Motion picture industry -- United States
Label
Motion picture industry -- United States
Name
Motion picture industry
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Incoming Resources
- Subject of37
- Code of fair competition for the motion picture laboratory industry as submitted on August 18, 1933 and as approved on September 7, 1933 by President Roosevelt
- The royal nonesuch, in which the author, a failure at literature, fails likewise at pornography, founds a corporate branding consultancy and a new media empire ., glasgow Phillips
- Hollywood's road to riches, David Waterman
- Hollywood jock, 365 days, four screenplays, three TV pitches, two kids, and one wife who's ready to pull the plug, Rob Ryder
- This film is not yet rated, IFC presents in association with Netflix and BBC a Chain Camera production ; a film by Kirby Dick
- Sleepless in Hollywood, tales from the new abnormal in the movie business, Lynda Obst
- Edison, the invention of the movies, the Museum of Modern Art in cooperation with the Library of Congress
- Such mad fun, ambition and glamour in Hollywood's golden age, Robin R. Cutler
- Edison, the invention of the movies, Part 1
- Director's cut, my life in film
- The aspiring screenwriter's dirty lowdown guide to fame and fortune, tough lessons you need to know to take your script from premise to premiere, Andy Rose
- Behind the screens, Hollywood goes hypercommercial, directors, Matt Soar, Susan Ericsson ; producer, Matt Soar ; executive producer, Sut Jhally
- The kid stays in the picture, Robert Evans
- Amendment to code of fair competition for the motion picture industry as approved on July 27, 1934
- Who killed Hollywood?, --and put the tarnish on Tinseltown, Peter Bart
- Naming Names, Victor S. Navasky
- Key grip, a memoir of endless consequences, Dustin Beall Smith
- The migration of U.S. film & television production, the impact of 'runaways' on workers and small business in the U.S. film industry
- Adventures in the screen trade, a personal view of Hollywood and screenwriting, William Goldman
- Amendment to code of fair competition for the motion picture industry as approved on March 11, 1935
- The CIA in Hollywood, How the Agency Shapes Film and Television
- Hollywood jock, 365 days, four screenplays, three TV pitches, two kids, and one wife who's ready to pull the plug, Rob Ryder
- Code of fair competition for the motion picture industry as approved on November 27, 1933 by President Roosevelt
- Code of fair competition for the dealers in motion-picture and theatre supplies and equipment industry as submitted on August 29, 1933
- The screenwriter's survival guide, or, guerilla meeting tactics and other acts of war, Max Adams
- Which lie did I tell?, more adventures in the screen trade, by William Goldman
- Amendment to code of fair competition for the motion picture industry as approved on June 13, 1934
- Feeding the dragon, inside the trillion dollar dilemma facing Hollywood, the NBA, & American business, Chris Fenton
- Alistair Cooke at the movies, Alistair Cooke
- Exception taken:, how France had defied Hollywood's new world order, Jonathan Buchsbaum
- Imaginary witness, Hollywood and the Holocaust, an Anker Productions film in association with Films Transit International Inc. ; produced by Daniel Anker and Ellin Baumel ; directed by Daniel Anker
- Bambi vs. Godzilla, on the nature, purpose, and practice of the movie business, David Mamet
- Overnight
- Edison, the invention of the movies. Part 2
- Red carpet, Hollywood, China, and the global battle for cultural supremacy, Erich Schwartzel
- Red carpet, Hollywood, China, and the global battle for cultural supremacy, Erich Schwartzel
- The CIA in Hollywood, how the agency shapes film and television, Patricia Jenkins
Outgoing Resources
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