Yahoo India Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: Alan Rudolph

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Alan_RudolphAlan Rudolph - Wikipedia

    Alan Steven Rudolph (born December 18, 1943) is an American film director and screenwriter. Early life [ edit ] Rudolph was born in Los Angeles, California, the son of Oscar Rudolph (1911–1991), a television director and actor, and his wife.

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0748928Alan Rudolph - IMDb

    Alan Rudolph is a filmmaker who has directed and written movies such as Trouble in Mind, Choose Me and Afterglow. He was born in Los Angeles in 1943 and is married to Joyce Rudolph.

    • January 1, 1
    • Alan Rudolph
    • Los Angeles, California, USA
  3. Jul 18, 2018 · Alan Rudolph, a pioneer in the American independent film movement, shares his list of ten films that have influenced him. He praises the works of Bergman, Fellini, Kubrick, Carné, Buñuel, Kurosawa, Tati, Altman, Truffaut, and Erice.

  4. Aug 19, 2016 · Alan Rudolph is a filmmaker who loves actors, art, and emotion, and who often explores how they intersect in his pop-modernist romances. Learn about his influences, style, and themes in this article by Steven Rybin.

    • Steven Rybin
  5. theyshootpictures.com › rudolphalanTSPDT - Alan Rudolph

    "Alan Rudolph, the son of director Oscar Rudolph, grew up in the film industry and learnt about film-making from watching studio people at work. A pioneer of independent film-making, he began as an assistant director on television programmes such as The Brady Bunch and Love American Style before directing two low-budget horror films, Premonition (1972) and Nightmare Circus (1973, under the pseudonym of Gerald Cormier).

  6. Birthday: Dec 18, 1943. Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, USA. The son of director Oscar Rudolph, writer-director Alan Rudolph followed in the footsteps of mentor Robert Altman, embracing a ...

  7. People also ask

  8. SOUL CITY: AN INTERVIEW WITH ALAN RUDOLPH. ALAN RUDOLPH’S TERRAIN is the shadowland of the psyche, the place where our pathologies find a home—where our obsessions, paranoias, fears, and fetishes ferment and fertilize one another. On the surface, Rudolph’s movies can look like simple melodramas, but the story lines are merely the ...