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  1. In 1918, Elizabeth MacDonald (Claudette Colbert) learns with shock that her husband, John Andrew (Orson Welles), has been killed in the war. Elizabeth bears John's son and eventually marries her ...

    • (5)
    • Claudette Colbert
    • Irving Pichel
    • Drama
  2. IMDb's advanced search allows you to run extremely powerful queries over all people and titles in the database. Find exactly what you're looking for!

  3. United Artists / Independent Releasing Organization - Taken from a black-and-white romance film "Tomorrow Is Forever" (1946).#TomorrowIsForever #logo #identi...

    • 26 sec
    • 958
    • ifrequire
    • Schedule Preorder Windows.
    • Avoid December and February.
    • Purchase A Specific Policy That Fits Your Film Release Plans.
    • Don’T Limit Your Theatrical Screenings to Arthouse Theaters.
    • Upload Final Dcp-Formatted Trailers on Dropbox Or Google Drive.
    • Do Not Purchase Kdms.
    • $250 Versus 35%…
    • Beware The “Virtual Print Fee.”
    • All Screenings Are Theatrical.
    • Be Frugal.

    “Offering a preorder window (even if only off your own website) is the best way to capitalize on festival chatter and press reviews. It will put your film on the radar of the retailer marketing departments and will help to make the case for promotion.” — Paul O’Neill of Premiere Digital

    “If you have flexibility and control in your release date, it may be best to avoid December holidays and February awards season. Digital retailers often give priority placement to higher profile indies during these months and your film, absent a specific and robust marketing plan, could get lost.” — Paul O’Neill

    “Curse under your breath and just purchase E&O. You need errors and omissions insurance, especially if you’re planning on launching on Netflix, where a film-specific policy is required. Depending on your plans, you can save money by purchasing a specific policy that fits your film release plans.For example, consider a U.S.-only, digital distributio...

    “Museums big and small often have film series and good projectors. Film societies may have an amazing warehouse. Places like Rooftop Films in NYC put on incredible shows without any walls.” — Mike Plante of Cinemad, the Sundance Film Festival, and Cinelicious

    “USB flash drives are the independent exhibitor’s wasteful equivalent of the K cup for coffee drinkers. Upload final DCP-formatted trailers on Dropbox or G Drive and give us the option to download them instead. Your trailer can be on screen that night.” — Toby Leonard of the Belcourt Theatre

    “KDMs (or key delivery messages) are essentially XML files containing encryption keys that can be used only by the destination device. Just keep a detailed record of where your DCPs are at all times, and at which theaters.” — Michael Tuckman of mTuckman Media

    “$250 versus 35%—repeat after me. That’s been an art house industry standard and benefits everyone. That’s the cut whether it’s one show or a week of shows. And if it’s a tiny theater that is scared to do a guarantee then that’s fine too, 35% is solid.” — Mike Plante

    “Beware the ‘virtual print fee’—with locally owned theaters, you often don’t have this, but many chain arthouses do. They borrowed money to upgrade to DCP, which is great, but every film they play has to pay another company $300 per week to show there no matter what, and that could be your entire split of the box office, so make it worth the effort...

    If you premiere at Tribeca, have a friends-and-family screening at a Brooklyn theater, and then an invite-only ‘tastemaker’ screening/premiere in Midtown, your ultimate ‘opening weekend’ in NYC could be poorly attended. Sometimes it’s best to pick your battles based on your ultimate goals. Keep a grid tracking every audience screening for each city...

    “You will likely not need more than 250 theatrical one-sheet posters for a national run, and let’s face it—you’ll still end up with an extra stack in your garage. Be frugal. Don’t go nuts.” — Joseph Beyer, Sundance Institute staffer (who has 121 Primer posters in his garage)

  4. Mar 10, 2017 · What it ends up coming down to is a question of whether a business should handle its own IT needs internally or rely on an independent service organization (ISO) to provide services. This question is a very simple one to answer once you understand what ISOs are and what services and benefits they can provide.

  5. Jun 5, 2018 · The organization can move from quarterly and yearly planning to more-frequent planning of less work. More-frequent planning helps teams stop multitasking and makes it easier to plan product roadmaps and the project portfolio.

  6. Independent Living is a social movement of and by persons with disabilities. The IL movement started during the late 1960’s in the United States. During the 1970’s the Canadian consumer movement promoted human rights, deinstitutionalization and full participation of all persons with disabilities.

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