Sometimes when a horror franchise is really on a roll, we’ll get sequels that are just one year apart from each other. But the waiting period between Child’s Play 2 and the movie we’re looking at in the new episode of the Wtf Happened to This Horror Movie? video series, Child’s Play 3 (watch it Here) was even shorter than a year. The third Child’s Play movie reached theatres just nine months after the second one! With such a quick development and production, is it any surprise that Child’s Play 3 turned out to be one of the least popular entries in the Chucky franchise? To find out all about the making of Child’s Play 3, check out the video embedded above.
Directed by Jack Bender from a screenplay by Don Mancini, Child’s Play 3 has the following synopsis: It’s been years since Chucky, the doll with...
Directed by Jack Bender from a screenplay by Don Mancini, Child’s Play 3 has the following synopsis: It’s been years since Chucky, the doll with...
- 2/10/2023
- by Cody Hamman
- JoBlo.com
The Forever Now: Contemporary Painting in an Atemporal World Museum of Modern Art, NYC December 14, 2014-April 5, 2015
Between 1942 and 1963 Dorothy Canning Miller was the curator of the influential Americans shows at the Museum of Modern Art. Beginning with Americans 1942: 18 Artists From 9 States and ending with Americans 1963, Miller presented the work of artists such as Hyman Bloom, Robert Motherwell, Jay DeFeo, Robert Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns, Lee Bontecou, and Frank Stella -- artists who would ultimately be the defining contributors to the mid-century American art historical canon. After a gap of nearly a half-century, MoMA once again is reviving this tradition with Laura Hoptman’s The Forever Now: Contemporary Painting in an Atemoporal World, an exhibition of seventeen painters representing current trends in painting.
In contrast to the U.S-centric exhibitions of the past, Forever Now emphasizes the concept of "a-temporality," a phenomenon of culture defined by the science fiction/cultural theorist William Gibson,...
Between 1942 and 1963 Dorothy Canning Miller was the curator of the influential Americans shows at the Museum of Modern Art. Beginning with Americans 1942: 18 Artists From 9 States and ending with Americans 1963, Miller presented the work of artists such as Hyman Bloom, Robert Motherwell, Jay DeFeo, Robert Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns, Lee Bontecou, and Frank Stella -- artists who would ultimately be the defining contributors to the mid-century American art historical canon. After a gap of nearly a half-century, MoMA once again is reviving this tradition with Laura Hoptman’s The Forever Now: Contemporary Painting in an Atemoporal World, an exhibition of seventeen painters representing current trends in painting.
In contrast to the U.S-centric exhibitions of the past, Forever Now emphasizes the concept of "a-temporality," a phenomenon of culture defined by the science fiction/cultural theorist William Gibson,...
- 2/25/2015
- by bradleyrubenstein
- www.culturecatch.com
The conceptual artist soups up the old teeny-bopper sneaker with her famous truisms.
Keds, for those of you who missed the early '90s, were once the hottest shoes around, worn by every Ym-reading girl in America who thought Zack Morris was just the dreamiest. Now, the company's trying to grow up a little and, on top of some low-key self-promotion (forget Mischa Barton), they've hired shoe designers straight from the halls of the Whitney Museum. First up: the conceptual artist Jenny Holzer.
Holzer is, in many ways, the perfect marketing tool. She earned her star projecting aphorisms and other text in conspicuous places: "Your oldest fears are the worst ones" running across a billboard in Times Square; "Survival: Savor Kindness Because Cruelty is Always Possible Later" etched in white marble at the Venice Guggenheim; and so on. From a branding perspective, her stuff has just the right mix of catchiness and surprise.
Keds, for those of you who missed the early '90s, were once the hottest shoes around, worn by every Ym-reading girl in America who thought Zack Morris was just the dreamiest. Now, the company's trying to grow up a little and, on top of some low-key self-promotion (forget Mischa Barton), they've hired shoe designers straight from the halls of the Whitney Museum. First up: the conceptual artist Jenny Holzer.
Holzer is, in many ways, the perfect marketing tool. She earned her star projecting aphorisms and other text in conspicuous places: "Your oldest fears are the worst ones" running across a billboard in Times Square; "Survival: Savor Kindness Because Cruelty is Always Possible Later" etched in white marble at the Venice Guggenheim; and so on. From a branding perspective, her stuff has just the right mix of catchiness and surprise.
- 6/28/2010
- by Suzanne LaBarre
- Fast Company
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.