Christina Radish is the Senior Entertainment Reporter at Collider. Having worked at Collider for over a decade (since 2009), her primary focus is on film and television interviews with talent both in ...
Christina Radish is the Senior Entertainment Reporter at Collider. Having worked at Collider for over a decade (since 2009), her primary focus is on film and television interviews with talent both in ...
Richard Linklater's latest film, "Boyhood," was 12 years in the making -- and it's worth every second. For three or four days each year, Linklater would gather his cast and crew to shoot a few scenes ...
The actor, who spent 12 years making his feature debut, discusses what's next for him in a new interview. READ MORE: 7 Films New to Netflix to Watch In November 2016, Including ‘Boyhood’ and ‘The ...
A little more than a year ago, Ellar Coltrane was a homeschooled Texas teenager nobody had heard of. As the Oscars loom, the “Boyhood” actor now finds himself at the center of one of the year’s ...
The title “Boyhood” implies a certain perspective, but one of the great things about the movie is how much we see all four of the central characters grow. Ellar Coltrane’s character may not notice his ...
Ellar Coltrane uses a flip phone. The star of “Boyhood,” whose entire maturation process is seen on screen by each person who contributed to its $21,808,498-and-counting box office take, had to search ...
There are filmmakers quite like Richard Linklater, as somebody who continuously pushes the boundaries of cinema, and never more so than in his latest production Boyhood, which took 12 years to shoot.
Working on the same film for more than a decade would be taxing for any producer, but Boyhood’s Cathleen Sutherland says the 12 years she spent on Richard Linklater’s coming-of-age picture went ...
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or ...
It would be easy to get Patricia Arquette wrong. When she first sits down on a sofa opposite me in a bland Berlin hotel room, she is subdued and softly spoken, fidgeting with a long tasselled scarf.
Well, nothing yet, but film site TheWrap.com noted recently that in 18 critics’ groups thus far handing out awards, “Boyhood” has won best picture in 12 of them. (I don’t think this counts as a critic ...