Film is set to start shooting next week in Buenos Aires and to continue in Barcelona and Las Vegas.
Barcelona-based production company Mr. Miyagi has teamed with Uruguay’s Mother Superior and Argentina’s Sombracine to co-produce queer romantic comedy Astronaut, the feature directorial debut of producer-director David Matamoros.
Lead-produced by Mr. Miyagi’s Matamoros and Ángeles Hernández, Astronaut follows David, an inveterate romantic who has a travel agency specialising in trips linked to romantic comedies. His 15-year relationship with Quique is stagnant. So, David decides to give Quique a trip down Route 66 with a special stop in Las Vegas.
Barcelona-based production company Mr. Miyagi has teamed with Uruguay’s Mother Superior and Argentina’s Sombracine to co-produce queer romantic comedy Astronaut, the feature directorial debut of producer-director David Matamoros.
Lead-produced by Mr. Miyagi’s Matamoros and Ángeles Hernández, Astronaut follows David, an inveterate romantic who has a travel agency specialising in trips linked to romantic comedies. His 15-year relationship with Quique is stagnant. So, David decides to give Quique a trip down Route 66 with a special stop in Las Vegas.
- 8/2/2023
- by Emilio Mayorga
- ScreenDaily
Santiago Requejo's live action short, which is on the Oscars' shortlist, considers how quickly latent prejudices can assert themselves in the right setting.
It's a residents meeting at an apartment block and each owner is voting on the funding for a new lift. Everything is amicably settled, until one of those present (Raúl Fernández de Pablo) lets slip his plans for renting out his apartment. What initially seems as though it will be a celebration of the event quickly turns sour when he reveals that the new tenant is a work colleague who came to the company via a programme for people with mental health issues.
The themes, while highlighting everyday prejudice many people with mental health issues face, are heavily handled. Almost everyone at the meeting is suddenly quite happy to voice their negative opinions about the prospective tenant, which seems an unlikely turn of events in the modern era and.
It's a residents meeting at an apartment block and each owner is voting on the funding for a new lift. Everything is amicably settled, until one of those present (Raúl Fernández de Pablo) lets slip his plans for renting out his apartment. What initially seems as though it will be a celebration of the event quickly turns sour when he reveals that the new tenant is a work colleague who came to the company via a programme for people with mental health issues.
The themes, while highlighting everyday prejudice many people with mental health issues face, are heavily handled. Almost everyone at the meeting is suddenly quite happy to voice their negative opinions about the prospective tenant, which seems an unlikely turn of events in the modern era and.
- 1/4/2023
- by Amber Wilkinson
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Written by Various | Art by Various | Published by DC Comics
Although the 80-page giants generally have been pretty good, especially the wave of books we had celebrating various character anniversaries, DC of late have struggled a little with the anthology books. I should say it’s not just DC, but as once upon a time they were the masters of the format it is most noticeable with them. The mix of creative teams isn’t the issue either. A blend of known names and up-and-comers was always the way DC’s mystery books operated, and it served them very well. What drew me to this book the most was Paul Levitz writing Phantom Stranger (that alone is worth the entrance price), and Tom Mandrake and Kelley Jones illustrating two tales. Let’s hope the other stories can add some scary fun as well.
The know the score with these books,...
Although the 80-page giants generally have been pretty good, especially the wave of books we had celebrating various character anniversaries, DC of late have struggled a little with the anthology books. I should say it’s not just DC, but as once upon a time they were the masters of the format it is most noticeable with them. The mix of creative teams isn’t the issue either. A blend of known names and up-and-comers was always the way DC’s mystery books operated, and it served them very well. What drew me to this book the most was Paul Levitz writing Phantom Stranger (that alone is worth the entrance price), and Tom Mandrake and Kelley Jones illustrating two tales. Let’s hope the other stories can add some scary fun as well.
The know the score with these books,...
- 10/26/2022
- by Dean Fuller
- Nerdly
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