Nice Shoes has engaged New York-based Carolyn Reps for sales representation on the East Coast. The Carolyn Reps firm will focus on developing new postproduction business among East Coast advertising agencies and brands while also pursuing opportunities in entertainment and immersive media. The effort will be led by Carolyn Hill, the agency’s founder, and Amanda Rosenberg. Hill reunites with Nice Shoes managing director/executive producer Camille Geier. She and Hill worked together at Curious Pictures in the mid-2000s. Carolyn Reps represents directors, production companies, graphics designers, visual effects producers and others. It also acts as a consultant to the production community regarding the intricacies of international production. Hill also serves on the East Coast board of the Association of Independent Commercial Producers. Rosenberg joined the agency in 2013 after a career as a television, advertising and broadcast producer….
Review: Steven Soderbergh’s Eerie Haunted House Drama “Presence”
The camera is the ghost in Steven Soderbergh's chillingly effective, experiential haunted house drama "Presence." The filmmaker traps the audience in a beautiful suburban home, letting us drift through rooms with this curious being, in and out of delicate conversations as we (and the ghost) try to piece together a puzzle blindly.
Often in haunted house movies where a new family moves in and starts sensing strange things, the ghost knows exactly what they want — usually their house back. In this one, the presence doesn't have such a clear objective. It's more confused, wandering around and investigating the surroundings, like a benevolent amnesiac. Occasionally, though, big emotions erupt, and things shake violently.
Mostly, they go unnoticed. They observe the chipper real estate agent (Julia Fox) preparing for a showing, the painting crew, one of whom believes there's something around, and finally the family and all the complexities of its dynamics. Lucy Liu (a delightful, wickedly funny scene-stealer) is the mom, Rebecca, a wealthy, successful, type-A woman hyper focused on the success of her eldest, a teenage boy named Tyler (Eddy Maday). The father, Chris (Chris Sullivan), is more of the nurturer, concerned about their teen daughter Chloe (Callina Liang) in the aftermath of her friend's unexpected death.
There is a family drama transpiring inside the house, only some of which will make sense in the end. We overhear Rebecca drunkenly telling Tyler that everything she does is for him. We listen in as Chris confides to someone on the phone about a hypothetical partner being involved in something illegal and whether they still would be if legally separated. We see Tyler often with his head buried in his phone. And then there's Chloe: Sad,... Read More