Baby steps out the door, baby steps to the elevator ... baby steps to the playoffs? The advice that Bill Murray's eponymous character received from Richard
Horror isn’t known for producing heroes. It’s quite the opposite. Usually, the antagonist gets top billing on the posters and even the marquee. Well, even the bad guy needs a little help now and then.
As unfortunate as it is that the reason the Academy’s inclusion standards are back in the news (because of an answer Oscar winner Richard Dreyfuss recently gave in an interview that ultimately led into his defense of blackface), it is worth it to take a closer look at them before they officially go into effect this coming film awards season.
In an interview on PBS‘ Firing Line with Margaret Hoover, Richard Dreyfuss has slammed new diversity and inclusion requirements for next year’s Oscars and said the rules “make me vomit.” The veteran actor went on to comment, “Because this is an art form.
Richard Dreyfuss is blasting the Oscar’s looming new inclusivity requirements — and defending the use of blackface in the process. The Oscar-winning “Goodbye Girl” actor sat down for an interview with PBS’ “Firing Line With Margaret Hoover,” released this Friday (via Variety).
Even if you have never been to a symphony, you can enjoy a film about the composers and conductors of the world, fictional and otherwise. Here are the best of the bunch.