Mark Moskowitz sat down with indieWIRE contributor Jason Guerrasio to talk about the adventures that took place behind the camera, why books still are of value, and how his assistant cameraman may ...
What a strange enterprise, making a movie about reading a book. It’s the kind of paradox that philosophy students chew over at three in the morning — and a prospect any Hollywood producer would flee ...
What a strange enterprise, making a movie about reading a book. It’s the kind of paradox philosophy students chew over at 3 o’clock in the morning–and a prospect any Hollywood producer would flee from ...
When real-estate developer Mark Moskowitz and his partner, filmmaker Yuval Hadadi, decided to move out of their Flatiron apartment in 2020, they didn’t intend to go very far. “We lived in the ...
In 1972 a college student named Mark Moskowitz read a review in the New York Times of a first novel called The Stones of Summer by one Dow Mossman. Intrigued, he bought a copy but found the novel ...
W hen I was an exuberant little undergrad in the early 1990s, my friends and I used to spend a lot of time speculating about the private lives of mysterious authors, men who never appeared in public ...
This compelling 2002 documentary by Mark Moskowitz, an avid fiction reader who makes a living shooting political commercials, is a kind of literary detective story, though paradoxically the piece of ...
This compelling 2002 documentary by Mark Moskowitz is a kind of literary detective story, though paradoxically the piece of literature at its center remains elusive and opaque to the end. In his late ...
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