DANNY BOYLE: “It's about someone who's turned his back on his friends and family and society and goes through this extraordinary change. He's forced by the events to re-examine his life and where he went wrong and what he could've done differently, people he could've treated in a slightly kinder way, maybe.”
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: The audience watches as Aron Ralston cuts off his arm to free himself.
DANNY BOYLE: “In reality it took him over forty minutes, and involved a series of plateaus of pain that he had to live through.”
STEVE EMBER: The end of the film is as intense as its beginning. Although he loses an arm, Ralston becomes a more complete person. Today, wearing a prosthetic arm, Aron Ralston still climbs mountains and explores canyons. He also travels the world as a speaker.
(MUSIC)
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: The comedy “Morning Glory” is for people looking for a more light-hearted movie experience. It shows the daily operation of a morning television news program.
Rachel McAdams, Diane Keaton and Harrison Ford in "Morning Glory"
(Sound: “Morning Glory”)
“Coming up tomorrow, we’ll show you what to do with those shampoo bottles with just an inch of shampoo left.”
“Ah!”
STEVE EMBER: Rachel McAdams play Becky Fuller, a young, energetic television producer. She loses her job at one television station. She gets a job at Daybreak, the lowest-rated morning program on television. Becky tries to improve the program and increase the number of viewers. The movie makes fun of the real-life battle between news and entertainment that takes place each day on American morning television.
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2013-11-25
2013-11-25
2013-11-25
2013-11-25
2013-11-25
2013-11-25