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  1. Living in Oblivion. From award-winning writer/director Tom DiCillo (Johnny Suede) comes an inventive, hilarious look at the movie-making business. IMDb 7.5 1 h 29 min 1995. R.

  2. 10 de ene. de 2024 · John Gaspard has directed half a dozen low-budget features, as well as written for TV, movies, novels and the stage. The book covers (among other topics): Academy-Award Winner Dan Futterman (“Capote”) on writing real stories. Tom DiCillio (“Living In Oblivion”) on turning a short into a feature.

  3. Cinema has provided its share of films about the many challenges of filmmaking, but few—if any—realize as disastrous circumstances as Tom DiCillo’s Living in Oblivion.Virtuoso performances from Catherine Keener & Steve Buscemi bolster this remarkably accurate and distinctly hilarious cult gem.

  4. Currently you are able to watch "Living in Oblivion" streaming on Amazon Prime Video, fuboTV, Peacock, Fandor, Fandor Amazon Channel or for free with ads on The Roku Channel, Tubi TV, Crackle, Popcornflix, Freevee, Cineverse, Amazon Prime Video with Ads. It is also possible to rent "Living in Oblivion" on Amazon Video, Google Play Movies ...

  5. You will NEVER see a more hilarious or spot on take on some indie films and what they go through producing them than what Living in Oblivion brings to the table! Countless time spent finding "just the right shot" only to have a car horn go off and ruin it AND all on a limited budget with a half-assed staff and finicky "I'm bigger than this" actors, this movie is SPOT ON in portraying it just ...

  6. 17 de mar. de 1995 · AN inspired choice opens this year's New Directors/New Films series tonight: "Living in Oblivion," Tom DiCillo's wonderfully funny behind-the-scenes look at the perils of film making, no-budget style.

  7. In Living in Oblivion, Tom DiCillo’s 1995 triptych of the agony and ecstasy of indie film production, Murphy’s cinematic law is in full effect.Prima donna actors. Uncooperative smoke machines. Blown lines. Soft focus. Booms in the frame. However, the film’s most soul-crushing moment comes when the camera isn’t even rolling.