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Unbreakable Movie

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November 12, 2000 | GENE SEYMOUR, Gene Seymour is a Newsday film critic
The distance between the administrative offices of Burning Edge Pictures and the actual production "annex"--for want of a better word--seems narrow enough to be covered as quickly by foot as by wheel. But given all the tricky curves and jumps along the way, it's better that we're getting a lift this morning from Burning Edge's head honcho, who's happy to oblige despite the fact that his outfit's about to enter what he terms the "red zone" of its latest enterprise.
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ENTERTAINMENT
November 25, 2000 | JON BURLINGAME, SPECIAL TO THE TIMES
It's fairly common for an A-list film composer to be booked months in advance, sometimes even a year or more. Directors like to be assured that the composer they want will be available during post-production. What's much rarer is for a director to ask the composer to begin writing his score even before a frame of film has been shot. That's what happened to James Newton Howard on "Unbreakable," the Bruce Willis-Samuel L. Jackson film that opened Wednesday. Director-writer-producer M.
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ENTERTAINMENT
November 25, 2000 | JON BURLINGAME, SPECIAL TO THE TIMES
It's fairly common for an A-list film composer to be booked months in advance, sometimes even a year or more. Directors like to be assured that the composer they want will be available during post-production. What's much rarer is for a director to ask the composer to begin writing his score even before a frame of film has been shot. That's what happened to James Newton Howard on "Unbreakable," the Bruce Willis-Samuel L. Jackson film that opened Wednesday. Director-writer-producer M.
ENTERTAINMENT
November 12, 2000 | GENE SEYMOUR, Gene Seymour is a Newsday film critic
The distance between the administrative offices of Burning Edge Pictures and the actual production "annex"--for want of a better word--seems narrow enough to be covered as quickly by foot as by wheel. But given all the tricky curves and jumps along the way, it's better that we're getting a lift this morning from Burning Edge's head honcho, who's happy to oblige despite the fact that his outfit's about to enter what he terms the "red zone" of its latest enterprise.
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