The lawyer for the family of Sarah Jones said today that it has reached an agreement with Midnight Rider director Randall Miller, his wife and producer Jody Savin, and several crewmembers in the wrongful death civil lawsuit filed after their daughter was killed during production in February on a train trestle in rural Georgia.
Attorney Jeff Harris said the confidential agreement had been reached with Miller, Savin, their Unclaimed Freight production company, location manager Charles Baxter, unit production manager/executive producer Jay Sedrish and Jay Sedrish Inc, executive producer and financier Don Mandrick, first assistant director Hillary Schwartz, director of photography Mike Ozier, Epozier Films Inc and landowner Rayonier Performance Fibers Llc.
“Richard and Elizabeth Jones’ objectives in filing this lawsuit, after the death of their 27-year-old daughter, Sarah, have been clear and unwavering,” said Harris. “To find out what happened on the day of their daughter’s death, determine who was responsible,...
Attorney Jeff Harris said the confidential agreement had been reached with Miller, Savin, their Unclaimed Freight production company, location manager Charles Baxter, unit production manager/executive producer Jay Sedrish and Jay Sedrish Inc, executive producer and financier Don Mandrick, first assistant director Hillary Schwartz, director of photography Mike Ozier, Epozier Films Inc and landowner Rayonier Performance Fibers Llc.
“Richard and Elizabeth Jones’ objectives in filing this lawsuit, after the death of their 27-year-old daughter, Sarah, have been clear and unwavering,” said Harris. “To find out what happened on the day of their daughter’s death, determine who was responsible,...
- 11/19/2014
- by Dominic Patten
- Deadline
Cbgb
Director: Randall Miller
Writer: Miller and Jody Savin
Cast: Malin Akerman, Alan Rickman, Stana Katic, Rupert Grint, Joel David Moore, Ryan Hurst, Josh Zuckerman, Estelle Harris, Julian Acosta, Richard de Klerk, Mickey Sumner, Arthur Bridgers and John Holmstrom
Crew: Dp: Mike Ozier. Editor: Dan O’Brien. Production Designer: Craig Stearns
Producers: Miller, Savin and Brad Rosenberger
Filming in Los Angeles...
Director: Randall Miller
Writer: Miller and Jody Savin
Cast: Malin Akerman, Alan Rickman, Stana Katic, Rupert Grint, Joel David Moore, Ryan Hurst, Josh Zuckerman, Estelle Harris, Julian Acosta, Richard de Klerk, Mickey Sumner, Arthur Bridgers and John Holmstrom
Crew: Dp: Mike Ozier. Editor: Dan O’Brien. Production Designer: Craig Stearns
Producers: Miller, Savin and Brad Rosenberger
Filming in Los Angeles...
- 9/1/2012
- by admin
- IONCINEMA.com
“Tracking Shot” is a monthly featurette here on Ioncinema.com that looks at a dozen or so projects that are moments away from lensing and with June being a major production month we’ve got a slew of projects that we feel are worth signaling out. Music appears to be a common narrative theme surrounding several items – we find it infused in Once‘s John Carney’s U.S. production debut – a 10 million dollar production about a dejected music business executive forms a bond with a young singer-songwriter new to Manhattan. Scarlett Johansson was formerly attached to Can a Song Save Your Life?, now Knightley appears to be on board. Rock documentary filmmaker Stephen Kijak (Stones in Exile) is looking to make his second fictional feature based on the true story of a The Smiths fans who lost his bearings when the group announced its break-up. Shoplifters of the World...
- 6/5/2012
- by Eric Lavallee
- IONCINEMA.com
It took some checking, but I finally figured it out: this is the year 2009. With a little bit more fact checking, I was able to determine that Pulp Fiction came out in 1994, a full fifteen years ago. I figured the statute of limitations on wearing another film’s influence on your sleeve runs out at about five years, but here’s Nobel Son, a heist/kidnapping/general criminal plot film that simply drips with the residue that Tarantino left behind him when he first blustered through film-making last century. No, there are no overlapping storylines or long dissertations on the hidden meaning of various pop culture icons. Tarantino certainly doesn’t have any kind of copyright on criminal films considering he was arguably bested by L.A. Confidential a few years after his own masterpiece. But if you look at the details of this film - the waving of handguns directly at the camera,...
- 6/10/2009
- by Anders Nelson
- JustPressPlay.net
Release Date: Dec. 5
Director: Randall Miller
Writers: Randall Miller & Jody Savin
Cinematographer: Michael J. Ozier
Starring: Alan Rickman, Bryan Greenberg, Bill Pullman, Eliza Dushku, Danny DeVito
Studio Information: Freestyle Releasing, 110 mins.
Quentin Tarantino and The Coen Brothers worked the past two decades to raise genre pictures to high art. More recently, the far more obscure Randall Miller and Jody Savin have been trying, and generally failing, to create movies with this sensibility while lacking their predecessors’ skill. One difference: instead of making pulp pictures look great, they’ve mostly grafted the more gimmicky B-filmmaking tropes onto other movie types. Like Bottle Shock and Marilyn Hotchkiss’ Ballroom Dancing & Charm School, Nobel Son is filled with ridiculous plotlines, quirky stock characters and unrealistic dialogue. But while these previous films were weighted down by this, Nobel Son attempts nothing more than being a good yarn, a true-blue work of pulp.
Director: Randall Miller
Writers: Randall Miller & Jody Savin
Cinematographer: Michael J. Ozier
Starring: Alan Rickman, Bryan Greenberg, Bill Pullman, Eliza Dushku, Danny DeVito
Studio Information: Freestyle Releasing, 110 mins.
Quentin Tarantino and The Coen Brothers worked the past two decades to raise genre pictures to high art. More recently, the far more obscure Randall Miller and Jody Savin have been trying, and generally failing, to create movies with this sensibility while lacking their predecessors’ skill. One difference: instead of making pulp pictures look great, they’ve mostly grafted the more gimmicky B-filmmaking tropes onto other movie types. Like Bottle Shock and Marilyn Hotchkiss’ Ballroom Dancing & Charm School, Nobel Son is filled with ridiculous plotlines, quirky stock characters and unrealistic dialogue. But while these previous films were weighted down by this, Nobel Son attempts nothing more than being a good yarn, a true-blue work of pulp.
- 12/10/2008
- Pastemagazine.com
As recently as 30 years ago, California wines were considered something of a joke by connoisseurs. Even most Americans were familiar only with gallon jugs of Gallo that sold for $5 or so.
Randall Miller's crowd-pleasing "Bottle Shock" tells the incredible but true story of how that abruptly changed in 1976, when a small Napa winery shocked the wine world by winning a major French blind-tasting contest with a 1973 Chardonnay.
The Bicentennial-themed tasting is organized by Steven Spurrier (Alan Rickman), who is trying to promote his faltering wine shop in Paris.
Encouraged an...
Randall Miller's crowd-pleasing "Bottle Shock" tells the incredible but true story of how that abruptly changed in 1976, when a small Napa winery shocked the wine world by winning a major French blind-tasting contest with a 1973 Chardonnay.
The Bicentennial-themed tasting is organized by Steven Spurrier (Alan Rickman), who is trying to promote his faltering wine shop in Paris.
Encouraged an...
- 8/6/2008
- by By LOU LUMENICK
- NYPost.com
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