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  1. テリー・ツワイゴフ(Terry Zwigoff, 1948年-)はアメリカ合衆国 ウィスコンシン州出身の映画監督である。 来歴 [ 編集 ] 映画監督 として知られるツワイゴフは 1948年 に ウィスコンシン州 アップルトン に生まれた。

  2. Terry Zwigoff. Director: Ghost World. Born in Appleton, Wisconsin, Zwigoff held several jobs before making his breakthrough feature: the documentary Crumb (1994) in 1994. His previous jobs included musician, shipping clerk, printer and welfare office worker. In fact, Zwigoff traces his film career back to discovering a rare blues recording by an unknown Chicago blues musician he discovered in ...

  3. Terry Zwigoff (18 mai 1949 - ) est un réalisateur, scénariste et producteur américain spécialiste de la mouvance underground et qui a une prédilection pour les films décrivant des personnages marginaux. Biographie. Son premier film, Louis ...

  4. Terry Zwigoff’s landmark 1995 film is an intimate documentary portrait of the underground artist Robert Crumb, whose unique drawing style and sexually and racially provocative subject matter have made him a household name in popular American art. Zwigoff candidly and colorfully delves into the details of Crumb’s incredible career and life, including his family of reclusive eccentrics, some ...

  5. Terry Zwigoff (born May 18, 1949 in Appleton, Wisconsin) is an American filmmaker best known for two popular small budget films, both arising out of the world of underground or alternative comics: the documentary Crumb (1994), about underground comics figure Robert Crumb, and the feature Ghost World (2001), adapted from the Dan Clowes comic ...

  6. 19 de may. de 2017 · The Sly Poetics of Terry Zwigoff. “I can’t relate to 99 percent of humanity,” says a character in Terry Zwigoff’s perceptive cult film Ghost World (2001). That movie—an ode to alienation, loneliness, and the melancholy process of growing up—was inspired by the graphic novel of the same name by Daniel Clowes.

  7. 11 de ago. de 2010 · When Terry Zwigoff made his debut feature Louie Bluie in 1985, he didn’t have big plans for a movie career. “My expectations were to show it in my living room to friends,” he explains in a new interview with the A.V. Club’s Noel Murray, coinciding with the release this week of Criterion’s special editions of Louie Bluie and Crumb.