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	Comments on: Ramin Bahrani Reveals Next Film &#8217;99 Homes&#8217; In Touching Final Interview With Roger Ebert	</title>
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		By: PRADIP BISWAS, THE INDIAN EXPRESS NEWSPAPERS, INDIA		</title>
		<link>https://staging2.theplaylist.net/ramin-bahrani-reveals-next-film-99-homes-in-touching-final-interview-with-roger-ebert-20130426/#comment-56705</link>

		<dc:creator><![CDATA[PRADIP BISWAS, THE INDIAN EXPRESS NEWSPAPERS, INDIA]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 13 May 2016 10:05:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.indiewire.com/2013/more/uncategorized/ramin-bahrani-reveals-next-film-99-homes-in-touching-final-interview-with-roger-ebert-98904/#comment-56705</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[99 HOMES: NUMBERS COUNT 
BY PRADIP BISWAS, THE INDIAN EXPRESS NEWSPAPERS, INDIA
JURY MEMBER INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL AND FRIBOURG INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL, SWISS, CURATOR.
NEWS
Rahim Bahrani is an upcoming director from the States but with a fresh vision. His films do not copy Hollywood rubbish and that is why laet Roger Ebert had welcomed this filmmaker who straight landed into darkish pictures of Hollywood junk. May I say there is no âLovely stuffâ in his work. Indeed, Bahrani disclosed to Ebert what he was up to next, a film entitled 99 Homes, which would find him tackling a subject that has rocked America over the past few years. Set in sunny Orlando, Florida, it is about Dennis Nash, a man evicted from his home with his mom and son by Mike Carver, a power-hungry, gun-toting monster and real estate broker, who works for the banks. Bahrani explains. &#034;In a desperate attempt to get his home back, Dennis agrees to work for Mike â a deal with the devil that leads him deeper into the heart of the corrupt housing industry. I will shoot later this year.&#034;

In a way, the story centers on a young man (Andrew Garfield) who loses his house to foreclosure. Bent upon and Desperate for work, he ends up taking a job with the shady real estate broker (Michael Shannon) who took his home away, where he becomes involved in a plot to embezzle money from the government, a big crime that crushes his life and dreams. Indeed, Ramin Bahrani has directed from his own screenplay, which reflects recent economic headlines steeped in hopelessness and fall of share and money market. Kevin Turen, Justin Nappi andJuliet Berman have gleefully produced for Treehouse Pictures. It is claimed no production schedule was given.


99 HOMES daringly showcases the horrors of goons operating in new Orleans. How the most ordinary cooky with little stay-home property falls a victim to the power-brokers is pinned upon in the film. Why 99 HOMES it could be 999 HOMES TOO.
It is said when Ebert was alive, Bahrani shared his memories of his friendship with him which started all the way back on &#034;Man Push Cart,&#034; and reveals what his next film will be.

According to Bahrin, âOne of his havens during that time was your essays, blogs and reviews. Youâve always had the ability to cut right to the heart of the matter. Your reviews were never bogged down in adolescent fanfare or stuffy intellectualism. You were wiser than that. You wrote about the most complex films in simple and direct ways that anybody could understand. This is a rare talent that reminds me of John Fordâs cinema. You also approached every film with the same generous heart, yet with the highest standards of what cinema can and must be.â]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>99 HOMES: NUMBERS COUNT<br />
BY PRADIP BISWAS, THE INDIAN EXPRESS NEWSPAPERS, INDIA<br />
JURY MEMBER INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL AND FRIBOURG INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL, SWISS, CURATOR.<br />
NEWS<br />
Rahim Bahrani is an upcoming director from the States but with a fresh vision. His films do not copy Hollywood rubbish and that is why laet Roger Ebert had welcomed this filmmaker who straight landed into darkish pictures of Hollywood junk. May I say there is no âLovely stuffâ in his work. Indeed, Bahrani disclosed to Ebert what he was up to next, a film entitled 99 Homes, which would find him tackling a subject that has rocked America over the past few years. Set in sunny Orlando, Florida, it is about Dennis Nash, a man evicted from his home with his mom and son by Mike Carver, a power-hungry, gun-toting monster and real estate broker, who works for the banks. Bahrani explains. &quot;In a desperate attempt to get his home back, Dennis agrees to work for Mike â a deal with the devil that leads him deeper into the heart of the corrupt housing industry. I will shoot later this year.&quot;</p>
<p>In a way, the story centers on a young man (Andrew Garfield) who loses his house to foreclosure. Bent upon and Desperate for work, he ends up taking a job with the shady real estate broker (Michael Shannon) who took his home away, where he becomes involved in a plot to embezzle money from the government, a big crime that crushes his life and dreams. Indeed, Ramin Bahrani has directed from his own screenplay, which reflects recent economic headlines steeped in hopelessness and fall of share and money market. Kevin Turen, Justin Nappi andJuliet Berman have gleefully produced for Treehouse Pictures. It is claimed no production schedule was given.</p>
<p>99 HOMES daringly showcases the horrors of goons operating in new Orleans. How the most ordinary cooky with little stay-home property falls a victim to the power-brokers is pinned upon in the film. Why 99 HOMES it could be 999 HOMES TOO.<br />
It is said when Ebert was alive, Bahrani shared his memories of his friendship with him which started all the way back on &quot;Man Push Cart,&quot; and reveals what his next film will be.</p>
<p>According to Bahrin, âOne of his havens during that time was your essays, blogs and reviews. Youâve always had the ability to cut right to the heart of the matter. Your reviews were never bogged down in adolescent fanfare or stuffy intellectualism. You were wiser than that. You wrote about the most complex films in simple and direct ways that anybody could understand. This is a rare talent that reminds me of John Fordâs cinema. You also approached every film with the same generous heart, yet with the highest standards of what cinema can and must be.â</p>
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		<item>
		<title>
		By: PRADIP BISWAS, THE INDIAN EXPRESS NEWSPAPERS, INDIA		</title>
		<link>https://staging2.theplaylist.net/ramin-bahrani-reveals-next-film-99-homes-in-touching-final-interview-with-roger-ebert-20130426/#comment-56706</link>

		<dc:creator><![CDATA[PRADIP BISWAS, THE INDIAN EXPRESS NEWSPAPERS, INDIA]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 13 May 2016 10:05:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.indiewire.com/2013/more/uncategorized/ramin-bahrani-reveals-next-film-99-homes-in-touching-final-interview-with-roger-ebert-98904/#comment-56706</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[99 HOMES: NUMBERS COUNT 
BY PRADIP BISWAS, THE INDIAN EXPRESS NEWSPAPERS, INDIA
JURY MEMBER INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL AND FRIBOURG INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL, SWISS, CURATOR.
NEWS
Rahim Bahrani is an upcoming director from the States but with a fresh vision. His films do not copy Hollywood rubbish and that is why laet Roger Ebert had welcomed this filmmaker who straight landed into darkish pictures of Hollywood junk. May I say there is no âLovely stuffâ in his work. Indeed, Bahrani disclosed to Ebert what he was up to next, a film entitled 99 Homes, which would find him tackling a subject that has rocked America over the past few years. Set in sunny Orlando, Florida, it is about Dennis Nash, a man evicted from his home with his mom and son by Mike Carver, a power-hungry, gun-toting monster and real estate broker, who works for the banks. Bahrani explains. &#034;In a desperate attempt to get his home back, Dennis agrees to work for Mike â a deal with the devil that leads him deeper into the heart of the corrupt housing industry. I will shoot later this year.&#034;

In a way, the story centers on a young man (Andrew Garfield) who loses his house to foreclosure. Bent upon and Desperate for work, he ends up taking a job with the shady real estate broker (Michael Shannon) who took his home away, where he becomes involved in a plot to embezzle money from the government, a big crime that crushes his life and dreams. Indeed, Ramin Bahrani has directed from his own screenplay, which reflects recent economic headlines steeped in hopelessness and fall of share and money market. Kevin Turen, Justin Nappi andJuliet Berman have gleefully produced for Treehouse Pictures. It is claimed no production schedule was given.


99 HOMES daringly showcases the horrors of goons operating in new Orleans. How the most ordinary cooky with little stay-home property falls a victim to the power-brokers is pinned upon in the film. Why 99 HOMES it could be 999 HOMES TOO.
It is said when Ebert was alive, Bahrani shared his memories of his friendship with him which started all the way back on &#034;Man Push Cart,&#034; and reveals what his next film will be.

According to Bahrin, âOne of his havens during that time was your essays, blogs and reviews. Youâve always had the ability to cut right to the heart of the matter. Your reviews were never bogged down in adolescent fanfare or stuffy intellectualism. You were wiser than that. You wrote about the most complex films in simple and direct ways that anybody could understand. This is a rare talent that reminds me of John Fordâs cinema. You also approached every film with the same generous heart, yet with the highest standards of what cinema can and must be.â]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>99 HOMES: NUMBERS COUNT<br />
BY PRADIP BISWAS, THE INDIAN EXPRESS NEWSPAPERS, INDIA<br />
JURY MEMBER INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL AND FRIBOURG INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL, SWISS, CURATOR.<br />
NEWS<br />
Rahim Bahrani is an upcoming director from the States but with a fresh vision. His films do not copy Hollywood rubbish and that is why laet Roger Ebert had welcomed this filmmaker who straight landed into darkish pictures of Hollywood junk. May I say there is no âLovely stuffâ in his work. Indeed, Bahrani disclosed to Ebert what he was up to next, a film entitled 99 Homes, which would find him tackling a subject that has rocked America over the past few years. Set in sunny Orlando, Florida, it is about Dennis Nash, a man evicted from his home with his mom and son by Mike Carver, a power-hungry, gun-toting monster and real estate broker, who works for the banks. Bahrani explains. &quot;In a desperate attempt to get his home back, Dennis agrees to work for Mike â a deal with the devil that leads him deeper into the heart of the corrupt housing industry. I will shoot later this year.&quot;</p>
<p>In a way, the story centers on a young man (Andrew Garfield) who loses his house to foreclosure. Bent upon and Desperate for work, he ends up taking a job with the shady real estate broker (Michael Shannon) who took his home away, where he becomes involved in a plot to embezzle money from the government, a big crime that crushes his life and dreams. Indeed, Ramin Bahrani has directed from his own screenplay, which reflects recent economic headlines steeped in hopelessness and fall of share and money market. Kevin Turen, Justin Nappi andJuliet Berman have gleefully produced for Treehouse Pictures. It is claimed no production schedule was given.</p>
<p>99 HOMES daringly showcases the horrors of goons operating in new Orleans. How the most ordinary cooky with little stay-home property falls a victim to the power-brokers is pinned upon in the film. Why 99 HOMES it could be 999 HOMES TOO.<br />
It is said when Ebert was alive, Bahrani shared his memories of his friendship with him which started all the way back on &quot;Man Push Cart,&quot; and reveals what his next film will be.</p>
<p>According to Bahrin, âOne of his havens during that time was your essays, blogs and reviews. Youâve always had the ability to cut right to the heart of the matter. Your reviews were never bogged down in adolescent fanfare or stuffy intellectualism. You were wiser than that. You wrote about the most complex films in simple and direct ways that anybody could understand. This is a rare talent that reminds me of John Fordâs cinema. You also approached every film with the same generous heart, yet with the highest standards of what cinema can and must be.â</p>
]]></content:encoded>
		
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		<item>
		<title>
		By: PRADIP BISWAS, THE INDIAN EXPRESS NEWSPAPERS, INDIA		</title>
		<link>https://staging2.theplaylist.net/ramin-bahrani-reveals-next-film-99-homes-in-touching-final-interview-with-roger-ebert-20130426/#comment-56707</link>

		<dc:creator><![CDATA[PRADIP BISWAS, THE INDIAN EXPRESS NEWSPAPERS, INDIA]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 13 May 2016 10:05:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.indiewire.com/2013/more/uncategorized/ramin-bahrani-reveals-next-film-99-homes-in-touching-final-interview-with-roger-ebert-98904/#comment-56707</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[99 HOMES: NUMBERS COUNT 
BY PRADIP BISWAS, THE INDIAN EXPRESS NEWSPAPERS, INDIA
JURY MEMBER INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL AND FRIBOURG INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL, SWISS, CURATOR.
NEWS
Rahim Bahrani is an upcoming director from the States but with a fresh vision. His films do not copy Hollywood rubbish and that is why laet Roger Ebert had welcomed this filmmaker who straight landed into darkish pictures of Hollywood junk. May I say there is no âLovely stuffâ in his work. Indeed, Bahrani disclosed to Ebert what he was up to next, a film entitled 99 Homes, which would find him tackling a subject that has rocked America over the past few years. Set in sunny Orlando, Florida, it is about Dennis Nash, a man evicted from his home with his mom and son by Mike Carver, a power-hungry, gun-toting monster and real estate broker, who works for the banks. Bahrani explains. &#034;In a desperate attempt to get his home back, Dennis agrees to work for Mike â a deal with the devil that leads him deeper into the heart of the corrupt housing industry. I will shoot later this year.&#034;

In a way, the story centers on a young man (Andrew Garfield) who loses his house to foreclosure. Bent upon and Desperate for work, he ends up taking a job with the shady real estate broker (Michael Shannon) who took his home away, where he becomes involved in a plot to embezzle money from the government, a big crime that crushes his life and dreams. Indeed, Ramin Bahrani has directed from his own screenplay, which reflects recent economic headlines steeped in hopelessness and fall of share and money market. Kevin Turen, Justin Nappi andJuliet Berman have gleefully produced for Treehouse Pictures. It is claimed no production schedule was given.


99 HOMES daringly showcases the horrors of goons operating in new Orleans. How the most ordinary cooky with little stay-home property falls a victim to the power-brokers is pinned upon in the film. Why 99 HOMES it could be 999 HOMES TOO.
It is said when Ebert was alive, Bahrani shared his memories of his friendship with him which started all the way back on &#034;Man Push Cart,&#034; and reveals what his next film will be.

According to Bahrin, âOne of his havens during that time was your essays, blogs and reviews. Youâve always had the ability to cut right to the heart of the matter. Your reviews were never bogged down in adolescent fanfare or stuffy intellectualism. You were wiser than that. You wrote about the most complex films in simple and direct ways that anybody could understand. This is a rare talent that reminds me of John Fordâs cinema. You also approached every film with the same generous heart, yet with the highest standards of what cinema can and must be.â]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>99 HOMES: NUMBERS COUNT<br />
BY PRADIP BISWAS, THE INDIAN EXPRESS NEWSPAPERS, INDIA<br />
JURY MEMBER INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL AND FRIBOURG INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL, SWISS, CURATOR.<br />
NEWS<br />
Rahim Bahrani is an upcoming director from the States but with a fresh vision. His films do not copy Hollywood rubbish and that is why laet Roger Ebert had welcomed this filmmaker who straight landed into darkish pictures of Hollywood junk. May I say there is no âLovely stuffâ in his work. Indeed, Bahrani disclosed to Ebert what he was up to next, a film entitled 99 Homes, which would find him tackling a subject that has rocked America over the past few years. Set in sunny Orlando, Florida, it is about Dennis Nash, a man evicted from his home with his mom and son by Mike Carver, a power-hungry, gun-toting monster and real estate broker, who works for the banks. Bahrani explains. &quot;In a desperate attempt to get his home back, Dennis agrees to work for Mike â a deal with the devil that leads him deeper into the heart of the corrupt housing industry. I will shoot later this year.&quot;</p>
<p>In a way, the story centers on a young man (Andrew Garfield) who loses his house to foreclosure. Bent upon and Desperate for work, he ends up taking a job with the shady real estate broker (Michael Shannon) who took his home away, where he becomes involved in a plot to embezzle money from the government, a big crime that crushes his life and dreams. Indeed, Ramin Bahrani has directed from his own screenplay, which reflects recent economic headlines steeped in hopelessness and fall of share and money market. Kevin Turen, Justin Nappi andJuliet Berman have gleefully produced for Treehouse Pictures. It is claimed no production schedule was given.</p>
<p>99 HOMES daringly showcases the horrors of goons operating in new Orleans. How the most ordinary cooky with little stay-home property falls a victim to the power-brokers is pinned upon in the film. Why 99 HOMES it could be 999 HOMES TOO.<br />
It is said when Ebert was alive, Bahrani shared his memories of his friendship with him which started all the way back on &quot;Man Push Cart,&quot; and reveals what his next film will be.</p>
<p>According to Bahrin, âOne of his havens during that time was your essays, blogs and reviews. Youâve always had the ability to cut right to the heart of the matter. Your reviews were never bogged down in adolescent fanfare or stuffy intellectualism. You were wiser than that. You wrote about the most complex films in simple and direct ways that anybody could understand. This is a rare talent that reminds me of John Fordâs cinema. You also approached every film with the same generous heart, yet with the highest standards of what cinema can and must be.â</p>
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