The first scheduled release, a short film co-directed by Ernst and Golykh entitled Three Stops, is currently in post-production. However, even their short films have not yet been released, so as far as audiences are concerned, neither has as yet released a film as director. In fact, Finding Jack, will be the feature directorial debut for both Ernst and Golykh.
Notably, their director credits are scant (although Ernst was a producer of Little One, the South African official submission to the Best Foreign Language Film category of the 85th Academic Awards, 2013). Today, some 64 years later, the reanimation of James Dean has been promised by directors Anton Ernst 1 and Tati Golykh 2 in their announcement of Finding Jack, to be released through their production company, Magic City Films. How then is he cast in a new film? The fascination for me is less about whether this film should or even can be made, and more to do with the insight this whole episode provides into wider social and legal perspectives on the performer and the art of performance. But of course, James Dean died in a car accident on 30 September 1955, almost a decade before US troops entered Vietnam.
In late 2019, cinephiles reacted to the news that James Dean would be starring in a new film, an adaptation of Gareth Crocker's 2013 novel, Finding Jack, the story of hundreds of canine units left behind at the end of the Vietnam War. East of Eden (1955), directed by Elia Kazan, starring James Dean (Cal Trask) and Richard Davalos (Aron Trask) Subsequent terror drove them from my mind, but I think the last one, which I repeated, was: ‘Where have you been?’ HP Lovecraft, ‘Herbert West – Reanimator’Ĭal Trask: Hey Aron, why don't you ask me where I've been?Ĭal Trask: No. In a moment of fantastic whim I whispered questions to the reddening ears questions of other worlds of which the memory might still be present.
Encyclopedia of Private International Law.Encyclopedia of Tourism Management and Marketing.