Steve James |
- Steve James Documentary Stevie
- Stevie Documentary Update
- Steve James Documentary Stevie Updated Youtube
- Documentary Stevie Update
- Steve James Documentary Stevie Update Flash Torrent Oggy Et Les Cafards Saison 3 De Scorpion Contact But often these mishaps and detours end up being silver linings.
- Steve James, Director: Stevie. Steve James was born in Hampton, Virginia, USA. He is a director and producer, known for Stevie (2002), The Interrupters (2011) and Hoop Dreams (1994). He is married to Judy James.
- Ten years ago filmmaker Steve James was a 'Big Brother' mentor to a troubled young man named Stevie. He decides to reconnect with him to make a documentary, but an unexpected event changes not only the course of the film but Stevie's whole life.
- Steve James Documentary Stevie Update Flash Torrent Oggy Et Les Cafards Saison 3 De Scorpion Contact But often these mishaps and detours end up being silver linings in the final film, according to award-winning director Steve James (“Life Itself,” “Hoop Dreams”), during his masterclass at. Welcome, friends! Check the top of the.
Steve James produced and directed Oscar®-nominated Hoop Dreams (1994), universally acclaimed by critics and winner of several major awards, including the George Foster Peabody Award and Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award. This began his 30 year affiliation with Kartemquin Films, with whom James has produced numerous award-winning films, including: Stevie (2002), winner of the Sundance Excellence in Cinematography Award: Documentary and the IDFA award for Best Feature-Length Documentary;The New Americans (2004), named Best Limited Series at the IDA’s Distinguished Documentary Achievement Awards; The War Tapes (2006), winner of the Best Documentary Feature award at the Tribeca Film Festival; and The Interrupters (2011), winner of the Emmy for Outstanding Informational Programming - Long Form and the Independent Spirit Award for Best Documentary. James’s most recent documentary, Life Itself (2014), was named the best documentary of the year by over a dozen critics associations, Rotten Tomatoes, The Critic’s Choice Awards, The National Board of Review, and The Producers Guild of America.
Steve James Documentary Stevie
Stevie is Steve James’ critically acclaimed documentary about Stevie (Stephen) Fielding, a man who was James’ own “Little Brother” in the 1980s. After a decade without any contact with Stevie, in 1995, he returns to rural Illinois hoping to reconnect.
Works by Steve James
Stevie | |
---|---|
Directed by | Steve James |
Produced by | Steve James Adam Singer Gordon Quinn |
Music by | Dirk Powell |
Cinematography | Dana Kupper Gordon Quinn Peter Gilbert |
Edited by | Steve James, Bill Haugse |
Kartemquin Films Films Transit International | |
Distributed by | Lions Gate Films |
144 min | |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Stevie is a 2002 film by documentarian Steve James, and Kartemquin Films.
Content[edit]
In 1995, James returned to Pomona, a rural town in Southern Illinois, USA. After 10 years with no contact, he attempts to reconnect with Stevie Fielding, a troubled young boy to whom he had been an 'Advocate Big Brother'. James's re-entry into Stevie's life is brief.
The story then picks up again about two years later after Stevie is charged with a serious crime. Through interviews with Stevie and his family and friends, James paints the portrait of a man who is still very troubled, while he tries to understand what led Stevie down the path of self-destruction.
Post-release[edit]
Stevie was the winner of numerous festival awards, including the 2002 Amsterdam International Documentary Film Festival's Joris Ivens Award, given to that year's top documentary.[1] The film was a 2003 nominee for Best Documentary at the Sundance FIlm Festival, as well as the Independent Spirit Awards.[2][3]
By decade's end, Stevie was on numerous 'Best of the 2000s' list. In his list of 'Best Films of Any Genre', Ray Pride of NewCity Film, ranked Stevie at #19.[4][5][6] Critic Collin Souter of Efilmcritic.com named Stevie the best documentary of the decade.[7][failed verification]
Aftermath[edit]
Stephen Fielding was scheduled to be paroled on February 15, 2007. His original ten-year sentence was completed on October 29, 2009, and he was released from the Stateville Correctional Center.
References[edit]
- ^IDFA[permanent dead link] International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam 2002. Retrieved 25 Jan. 2011.
- ^Sundance-Stevie. Sundance.org. Retrieved 25 Jan. 2011.
- ^Independent Spirit Awards 2011 'Twenty-Six Years of Nominees & Winners'.Archived 2011-01-25 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 25 Jan. 2011.
- ^'At Zeroes End: Best Films, 2000-2009'. Pride, Ray. NewCity Film.com. 21 Dec. 2009. Retrieved 25 Jan. 2011.
- ^'More Top Ten From the Aughts.'Archived 2011-09-23 at the Wayback Machine Filmsweep.com. 24 Dec. 2009. Retrieved 25 Jan. 2011.
- ^'Top 100 of the '00s'. Phipps, Keith. Untitled Keith Phipps Project. 28 Dec. 2009. Retrieved 25 Jan. 2011.
- ^'Capturing the Decade: Documentaries'[permanent dead link] Souter, Collin. EFilmcritic.com. Retrieved 25 Jan. 2011.
Stevie Documentary Update
External links[edit]
Steve James Documentary Stevie Updated Youtube
- Stevie at the Arts & Faith Top100 Spiritually Significant Films list
- Stephen Fielding Illinois State Offender page [1]
- Stephen Fielding Tennessee Sex Offender Page [2]
- Big Brothers Big Sisters of America.
- Stevie on IMDb