The Motion Picture Sound Editors (MPSE) will honor Academy Award-winner George Miller with its annual Filmmaker Award. The Australian writer, director and producer is responsible for movies including Mad Max, Mad Max 2: Road Warrior, Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome and Mad Max: Fury Road. In 2007, he won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature for the smash hit Happy Feet. He also earned Oscar nominations for Babe and Lorenzo’s Oil. Miller will be presented with the MPSE Filmmaker Award at the 68th MPSE Golden Reel Awards, set for April 16 as an international virtual event.
Miller is being honored for a career noteworthy for its incredibly broad scope and consistent excellence. “George Miller redefined the action genre through his Mad Max films, and he has been just as successful in bringing us such wonderfully different films as The Witches of Eastwick, Lorenzo’s Oil, Babe and Happy Feet,” said MPSE president Mark Lanza. “He represents the art of filmmaking at its best. We are proud to present him with MPSE’s highest honor.”
Miller called the award “a lovely thing,” adding, “It’s a big pat on the back. I was originally drawn to film through the visual sense, but I learned to recognize sound, emphatically, as integral to the apprehension of the story. I’ve become an utter convert to cinema sound. That’s why this award is so significant to me.”
Miller earned a degree in medicine from the University of New South Wales and was working as an emergency room doctor when he took part in a filmmaking workshop where he met his future co-producer, the late Byron Kennedy. They collaborated on a comedy short Violence in the Cinema—Part 1 and later formed Kennedy Miller Productions, which has gone on to produce more than two dozen films and television miniseries while winning scores of international awards.
Miller made his directorial debut in 1979 with Mad Max, which he also co-wrote. The latest film in the series¸ 2015’s Mad Max: Fury Road was nominated for 10 Academy Awards, including Best Motion Picture of the Year and Best Achievement in Directing. Its six wins included Best Achievement in Sound Editing.
Miller’s other film directing credits include The Witches of Eastwick, starring Jack Nicholson, Cher, Susan Sarandon and Michelle Pfeiffer, and the “Nightmare at 20,000 Feet” segment of Twilight Zone: The Movie. Miller produced John Duigan’s The Year My Voice Broke and Flirting and Philip Noyce’s Dead Calm. Miller also wrote, directed, produced and narrated the documentary White Fellas Dreaming, the Australian contribution to the international celebration of the Century of Cinema.
A key figure within the Australian film industry, Miller serves as a Patron of the Sydney Film Festival and the Australian Film Institute (now Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts/AACTA), and has been a Patron of the Brisbane International Film Festival. He has been a member of the jury at the Cannes Film Festival twice, in 1988 and 1999. In 1996 he was awarded the Order of Australia for distinguished service to Australian cinema and in 2009 he was honored with the French Order of the Arts and Letters. In 2016, he served as president of the Jury for the Palme d’Or at the 69th Cannes Film Festival.
In NBC’s “Brilliant Minds,” Zachary Quinto Plays Doctor–In A Role Inspired By Physician/Author Oliver Sacks
There's a great moment in the first episode of the new NBC medical drama "Brilliant Minds" when it becomes very clear that we're not dealing with a typical TV doctor.
Zachary Quinto is behind the wheel of a car barreling down a New York City parkway, packed with hospital interns, abruptly weaving in and out of lanes, when one of them asks, "Does anyone want to share a Klonopin?" — a drug sometimes used to treat panic disorders.
"Oh, glory to God, yes, please," says Quinto, reaching an arm into the back seat. The intern then breaks the pill in half and gives a sliver to the driver, who swallows it, as the other interns share stunned looks.
Quinto, playing the character Dr. Oliver Wolf, is clearly not portraying any dour, by-the-rules doctor here — he's playing a character inspired by Dr. Oliver Sacks, the path-breaking researcher and author who rose to fame in the 1970s and was once called the "poet laureate of medicine."
"He was someone who was tirelessly committed to the dignity of the human experience. And so I feel really grateful to be able to tell his story and to continue his legacy in a way that I hope our show is able to do," says Quinto.
He's a fern-loving doctor
"Brilliant Minds" takes Sack's personality — a motorcycle-riding, fern-loving advocate for mental health who died in 2015 at 82 — and puts him in the present day, where the creators theorize he would have no idea who Taylor Swift is or own a cell phone. The series debuts Monday on NBC, right after "The Voice."
"It's almost as if we're imagining what it would have been like if Oliver Sacks had been born at a different time," says Quinto. "We use the real life person as our North Star through everything we're doing and all the... Read More