SundanceChannel Tagged Articles at Cinematical
EXCLUSIVE: Clip from Sundance Channel's 'Big Ideas for a Small Planet'
Filed under: Fandom », Trailers and Clips »
Cinematical has received this exclusive clip from tonight's episode of Big Ideas for a Small Planet, which airs on the Sundance Channel at 9:00pm e/p. The clip above features Architect Peter Demaria of Logical Design located in East Los Angeles. Demaria has a unique job: He creates homes out of shipping crates. Yup, shipping crates. Watch the clip above to see what I'm talking about, then gun it over to the Sundance Channel tonight at 9pm (heck, TIVO the show if you have to -- it looks pretty damn cool). Tonight's episode, titled Live, comes with this synopsis: "The recent building boom – one of the biggest in history – used enormous quantities of resources and generated millions of tons of garbage through the demolition of older structures. This episode surveys some fresh ideas for eco-conscious construction and de-construction."
For more info, check out Big Ideas for a Small Planet on the Sundance Channel website.
Sundance Party Report: Sundance Channel's 10th Birthday Party
Filed under: Sundance », Festival Reports », Celebrities and Controversy »

Every year, The Sundance Channel's party at Sundance is a mix of producers, sponsors, press and stars. This year's, held Thursday afternoon down on Main Street, had one very special guest of honor -- Robert Redford himself, who shook hands and talked with paparazzi as naturally as, well, a movie star.

It's got to be nice to be the boss.
Cinematical: Acting bolder even over your shoulder.
Sundance Channel picks up Sundance Films
Filed under: Classics », Foreign Language », Independent », Deals », Sundance », Home Entertainment », Cinematical Indie »
Well, this is good news: the Sundance Channel has acquired pay TV rights to 12 films that screened at this year's Sundance Film Festival, including one of my favorite films of 2005, Gregg Araki's Mysterious Skin, as well as I am Cuba, the Siberian Mammoth, which I'm seeing next week and very much looking forward to. It's a documentary by Vincente Ferraz, about the impact of the Soviet/Cuban re-discovered classic I Am Cuba. Designed as the stepchild of Eisenstein and Godard, it was virtually ignored by all audiences opon release in 1964, only to be resurrected by Martin Scorsese and Francis Ford Coppola several years ago to become an art school staple. indieWIRE has the full list; the films should start airing in 2006.








