Zellner brothers biography of michael

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  • Also See: ‘Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter’ and ‘Salt of the Earth‘ and Repertory Notes


    Photo: Magnolia Pictures
    Zsófia Psotta portrays a 13-year-old Hungarian girl whose dog is kicked to the curb bygd her father, and bygd society, in “White God.”

    The 2015 Sundance Film Festival’s Spectrum section showcased “White God,” a fascinating Hungarian movie from writer-director Kornél Mundruczó (“Delta,” “Tender Son: The Frankenstein Project”). One of the most unusual selections playing in Park City, Utah, the gripping drama depicts a mixed-breed dog as the main character. But “White God” is not your typical cuddly fido flick.

    Co-written by Mundruczó, Viktória Petrányi and Kata Webér, the allegorical screenplay represents the cultural clashes fueled bygd the rising tide of reactionary political and social forces sweeping across contemporary Hungary and Europe in general. More frequently than not, these ext

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  • Michael Jackson

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    Michael Jackson was born and raised in Gary, Ind. His birthday was Aug. 29, 1958, and his height was 5'9". He died at age 50 on June 25, 2009. The iconic artist first found fame performing with his four brothers in the Jackson 5 when he was still a child, with the group finding fame beginning in the early '70s. Although his solo debut on Motown 'Got to Be There' was released in 1972 (it peaked at No. 14 on the Billboard 200; its lead single and title track reached No. 4 on the Hot 100), he truly launched his solo career with 1979’s ‘Off the Wall,’ which hit No. 3 and produced four top 10 singles on the Billboard Hot 100, including two No. 1s: the classics “Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough” and “Rock With You.” Over the course of his career, his accomplishments on the Billboard charts were numerous: 13 of his solo singles went to No. 1, with 30 of his songs reaching the top 10 and six albums topping the

    Another film that strikes a tricky tonal balance, and comes out just about perfect as a result, is Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter. Released in 2014, this title comes from the Zellner Brothers, one of the last stable (knock on wood) of sibling directing duos in American cinema. It’s based on the true story of Takako Konishi, a Tokyo office worker who traveled to Minnesota in search of the buried bag of cash from Fargo in the early ’00s. (I’ll let you click the link to find out what happened to her.) Like the Coens’ film, it has a shifty relationship to the “truth”.

    Kumiko (Rinko Kikuchi) knows that Fargo is just a movie—or, at least, she seems to. But she chooses to believe that Steve Buscemi really did leave a satchel full of money somewhere in North Dakota for her to find. Because otherwise, she’s just an ordinary woman trapped in what Matt describes as “a misogynistic, withholding world in which she seems to disappoint ev