The Art of Open Season In the new action-adventure comedy Open Season, the first feature-length CG animated film from Sony Pictures Animation, a happily domesticated grizzly bear (Martin Lawrence) has his perfect world turned upside-down after he meets a scrawny, fast-talking mule deer (Ashton Kutcher). Recognized by
Title | : | The Art of Open Season |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.75 (404 Votes) |
Asin | : | 1933784040 |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 160 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2006-09-26 |
Genre | : |
In the new action-adventure comedy Open Season, the first feature-length CG animated film from Sony Pictures Animation, a happily domesticated grizzly bear (Martin Lawrence) has his perfect world turned upside-down after he meets a scrawny, fast-talking mule deer (Ashton Kutcher). Open Season also features Debra Messing, Gary Sinise, Jon Favreau, and Billy Connolly (as head of a rogue gang of Scottish squirrels).
Open Season is directed by Roger Allers (The Lion King) and Jill Culton (credits include Monsters, Inc., Toy Story 2) and co-directed by Anthony Stacchi (credits include Antz).
The film showcases the Computer Generated (CG) animation created by Sony Pictures Imageworks Inc., an Academy Award®-winning, state-of-the-art visual effects and character animation company, dedicated to the art and artistry of digital production and character creation. Recognized by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Imageworks has been nominated for its work on Spider-Ma
Editorial : About the Author
Linda Sunshine is a former editor at Stewart, Tabori & Chang, and the author of more than fifty books including twenty-six behind-the-scenes portraits of notable films, from E.T. and Stuart Little to Catch Me If You Can and Frida. She lives in New York and Los Angeles.
Steve Moore, executive producer, created the comic panel In the Bleachers, while working at a sports editor at The Maui News in Hawaii. He then took a post at the Los Angeles Times, where after eleven years, he left to concentrate full-time on the comic strip and developing other projects. Open Season is his first animated feature film. In the Bleachers is distributed by Universal Press Syndicate. Steve and his family currently reside in Boise, Idaho.
Goodies were packed everywhere in the book. I read it all in one sitting. What's going on in her mind that we can't see or hear? How many inane, boring lessons has she sat through, thinking "I know all this! Stop with the baby lessons!" And when Chloe watches the other kids run and talk and laugh and play, does she long, like Melody, to be a part? Does Chloe get embarrassed by her difficulty in feeding herself, that she wears diapers at age 9, that she rides the handicapped bus?
I thought of Kelly as much as I thought of Chloe. But Singer, the philosopher Phillips mostly draws from, argues that the marginal humans therefore *shouldn't* have rights, while some animals should have *more* rights than infants or the mentally handicapped! Singer is notorious for advocating infanticide, something Phillips never mentions in his pamphlet, despite accepting Singer's utilitarian argument that the only relevant criterion for having rights is the ability to suffer (presumably, beef cows
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