Crawford Hawkins, a director, producer and editor in Los Angeles before heading to Canada in 1979 and eventually becoming head of the Directors Guild of Canada on the West Coast, has died. He was 85.
Hawkins died June 25 due to unspecified causes, the Dgc confirmed. "What Crawford gave our community is stunning in its breadth as in its depth and matched by the memories of the countless individuals and lives he touched along the way. He will be remembered and he will be missed," Tim Southam, national president of the Directors Guild of Canada, said in a ...
Hawkins died June 25 due to unspecified causes, the Dgc confirmed. "What Crawford gave our community is stunning in its breadth as in its depth and matched by the memories of the countless individuals and lives he touched along the way. He will be remembered and he will be missed," Tim Southam, national president of the Directors Guild of Canada, said in a ...
- 7/15/2019
- The Hollywood Reporter - Film + TV
Crawford Hawkins, a director, producer and editor in Los Angeles before heading to Canada in 1979 and eventually becoming head of the Directors Guild of Canada on the West Coast, has died. He was 85.
Hawkins died June 25 due to unspecified causes, the Dgc confirmed. "What Crawford gave our community is stunning in its breadth as in its depth and matched by the memories of the countless individuals and lives he touched along the way. He will be remembered and he will be missed," Tim Southam, national president of the Directors Guild of Canada, said in a ...
Hawkins died June 25 due to unspecified causes, the Dgc confirmed. "What Crawford gave our community is stunning in its breadth as in its depth and matched by the memories of the countless individuals and lives he touched along the way. He will be remembered and he will be missed," Tim Southam, national president of the Directors Guild of Canada, said in a ...
- 7/15/2019
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Those pesky no good aliens are at it again folks. No wonder nobody ever visits earth...Still, here we have the trailer for Roadside Attractions' "Alien Trespass" starring Eric McCormack, Jenni Baird, Robert Patrick, Dan Lauria and Jody Thompson. See the trailer here. What's it about? Coming soon to a theater and drive-in near you: Alien Trespass, a thrilling sci-fi adventure from three-time Golden Globe winner and five time Emmy Award-nominated director/producer R.W. Goodwin ("The X-Files") and brought to you in glorious color! Alien Trespass is an exciting and entertaining homage to the great science-fiction movies of the 1950s, the post-war boom period when the country was filled with great hope and prosperity and, at the same time, lived under the threat of nuclear annihilation. The story begins in 1957 in the star-filled skies above California's Mojave Desert. It is a special night for noted astronomer Ted Lewis (Eric McCormack...
- 2/26/2009
- Upcoming-Movies.com
Movie Jungle has images in from the sci-fi horror comedy "Alien Trespass," helmed by R.W. Goodwin ("The X:Files: Revelations," "The Fugitive" TV Series). James Swift and Steven P. Fisher make their writing debut on the film. See all of the images from the gallery including the poster. Coming soon to a theater and drive-in near you: Alien Trespass, a thrilling sci-fi adventure from three-time Golden Globe winner and five time Emmy Award-nominated director/producer R.W. Goodwin ("The X-Files") and brought to you in glorious color! Alien Trespass is an exciting and entertaining homage to the great science-fiction movies of the 1950s, the post-war boom period when the country was filled with great hope and prosperity and, at the same time, lived under the threat of nuclear annihilation. The story begins in 1957 in the star-filled skies above California's Mojave Desert. It is a special night for noted astronomer Ted Lewis (Eric McCormack...
- 2/6/2009
- Upcoming-Movies.com
VANCOUVER, British Columbia -- Faced with a steep fall in U.S. runaway production, the British Columbia film industry is set to fight back with a major lobbying campaign for new incentives to keep Hollywood producers coming to shoot here. Officials of the Motion Picture Production Industry Assn., an industry umbrella organization, met Sunday in Vancouver for crisis talks and agreed to pressure the provincial government to increase tax incentives and reduce taxes overall for foreign producers shooting locally, as well as to raise the profile of their production sector at home and in the United States. The rear-guard effort to deal with the effects of a rising Canadian dollar on local labor costs also includes trimming per-day rates for production crews and equipment rentals. Crawford Hawkins, managing director of the Directors Guild of British Columbia, said Monday that his own and other unions were dropping their rates by 5%-10% on a job-by-job basis as they seek ways to streamline labor costs all round.
- 12/7/2004
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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