (Allan Paule) leaves the provinces to try his luck in the soapy gay clubs of Metro Manila. Pol learns the ropes alongside fellow stripper Noel (Daniel Fernando) and savvy prostitute Bambi (Jaclyn Jose), discovering an underbelly of protection rackets, human trafficking and rampant political corruption. One of Lino Brocka’s lasting successes, 1988’s ‘Macho Dancer’ combines a flair for socially conscious melodrama with pulp provocation, setting the template for what would become Viva Films’ erotic niche to this day. Underlying the film’s astute, cynical outlook on systemic, class-based exploitation in the Philippines is a neon-lit tale of self-discovery gyrating between queer desire and heteronormativity, sensuality and street-level grit, tenderness and violence. Heavily censored upon release and hugely successful overseas, ‘Macho Dancer’ follows the recent re-discovery of Brocka’s ‘Bona’ and is presented here in a new 4K restoration from Viva Film’s original film elements.”

Brocka died suddenly in 1991 amid a car accident after directing at least nine studio movies and dozens more independently. Most famously, he directed “Manila in the Claws of Light” from 1975 and is often regarded as the greatest Philippine movie of the 20th century. “Macho Dancer” was heavily censored upon release, but the new version fully restores Brocka’s vision from Viva Film’s original 35mm negative. It’s both a sensuous study of queer desire and an interrogation of corrupt urban power structures.

“Macho Dancer” arrives in theaters in 4K starting July 10 at IFC Center in New York, courtesy of Kani Releasing. Check out the film’s new trailer, an IndieWire exclusive, below.

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Andy Burnham Speaking At Mythos Manchester Film TV Event

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The man with ambitions to be the next UK Prime Minister is set to headline a new film and TV event in Manchester championing talent in the north of England.

Andy Burnham will topline the Mythos Manchester event next Thursday at an event alongside the likes of BBC iPlayer and channels boss Dan McGolpin and Emily Feller, Chief Creative Officer at Adolescence producer Warp Films.

The new event comes with Greater Manchester bidding to be the new home of the Edinburgh TV Festival, which is currently exploring options to move.

Burnham, the Mayor of Greater Manchester, will deliver the keynote at the ABC Buildings in St John’s District. Burnham is about to fight a by-election that will see him return to UK parliament amid what almost the entire country believe is the beginning of a leadership challenge against unpopular Labour leader Keir Starmer. This political psychodrama has dominated UK news for weeks.

Others speaking at Mythos include Caroline Simpson from GMCA, Phil Hunt, founder of Head Gear Films and Bankside Films, Richard Fee of Quay Street Productions, Rob Page from Screen Manchester and Space Studios, Screen Yorkshire’s Caroline Cooper Charles, Isabel Davis from Screen Scotland and Dead Man’s Shoes writer Paul Fraser.

Manchester has a rich TV and film heritage, having been home to classics like Queer as Folk and 24 Hour Party People. Last night, Russell T. Davies’ Tip Toe, set in Manchester’s famous Canal Street, launched on Channel 4. The city and wider region is currently bidding to take the Edinburgh TV Festival from 2027, which would be the first time the fest has relocated in its 50 year existence. Greater Manchester is into the final three versus Newcastle and Edinburgh.

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