Dear Diary
| Movie | |
|---|---|
| Original title | Dear Diary |
| Country of production | United States |
| original language | English |
| Publishing year | 1996 |
| length | 38 minutes |
| Rod | |
| Director | David Frankel |
| script | David Frankel |
| production | Barry Jossen |
| music | Wendy Blackstone |
| camera | Maryse Alberti |
| cut | Michael Berenbaum |
| occupation | |
| |
Dear Diary is an American short film that won an Oscar in 1997 . The film was originally written as a television pilot for ABC . When he canceled the project, however, the director David Frankel sympathized with the decision not to broadcast this production as a half-hour comedy series. The executive film producer was Barry Larson .
action
The film shows the life of Bebe Neuwirth, who is a 40-year-old art director for a New York magazine. Neuwirth, a mother of two, decides one day to write down the events of her life in the form of diary entries . As she reads the entries off-screen as the narrator, one sees repeatedly associated images, which change at a fast pace and are brought to life by her voice.
production
The short film was shot on 44 sets and the crew consisted of 75 people. The budget ranged from $ 1,000,000 to $ 2,000,000.
Web links
- Dear Diary in the Internet Movie Database (English)
Individual evidence
- ↑ Los Angeles Times, March 22, 1997. Retrieved February 2, 2012