Richard Levien
Historia
Richard Levien is a screenwriter, director and editor from New Zealand.
Producer
Transcending cultural barriers and consistently going against the grain, female Nepali climber Pasang Lhamu Sherpa attempted to summit Everest four times in the early nineties. Although she was not allowed to attend school as a child, Pasang did not let that stop her from pursuing her dreams. After founding her own trekking company in Kathmandu, she blazed a trail for Nepali women via her efforts to summit Everest. Proving how big you can dream and how far you can go to achieve those dreams, she left a legacy not only for the family she has left behind, but for the myriad women following in her footsteps.
Editor
Mientras se avecina la Segunda Guerra Mundial, el Papa Pío XI llama a un humilde sacerdote estadounidense para que lo ayude a desafiar los males del nazismo y el antisemitismo. Pero la muerte interviene y el Papa Pío XII lleva a cabo ahora una respuesta muy diferente a Hitler y al Holocausto
Producer
Itan, de 12 años, tiene una vida prometedora en San Francisco hasta que un día al volver del colegio descubre que su madre ha desaparecido. Solo le queda su tío, un camionero a quien a penas conoce.
Story
Itan, de 12 años, tiene una vida prometedora en San Francisco hasta que un día al volver del colegio descubre que su madre ha desaparecido. Solo le queda su tío, un camionero a quien a penas conoce.
Editor
Itan, de 12 años, tiene una vida prometedora en San Francisco hasta que un día al volver del colegio descubre que su madre ha desaparecido. Solo le queda su tío, un camionero a quien a penas conoce.
Screenplay
Itan, de 12 años, tiene una vida prometedora en San Francisco hasta que un día al volver del colegio descubre que su madre ha desaparecido. Solo le queda su tío, un camionero a quien a penas conoce.
Director
Itan, de 12 años, tiene una vida prometedora en San Francisco hasta que un día al volver del colegio descubre que su madre ha desaparecido. Solo le queda su tío, un camionero a quien a penas conoce.
Editor
Jerry Ross Barrish sees the beauty in—and creates the unexpected out of—discarded materials. The son of hard-working Jewish immigrants with crime-family connections, Barrish worked for 50 years as a bail bondsman, much of it for radical protesters. He stumbled into acclaim as a filmmaker, earning the Museum of Modern Art’s prestigious New Director distinction and winning major European awards along the way. Then one day, inspiration struck as he picked up plastic trash on a beach, leading him to launch a whole new career as a sculptor. Though acclaimed by curators, he long went virtually unnoticed in the commercial-art realm. But at age 75, the unassuming Barrish may finally be on the verge of success, as William Farley’s engaging documentary goes to show. Seeing the playfulness of his pieces, you’ll understand why: with artificial materials, he has managed to capture real life. -Denver Film Society
Editor
Upon returning to their countryside cabin one day, Kaya, his wife Helen, and their daughter Naomi are confronted by two suited men: representatives of the San Francisco Remigration Program. The men explain that San Francisco is now occupied entirely by the wealthy class. But stoplights still burn out and trains occasionally jump their rails. Blue-collar labor isn't obsolete, but it's scarce. The city has created a program to "remigrate" long-gone working class families from their inland homes back to the city that once pushed them out. Kaya, Helen, and Naomi return to San Francisco and join a handful of other potential remigrants for a tour of what can be expected in their new lives. But can they learn to trust their old home once again?
Editor
Pat Spurgeon is a professional musician whose dreams of being in a successful rock 'n' roll band have come true. But just as his band, Rogue Wave, starts to take off, his kidney starts to fail. "D tour" chronicles the life of a musician with "no back-up plan" as he's faced with daily dialysis, a grueling tour, and a search for a new kidney.