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75 MINUTES, COLOR |
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| from the set of "This Corrosion", December 2000 | ||||||||||
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| GILL HOLLAND Co-Producer Nominated for the Spirit Award for Producer of the Year 1998, Gill's producing credits include the Fox sit-com Greg The Bunny, Morgan J. Freeman's triple Sundance award-winning "Hurricane Streets" (MGM); his follow-up "Desert Blue"(Samuel Goldwyn), starring Christina Ricci, Casey Affleck, and the then-unknown Kate Hudson; Rob Tregenzas Inside/Out (Cannes 1997); John-Luke Montias' "Bobby G. Can't Swim" (winner AFI 1999, Best Film and Best Director); Tom Gilroy's award-winning "Spring Forward" (on many critics top ten lists for 2000); and Tim Kirkman's Spirit Award and Emmy-nominated documentary "Dear Jesse". Other films include Kirkmans follow-up The Night Larry Kramer Kissed Me, Jamie Yerkes' "Spin the Bottle" and Pagans, Kipp and Adam Marcus's Let It Snow" (AFI winner), Ian Williams The Pink House, Mikey Jackson's "Shooting Vegetarians" (with French star Elodie Bouchez), Arthur Flam and Diane Doniol-Valcroze's "Kill By Inches", Tim McCanns Revolution #9, Larry Blumes comedy Martin and Orloff (starring the Upright Citizens Brigade) and two shorts by famed Norwegian artist Per Fronth. He is also associate producer of BAFTA winner Jump Tomorrow and Dot the I. He is currently working on a movie about the Wright Brothers and a TV series based on Interpol. _____________________________________ JOAN WOOTERS-REISIN Co-Producer Joan Wooters-Reisin spent her early professional years as an actress performing at The Kennedy Center, on Broadway and Off-Broadway and in various TV and film appearances. Joan then studied film editing at New York University, The New School University and most recently The Edit Center. After completing This Corrosion last year she edited Ilona, Upstairs a short film by award-winning Melissa Hammel. Previously, she worked as co-producer on "Hope," an independent feature written and directed by former West Wing writer Julia Dahl. She also co-produced Rocks With Wings, a PBS documentary feature that aired nationwide in December 2002, screened at 15 film festivals across the country, earned an HBO Best Documentary Award at Urban World Film Festival and will air on BBC in 2003. |
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