Yahoo Web Search

  1. Online obituary search engine that contains billions of records. Easily search historical records in our extensive collections. Start your free trial now!

  2. Honor your loved one's memory with a beautiful online obituary. Get Started Today. Create a lasting tribute in minutes with our easy-to-use platform. Sign-Up Today.

Search results

  1. Visiting Assistant Professor. Sep 2021 - Present 2 years 7 months. Brooklyn, New York, United States. Visiting Assistant Professor in Film/Video, teaching production, directing, screenwriting...

    • 228
    • 229
    • Pratt Institute
  2. Dec 20, 2021 · by A.E. Hunt. in Directors, Interviews. on Dec 20, 2021. Ben Rosenfield, Bryan Wizemann, Factory 25, Mark Schwartzbard, Matt Grady, Morgan Saylor, You Mean Everything to Me. Bryan Wizemanns You Mean Everything to Me is the first feature film I worked on as an A.C in New York.

  3. Sep 9, 2011 · One of the more sobering and even painful short films of recent years is Bryan Wizemanns Film Makes Us Happy. In the 12-minute documentary, Wizemann argues with his wife about his obsession with filmmaking, with her challenging him to give up on his dreams in order to focus on his family — including his new baby.

  4. Dec 15, 2021 · Bryan Wizemann is an independent writer, producer, director and editor of film based in Brooklyn, NY. You Mean Everything to Me, his fourth feature film, stars Morgan Saylor, Ben Rosenfield and Lindsay Burge and is out December 17 through Factory 25.

  5. Articles by Bryan Wizemann on Muck Rack. Find Bryan Wizemann's email address, contact information, LinkedIn, Twitter, other social media and more.

  6. Wizemann is currently a Visiting Assistant Professor of Film at Pratt Institute. He was a Sundance Lab Fellow, a guest artist and lecturer at Cornell University, The New School, and UNLV, and served as a juror for the Pratt Film/Video Program and the Heermans-McCalmon Dramatic Writing Panel.

  7. Apr 4, 2006 · Wizemann cites John Huston’s Fat City—a sad and beautiful drama about a broken down boxer, with photography by Conrad Hall and music by Kris Kristofferson—as an inspiration. You can see the lineage, but more importantly, you can feel it.