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  1. Web Exclusive: A Conversation with Samuel Gray Anderson on Nick Cave. Mary Kenagy Mitchell | Issue 86. In Image issue 86, filmmaker Samuel Gray Anderson writes about darkly poetic rocker Nick Cave—and how a nice guy became a fan of such violent, discordant music.

  2. Eight years after “Munyurangabo”, Lee Isaac Chung and his frequent collaborator, Samuel Gray Anderson, return to Rwanda to co-direct a documentary on 39-year-old Jean Kwezi, who was separated from his family during the 1994 genocide, only reuniting with them many years later, long after they presumed him dead.

  3. Screenwriter Samuel Gray Anderson gained attention in 2007 as the cowriter, with Lee Isaac Chung, of Munyurangabo, which premiered at Cannes to critical acclaim. Filmed in Rwanda with local actors and crew, the film deals with the bloody 1994 genocide indirectly and personally, from the point of view of two boys too young to remember it—but ...

  4. Samuel Gray Anderson | Issue 86. To SSA and TBA. A T TIMES I TELL MYSELF that the difference between me today and me a decade ago can be summed up by the fact that where I was once a devoted fan of U2, I am now a partisan of Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds. I treat it as a joke, but there is more than a grain of truth in it.

  5. Feb 13, 2022 · What Chung and co-writer Samuel Gray Anderson give us is a truncated relationship, the highs, lows and abrupt breaks and make-ups of a love affair, much of it with only one character talking. It’s freighted with slender, sometimes obvious metaphors, and whispered about via narration.

  6. 2015 Directed by Samuel Gray Anderson, Lee Isaac Chung. ‘I Have Seen My Last Born’ is about Rwanda in transition from its difficult and violent past towards development, seen through the life of a man who juggles the roles of father and a son, between the city and the village. Cast. Crew. Details. Genres. Releases. John Kwezi.

  7. Mar 24, 2010 · Ebertfest: Synecdoche, Champaign-Urbana. Roger Ebert | 2010-03-24. Charlie Kaufman, the writer and director of "Synecdoche, New York" (2008), my choice for the best film of the decade, will appear after the screening of his masterpiece at Ebertfest 2010.