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Directed by Scott Hicks
Produced by
Kerry Haysen

Premiere in Australia, Adelaide Festival:
9 March 2008

USA: 18 April 2008
at The IFC Center NY

Official Site
Trailer (Quicktime)


Take also a look on
Glass Notes

The Boys are Back in Town




Pre-production
Filming begin in September

Directed by Scott Hicks
Written by Alan Cubitt
Produced by
Greg Brenman and Tim White
Starring: Clive Owen

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Samedi 12 janvier 2008
Hicks

VARIETY ANNONCE UNE SORTIE EN AVRIL AU GOTHAM'S IFC CENTER
Release in April at the Gotham's IFC Center

Reuters annonce une distribution possible en salle américaine pour "Glass a portrait of Philip in Twelve Parts". Les droits ont été acquis par le petit distributeur indépendant Koch Lorber, qui l'exploitera également en vidéo.

" Indie distributor Koch Lorber Films has acquired U.S. theatrical and home video rights to "Glass: A Portrait of Philip in Twelve Parts," a documentary from Australian filmmaker Scott Hicks."

The Australian propose par ailleurs un article sur le film.

"Filmmaker Scott Hicks begins his new documentary about Glass with the composer riding the roller-coaster at Coney Island, New York. The vertiginous camera work and fairground colour are underscored with Glass's music from another movie, Koyaanisqatsi. Rapidly repeated musical figures, so recognisably Glass, accompany the exhilarating ride.

Hicks says the outing to Coney Island, which Glass likes to visit every year, was just one activity in a typically action-packed day for the composer, who has written eight symphonies, more than 20 operas, ballets, concertos and scores for several films, among them Candyman, The Thin Blue Line and The Hours.

 

"He's one of the most extraordinary people I've ever met, and hardest-working, and he finds time to fit everything in," says Hicks, the director of Shine. "Of course, as the film reveals, there's a price to pay. It's intended to be a very human document of someone who I consider to be a great artist.""

To Be continued...


par Ishmael publié dans : News "Glass: a portrait of Philip in Twelve Parts
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Lundi 29 octobre 2007


Source: Adelaïde Now


Hicks parle dans cet article de son documentaire sur Glass. La première du film en Australie aura lieu le 9 mars 2008 au cinéma Picadilly / Here Hicks is talking abouts "Glass a portrait in twelve parts". The Premiere in Australia will be on March 9 2008 at Picadilly Cinema.


In 1984, my then teenage son Scott convinced me to go with him to a midnight screening of Godfrey Reggio's cult film KOYAANISQATSI at the Chelsea Cinema, and a new addiction was created. From that moment, I became a fan of Philip Glass's dynamic music, with its complex, layered sonic structures and its characteristic repetitiveness. I was hypnotised by it.

In 1997, while editing Snow Falling on Cedars, I used a track of Philip's music as a "temp" score (music you use as a guide in the editing stage). As my composer was having difficulty matching the power of the Glass piece, I contacted Philip's New York company to inquire about licensing the track in case I wanted to actually include it in the film. His manager, Jim Keller, realising I was a Glass "tragic", encouraged the start of a relationship between Philip and myself. Over the next few years, I was invited to a number of his performances, from Los Angeles to Sydney, taking both my sons to see Philip and his ensemble play live to screenings of movies that he had scored.

par Ishmael publié dans : News "Glass: a portrait of Philip in Twelve Parts
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Vendredi 21 septembre 2007

C'est avec un peu de retard que je relaie ces informations sur le documentaire sur Philip Glass; en raison de mes problèmes de connexion internet ces temps. Voici en tout cas pleins de commentaires et de photo du film sur le blog "documentaire" du festival de Toronto, c'est ici.

A few commentaries by Hicks and some photos here

GLASSAFilmByScottHicks.jpg


On the making of GLASS: a portrait of Philip in twelve parts: All in all, making this film has been a return to my roots as a filmmaker - pursuing an idea of personal passion, living it by the skin of your teeth, figuring out the financing and maintaining the persistence of vision you need to realise the dream.  I've enjoyed returning to the documentary form of story telling after more than a decade away from it - with all its unexpected developments, frustrations and delights


Thanks to José!

8.jpg


par Ishmael publié dans : News "Glass: a portrait of Philip in Twelve Parts
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Vendredi 21 septembre 2007

Avec des images du films! With some clips from the movie!!


par Ishmael publié dans : News "Glass: a portrait of Philip in Twelve Parts
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Jeudi 20 septembre 2007

 

By John DeFore

TORONTO (Hollywood Reporter) - It's easy to believe that composer Philip Glass, whose so-called minimalist works often repeat themselves into transcendence, is a disciplined practitioner of Eastern meditation. But who'd have guessed he bakes mouthwatering pizza? Such are the personal tidbits revealed in Scott Hicks' "Glass: A Portrait of Philip in Twelve Parts," an entertaining documentary that will fascinate admirers but is wide-ranging and unpretentious enough to engage those intimidated by Glass' aesthetic. Within the arena of artist-centric docus, theatrical prospects are solid.

Declaring its intentions immediately with scenes of Glass enjoying himself at Coney Island, N.Y., the movie is at least as concerned with the ins and outs of the subject's daily life as with his place in music history. More so, to tell the truth, much to the probable relief of non-musicologists in the audience. We spend a fair bit of time watching Glass hang out with his family in New York and Nova Scotia (in an idyllic beachside compound with multiple small cabins for artists who come visit) and more among the spiritual teachers, whose backgrounds range from Taoist to Toltec, with whom he studies.

Glass is no R. Crumb -- he admits that his biggest secret is that he gets up early and works hard -- but he's not a bore, either. Down-to-earth and open, he talks about his work in layman-friendly terms. Many of the most interesting anecdotes here are less about the music than the way it entered the public sphere: tales of that much-romanticized period in New York when artists with crazy ideas could live almost for free and make names for themselves without going through normal cultural channels.

Painter Chuck Close, another veteran of that scene, provides context about those years before going off on an amusing tangent about his famous series of portraits based on a single photo of Glass. The thing that kept him coming back to the image in different styles, we're not surprised to hear, was the fascinating dendritic curl of the young composer's hair.

The documentary proceeds through segments devoted to single events like the career-making opera "Einstein on the Beach" to works in progress like "Symphony No. 8," and, of most interest to a film fest crowd, to his prolific career composing movie scores. Errol Morris, Woody Allen and Martin Scorsese put in appearances that entertain and enlighten, and as we watch Glass in his studio we happen to glimpse a scene from "No Reservations" -- which Hicks was wrapping while shooting this film.

The 12-part structure, echoing the 12 notes of the chromatic scale and the title of one of Glass' most famous compositions, might sound like a precious conceit, but Hicks for the most part makes it work. Longtime fans might wish, say, for one or two of the segments focused on current work to be redirected toward his more groundbreaking compositions, but the behind-the-scenes appeal afforded by "Waiting for the Barbarians" and "Orion" is some compensation -- whether or not it will seem docu-worthy on its own in years to come, it allows a glimpse of a compositional method that seemingly consists of equal parts artistic inspiration and plain old hard work.

Director/director of photography: Scott Hicks; Producers: Scott Hicks, Susanne Preissler; Executive producers: Kerry Heysen, Roger Sexton; Co-producer: Lindsay Skutch; Editor: Stephen Jess.

Reuters/Hollywood Reporter

You can find on IMDB some early reviews by users from the screening in Toronro.

par Ishmael publié dans : News "Glass: a portrait of Philip in Twelve Parts
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