The Man From UNCLE (September 22, 1964, NBC)
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"В 1976 году сценарист Джеймса Бонда Ричард Мэйбаум вписался было в проект NBC о новых Агентах АНКЛ, но этот проект так и не был реализован."
обрезанная газетная статья, правые столбикиотсюдаПлакат сопровождало описание, которое мне лень переводить, и, честно говоря, с первого раза я вообще не особо въехала.
ТЕКСТU.N.C.L.E. fans were treated to two lengthy scenes from the UNCLE features, "To Trap a Spy" and "The Spy with My Face", the weekend of 4-27-14 at the Egyptian Theater in Hollywood. They were shown as part of the Art Directors Guild presentation of "The Prisoner" as an overall example of production design from 60's TV shows.
"The Prisoner"
Presented by the American Cinematheque and the Art Directors Guild Film Society and sponsored by The Hollywood Reporter.
It all began in 1960, with British TV's “Dangerman” - 30 minutes of gritty film noir. More detective than spy adventure, the program starred Patrick McGoohan, the charismatic actor who'd pass on the role of James Bond. Re-titled “Secret Agent” in America, the show ran for most of the decade. Meanwhile the first Bond feature, DR. NO, revolutionized the look of the spy film, inspiring shows from “The Avengers” to “The Man from U.N.C.L.E.” It was in 1967 that McGoohan came up with his masterpiece – “The Prisoner.” Film clips tracing the decade of the sixties in film and TV design will be discussed by Kosh (art director, graphic artist, documentary producer/director, album cover designer & creative director of The Beatles' Abbey Road album) and Arnold Schwartzman, O.B.E. (Oscar®-winning documentarian, director, and graphic designer). ADG Film Society founder, co-chair and production designer John Muto will moderate the program.
150 min. | Screening format: Blu-rayотсюдаА вообще всё найдено в
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