Three of Anton Yelchin’s most beloved films will return to theaters this month in the run-up to the release of “Love, Antosha,” a documentary about the late actor’s many creative pursuits which premiered at this year’s Sundance Film Festival. The theatrical retrospective will feature J.J. Abrams’ “Star Trek” (2009), Drake Doremus’ “Like Crazy” (2011), and Jeremy Saulnier’s “Green Room” (2015). The screenings are set to take place at New York’s Quad Cinema and Portland’s Regal Fox Tower Cinemas, with additional cites to be announced at a later date.
Directed by Garret Price, “Love, Antosha” features interviews with the actor’s parents, Irina and Viktor Yelchin, as well as many of his high-profile friends and collaborators. While his acting work is well known to many, Price highlights the lesser-known sides of Yelchin’s artistic process by exploring his photographic projects as well as scoring the film entirely with the actor’s original music.
Directed by Garret Price, “Love, Antosha” features interviews with the actor’s parents, Irina and Viktor Yelchin, as well as many of his high-profile friends and collaborators. While his acting work is well known to many, Price highlights the lesser-known sides of Yelchin’s artistic process by exploring his photographic projects as well as scoring the film entirely with the actor’s original music.
- 8/1/2019
- by Jude Dry
- Indiewire
Kayti Burt Jun 10, 2019
Check out the trailer for the upcoming documentary celebrating the life and art of actor Anton Yelchin.
The trailer just dropped for Love, Antosha, a documentary that celebrates the life and work of actor Anton Yelchin, who died unexpectedly in a freak accident at the age of 27 years old in 2016.
Despite dying at a young age, Yelchin, who was born in Russia and moved to the U.S. when he was only six months old, had a vibrant career. He started acting professionally when he was only nine years old, starring in films and TV shows alongside actors some of western film's most celebrated actors. He was perhaps particularly known for his role as Chekov in the Star Trek reboot films, as well as for his work in Like, Crazy, alongside Felicity Jones, and Green Room, alongside Patrick Stewart.
The documentary, which was begun by Yelchin's parents,...
Check out the trailer for the upcoming documentary celebrating the life and art of actor Anton Yelchin.
The trailer just dropped for Love, Antosha, a documentary that celebrates the life and work of actor Anton Yelchin, who died unexpectedly in a freak accident at the age of 27 years old in 2016.
Despite dying at a young age, Yelchin, who was born in Russia and moved to the U.S. when he was only six months old, had a vibrant career. He started acting professionally when he was only nine years old, starring in films and TV shows alongside actors some of western film's most celebrated actors. He was perhaps particularly known for his role as Chekov in the Star Trek reboot films, as well as for his work in Like, Crazy, alongside Felicity Jones, and Green Room, alongside Patrick Stewart.
The documentary, which was begun by Yelchin's parents,...
- 6/10/2019
- Den of Geek
Almost three years after the tragic and shocking passing of the uncommonly sensitive and prolific actor Anton Yelchin, a new documentary about his life and work offers an intimate window into this rare talent. Garret Price’s heartbreaking “Love, Antosha” features interviews with the actor’s parents, Irina and Viktor Yelchin, as well as many of his high-profile friends and collaborators. While his acting work is well known to many, Price highlights the lesser-known sides of Yelchin’s artistic process by exploring his photographic projects as well as scoring the film entirely with the actor’s original music. The newly released trailer also promises plenty of archival photos and video of the young actor, sure to move any fan to tears.
The official synopsis reads: “From a prolific career in film and television, Anton Yelchin left an indelible legacy as an actor. Through his journals and other writings, his photography,...
The official synopsis reads: “From a prolific career in film and television, Anton Yelchin left an indelible legacy as an actor. Through his journals and other writings, his photography,...
- 6/10/2019
- by Jude Dry
- Indiewire
Following an acclaimed and emotional premiere at January’s Sundance Film Festival, a documentary about the life and work of late actor Anton Yelchin will hit U.S. theaters this summer.
Lurker Productions will self-distribute the movie, “Love, Antosha,” beginning with New York and Los Angeles in early August, with Michael Tuckman’s mTuckman Media booking theaters. The film will expand throughout the country into August and September.
“This film proves that passion, talent, and love are stronger than all adversities,” Yelchin’s parents Irina and Viktor said. “It has a tremendous charge of positive energy.”
Yelchin died in June 2016 in a freak accident. The doc examines his lifelong passion for the arts, and is told through journals and other writings, photography, original music, as well as interviews with his family, friends, and colleagues. First-time filmmaker Garret Price takes the lead, with Yelchin’s “Like Crazy” director Drake Doremus producing alongside Adam Gibbs.
Lurker Productions will self-distribute the movie, “Love, Antosha,” beginning with New York and Los Angeles in early August, with Michael Tuckman’s mTuckman Media booking theaters. The film will expand throughout the country into August and September.
“This film proves that passion, talent, and love are stronger than all adversities,” Yelchin’s parents Irina and Viktor said. “It has a tremendous charge of positive energy.”
Yelchin died in June 2016 in a freak accident. The doc examines his lifelong passion for the arts, and is told through journals and other writings, photography, original music, as well as interviews with his family, friends, and colleagues. First-time filmmaker Garret Price takes the lead, with Yelchin’s “Like Crazy” director Drake Doremus producing alongside Adam Gibbs.
- 4/10/2019
- by Matt Donnelly
- Variety Film + TV
When 27-year-old Anton Yelchin was killed in a freak accident in 2016, the outpouring of grief from the film community was overwhelming and immediate. But for those of us who only knew him onscreen, it was difficult to immediately assess his career. Unlike Heath Ledger, another star of a slightly older generation who died a shockingly young death, Yelchin was a respected and successful actor who nonetheless had yet to find his “Brokeback Mountain” or his “Dark Knight” – a role that could easily define him and clearly demarcate the potential that had been lost. In his short career, he’d made his name as a precocious and prolific child actor, established indie darling cred in “Like Crazy” and “Green Room,” and left his mark on multi-generational franchises like “Star Trek” and “Terminator Salvation.” But who was Anton Yelchin, and what might he have become?
Directed by Garret Price with substantial assistance from Yelchin’s former costars,...
Directed by Garret Price with substantial assistance from Yelchin’s former costars,...
- 1/30/2019
- by Andrew Barker
- Variety Film + TV
At yesterday’s Sundance Film Festival premiere of Love, Antosha, a new documentary celebrating the life of the late actor Anton Yelchin, his grief-stricken parents Irina and Viktor Yelchin emerged for a Q&A to a standing ovation from the crowd. Sundance had been a good home to Anton, who first visited with Alpha Dog in 2006 and returned many times, and the Park City audience sobbed as Price’s film—gathered from reams of material Anton shot and wrote, as well as reminiscences from friends and co-stars—unspooled for the first time.
For the Yelchins, the past few days here in Park City have been fraught with emotion. But it’s a pain they’ve been blinded by for two-and-a-half years now, since their son’s cruel death in 2016 aged just 27. As Yelchin’s sweet notes to his mother—signed “Love, Antosha,” her nickname for him—make clear, their bond with Anton burned deep.
For the Yelchins, the past few days here in Park City have been fraught with emotion. But it’s a pain they’ve been blinded by for two-and-a-half years now, since their son’s cruel death in 2016 aged just 27. As Yelchin’s sweet notes to his mother—signed “Love, Antosha,” her nickname for him—make clear, their bond with Anton burned deep.
- 1/29/2019
- by Joe Utichi
- Deadline Film + TV
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