Netflix – Hillbilly Elegy
NetflixHillbilly Elegy
NetflixHillbilly Elegy

The character Princess Merida is shown in a scene from the 2012 animated film “Brave,” directed by Mark Andrews and Brenda Chapman, in this publicity photo released to Reuters May 1, 2012. Hollywood’s summer season kicks off on May 4, 2012; as with recent years, the four-month period is dominated by superheroes, sequels and franchise reboots featuring epic battles between good and evil. With the summer season generating as much as 40 percent of the annual domestic box office, the pressure is on to lure core audiences of mostly young men to theaters, and superhero films, sequels and reboots most often do exactly that. Movies based on characters and stories that are well-known, such as those in comic books, or games, film sequels, remakes and best-selling books reach audiences of built-in fans that typically turn out in droves. Book-to-film titles already have helped push movie ticket sales up 14 percent this year to $3.3 billion. Theater attendance is up 17 percent giving box office watchers reason to think the summer will top last year’s $4.4 billion in seasonal revenues. REUTERS/Pixar/Handout (UNITED STATES – Tags: ENTERTAINMENT) NO SALES. NO ARCHIVES. FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY. NOT FOR SALE FOR MARKETING OR ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS. THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY. IT IS DISTRIBUTED, EXACTLY AS RECEIVED BY REUTERS, AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS NYTCREDIT: Pixar Animation Studios/Walt Disney Pictures
— 17brave
Walt Disney PicturesBrave
Genres & Disciplines
ADR
Drama
Feature
Narrative
Sound
Filmmaker Credits
Production Company
Imagine Entertainment
Director
Ron Howard
Cinematographer
Maryse Alberti
Editor
James Wilcox
Post Supervisor
Leslie Converse
Harbor Credits
Sound
Harbor
Supervising Sound Editors
Robert Hein
Josh Berger
Re-Recording Mixers
Josh Berger
Grant Elder
Dialogue Editor
Ian GR Cymore
ADR
Harbor
ADR Mixer
Bobby Johanson
ADR Recordist
Michael Rivera

The character Princess Merida is shown in a scene from the 2012 animated film “Brave,” directed by Mark Andrews and Brenda Chapman, in this publicity photo released to Reuters May 1, 2012. Hollywood’s summer season kicks off on May 4, 2012; as with recent years, the four-month period is dominated by superheroes, sequels and franchise reboots featuring epic battles between good and evil. With the summer season generating as much as 40 percent of the annual domestic box office, the pressure is on to lure core audiences of mostly young men to theaters, and superhero films, sequels and reboots most often do exactly that. Movies based on characters and stories that are well-known, such as those in comic books, or games, film sequels, remakes and best-selling books reach audiences of built-in fans that typically turn out in droves. Book-to-film titles already have helped push movie ticket sales up 14 percent this year to $3.3 billion. Theater attendance is up 17 percent giving box office watchers reason to think the summer will top last year’s $4.4 billion in seasonal revenues. REUTERS/Pixar/Handout (UNITED STATES – Tags: ENTERTAINMENT) NO SALES. NO ARCHIVES. FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY. NOT FOR SALE FOR MARKETING OR ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS. THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY. IT IS DISTRIBUTED, EXACTLY AS RECEIVED BY REUTERS, AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS NYTCREDIT: Pixar Animation Studios/Walt Disney Pictures
— 17brave
Walt Disney PicturesBrave
