Joseph Minion's direction, screenplay and film treatment
Joseph Minion was born in 1957 in New Jersey, USA.
He is a director and writer, known for his screenplay in the film After Hours
(1985). Minion briefly went to NYU Film School before finishing his studies at
Columbia University. In 1984, Minion's script for After Hours was opted for by
Amy Robinson and Griffin Dunne. Minion's screenplay was sent to Scorsese by
Robinson. As a director, Minion made his debut in 1987's Daddy's Boys with
producer Roger Corman. His last step as a director was for 1999s trafficking
another low-budget feature.
Joseph
Minion's After Hours
After Hours is a 1985 American black, comedy and
thriller film written by Joseph Minion and directed by Martin Scorsese. Joseph Minion After Hours received positive
reviews with honour for its black humour and is also considered a cult film.
The film was awarded the Independent Spirit Award for its best feature.
Scorsese the film director won the Cannes Film Festival Award and Independent
Spirit Award for Best Director.
Michael
Moorcock's Behold the Man
Behold the man is a science fiction novel written
by British writer Michael Moorcock
in 1969. It originally popped up as a novella in a 1966 issue of New Worlds,
but later on, Moorcock produced a stretched version which was first published
by Allison & Busby in 1969. The title was derived from the Gospel of John,
Chapter 19. The film was undergone a film treatment by Joseph Minion.
Drawings of
Hieronymus Bosch
Hieronymus Bosch is one of the most notable
representatives of the Early Netherlands painting school. Hieronymus Bosch
drawings are generally based on oil on oak wood, and mainly contain remarkable
illustrations of religious concepts and chronicles. In his lifetime his work
was collected in Austria, Netherlands, and Spain, and widely copied. The site
contains Joseph minion's paintings, film treatments, and Hieronymus Bosch
drawings.
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