Tony Rayns

Antony Rayns (born 1948) is a British writer, commentator, film festival programmer and screenwriter. He wrote for the underground publication Cinema Rising (its name inspired by Kenneth Anger's Scorpio Rising) before contributing to the Monthly Film Bulletin from the December 1970 issue until its demise in 1991. He has written for the British Film Institute's magazine Sight & Sound since the 1970s, and also contributed extensively to Time Out and to Melody Maker in the late 1970s.

Antony Rayns
Born1948
NationalityBritish
Occupationwriter, commentator, screenwriter

He provides commentary tracks for DVD releases of Asian films. He coordinated the Dragons and Tigers competition for Asian films at the Vancouver International Film Festival from 1988 to 2006.[1] In the 1980s, he presented a series called New Chinese Cinema on British television, showing (sometimes rare) films and biographies of eminent Chinese directors. He has also worked as a translator for English subtitles on films from Hong Kong, Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Thailand. For example, he wrote the English subtitles for the films of Huang Ming-chuan in the 1990s in Taiwan.

He wrote the screenplay for Away with Words, a feature film directed by cinematographer Christopher Doyle, starring Asano Tadanobu. He has written books about Seijun Suzuki, Wong Kar-wai and Rainer Werner Fassbinder.


Works

DVD commentary tracks

gollark: As far as I know *nobody* is insane enough to make *webhooked* messages get forwarded.
gollark: DTel does not forward bot messages.
gollark: Ah, a bee recognizer.
gollark: Sandwich please.
gollark: Beware the beeFor GTech™️ will deploy apioforms, inevitablyYou cannot hide beneath a treeApioforms will track any escapeeThey do not respect caller IDApioforms control the capital of TenneseeThus none are safe to an adequate degreeChronoapioforms control realityApiothalassahazards monitor the seaFrom an apioform none can fleeDue to their use of multispectral imaging in order to seeApiointellectuoforms have a PhDAnd kiloapioecoekaorganohazards [DATA EXPUNGED] Holy See<@481991918008664095>

References

  1. Bordwell, David; Thompson, Kristin. "Vancouver envoi". Retrieved 10 January 2007.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.