IFC Films’ Sundance comedy “Band Aid” just released a hilarious new music video in which Fred Armisen subtly tries to make himself the centerpiece of the band. The video begins with writer-director-star Zoe Lister-Jones and co-star Adam Pally being interviewed by a journalist immediately before shooting a music video, when Armisen joins and suggests some last minute changes to the shoot.
Read More: ‘Band Aid’ Review: Zoe Lister-Jones And Adam Pally Rock Their Marriage Back To Life In a Sincere Music Comedy
“Band Aid” tells the story of a dysfunctional married couple whose shared love of music leads to an unconventional form of couple’s therapy when they form a band with their neighbor (Armisen). The film is Lister-Jones’ feature directing debut.
Acquired by IFC Films shortly after its Sundance premiere, “Band Aid” has attracted strong reviews and special praise for Lister-Jones’ decision to employ an all-female crew, many of...
Read More: ‘Band Aid’ Review: Zoe Lister-Jones And Adam Pally Rock Their Marriage Back To Life In a Sincere Music Comedy
“Band Aid” tells the story of a dysfunctional married couple whose shared love of music leads to an unconventional form of couple’s therapy when they form a band with their neighbor (Armisen). The film is Lister-Jones’ feature directing debut.
Acquired by IFC Films shortly after its Sundance premiere, “Band Aid” has attracted strong reviews and special praise for Lister-Jones’ decision to employ an all-female crew, many of...
- 6/6/2017
- by Graham Winfrey
- Indiewire
Girl Talk is a weekly look at women in film — past, present, and future.
Long-time actress, writer, and producer Zoe Lister-Jones had a big idea when she decided to move behind the camera to direct her first film: she wanted an all-female crew to assist her. On her directorial debut, “Band Aid,” Lister-Jones was joined on set by producer Natalia Anderson, director of photography Hilary Spera, and a team that included female art directors, camera operators, electricians, sound editors, and many more. It was a revolutionary idea that the filmmaker found essential to execute, if only to prove that such a move was indeed possible.
While the lack of female filmmakers working in the industry has become a firebrand topic over the past couple of years, diversity is also severely lacking in other areas of the crew. The Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film at San...
Long-time actress, writer, and producer Zoe Lister-Jones had a big idea when she decided to move behind the camera to direct her first film: she wanted an all-female crew to assist her. On her directorial debut, “Band Aid,” Lister-Jones was joined on set by producer Natalia Anderson, director of photography Hilary Spera, and a team that included female art directors, camera operators, electricians, sound editors, and many more. It was a revolutionary idea that the filmmaker found essential to execute, if only to prove that such a move was indeed possible.
While the lack of female filmmakers working in the industry has become a firebrand topic over the past couple of years, diversity is also severely lacking in other areas of the crew. The Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film at San...
- 6/2/2017
- by Kate Erbland
- Indiewire
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