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Nonfiction » Entertainment » Entertainment industry

cortos    by Juan Carlos Ortiz
Price: $9.99 USD. 32080 words. Language: Spanish. Published on September 21, 2010. Nonfiction » Entertainment » Entertainment industry.

(5.00 from 5 reviews)
"Cortos relatos del mundo de las ideas escritos desde mi BlackBerry @ 30 mil pies de altura." Este libro pertenece a un nuevo mundo, el de la globalización digital, sin fronteras geográficas y con historias que vuelan sin límites por todo el planeta. Tuvo como objetivo ser escrito en su totalidad desde mi BlackBerry y así se cumplió.
99 Films and Cartoons Your Children MUST See Before Growing Up: OR THEY'LL TURN OUT TO BE AXE MURDERERS!!    by Tim DeForest
Price: $0.99 USD. 9860 words. Language: English. Published on July 13, 2011. Nonfiction » Entertainment » Entertainment industry.

(5.00 from 2 reviews)
A list of old-time movies meant to work as a guide for parents to help make TV time for their kids an enjoyable experience that also respects the innocence of childhood. This isn't a list of just classic films; it also includes lesser-known B-movies that also tell good stories.
Mann on Film: It's a Mad World and other essays    by S. E. Mann
Price: Free! 29170 words. Language: English. Published on December 2, 2009. Nonfiction » Entertainment » Television.

(5.00 from 1 review)
S.E. Mann celebrates American cinema and culture in this first in a series of books on entertainment. From his Tokyo hideaway, S.E. Mann offers up a blue plate special of juicy insight garnished with humor and gushing with delicious admiration for America's most beloved institution, Hollywood.
Reinventing Cinema: The First Decade of Digital Cinema    by Nick Dager
Price: $5.99 USD. 73650 words. Language: English. Published on June 3, 2010. Nonfiction » Entertainment » Entertainment industry.

(4.00 from 1 review)
In May 1999 Star Wars: Episode 1 – The Phantom Menace opened with digital screenings in a handful of movie theatres in and around New York and Los Angeles: digital cinema’s first decade was underway. An eyewitness to all the challenges and changes taking place, Nick Dager, founder of the website Digital Cinema Report, chronicles the people who are using new technology to reinvent cinema.