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・ Blow-me-down Brook
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・ Blow-Up (DJ duo)
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・ Blow-up and Other Stories
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・ Blowback (intelligence)
Blowback Productions
・ Blowdown
・ Blowdown (TV series)
・ Blowdown stack
・ Blower
・ Blower (surname)
・ Blower door
・ Blowering Dam
・ Blowers
・ Blowers Green railway station
・ Blowers Township, Otter Tail County, Minnesota
・ Blowfish (cipher)
・ Blowfish (company)
・ Blowfish (disambiguation)
・ Blowfly


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Blowback Productions : ウィキペディア英語版
Blowback Productions

Blowback Productions is an independent film and television production company founded in 1988 by Marc Levin. Along with producing partner, Daphne Pinkerson, they have made over 20 films and won numerous awards.
== Marc Levin ==
Independent filmmaker Marc Levin brings an original blend of narrative and verite techniques together in his feature films, television series, and documentaries. His Brick City TV series won the 2010 Peabody award and was nominated for an Emmy for Exceptional Merit in Nonfiction Filmmaking. His dramatic feature film, SLAM, which won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival and the Camera D'Or at Cannes in 1998, received international recognition for its seamless blending of the real world with a narrative flow. Hollywood Reporter wrote, “Brace yourself for a slam-dunk of a movie, in an in-your-face cinema verite-style that makes Godard's 'Breathless' seem like a cartoon."
Levin’s Brick City is a ground-breaking docu-series about the city of Newark, its Mayor, Cory Booker, and the people on the frontlines of a city struggling to change. Executive produced and directed with Mark Benjamin and produced with Academy Award winner Forest Whitaker, the 5-hour series aired its first Peabody Award-winning season on the Sundance Channel in September 2009. The show also received a 2010 Golden Eagle Cine Award and was nominated for both an Emmy for Exceptional Merit in Nonfiction Filmmaking and a NAACP Image Award. The second season premiered on January 30, 2011. TV Guide wrote, “Brick City plays like a verité version of The Wire, one of TV's finest series ever. It's the ultimate reality show.” Season two of Brick City was nominated for a News and Documentary Emmy in the category "Outstanding Informational Programming - Long Form" on July 12, 2012.
Levin’s (Street Time ), a television series produced by Columbia/Tristar for Showtime, received critical acclaim for its authenticity and verite style. Levin executive produced the series and directed 10 episodes. The show stars Rob Morrow, Scott Cohen, Erica Alexander and Terrence Howard. The Los Angeles Times called it "some of the most seductive television ever: vivid, distinctive, explosive storytelling . . .”
Levin’s documentary feature, (Godfathers and Sons ), was part of the highly regarded Martin Scorsese PBS series, The Blues. Scorsese recruited an international team of directors with both feature and documentary experience - Charles Burnett, Clint Eastwood, Mike Figgis, Richard Pierce and Wim Wenders. Variety called Levin’s show "the crown jewel in the Scorsese series."
In the late nineties Levin created a hip-hop trilogy beginning with SLAM, a searing prison drama, which starred Saul Williams, Sonja Sohn and Bonz Malone. Whiteboys, a black comedy about white kids who want to be black rappers, starred Danny Hoch, Dash Mihok, Mark Webber and Piper Perabo. Brooklyn Babylon, a fable inspired by the “Song of Songs,” starred Tariq Trotter, Bonz Malone, and featured music by the legendary Grammy winners The Roots.

In Twilight Los Angeles, an adaptation of Anna Deavere Smith's one-woman show, Levin fused a Broadway play with a documentary look at the LA riots. Twilight premiered at the Sundance 2000 Film Festival and was selected as the opening film of the International Human Rights Film Festival at Lincoln Center.
In 1992 Levin, along with Mark Benjamin, directed Oscar nominee Robert Downey, Jr. in The Last Party, a gonzo look at the Presidential campaign, weaving together the personal and the political fortunes of Downey and Bill Clinton.
Levin and his documentary film partner, Daphne Pinkerson, have produced 11 films for HBO's documentary film division, including Triangle: Remembering the Fire, Schmatta: Rags to Riches to Rags, Mob Stories, Prisoners of the War on Drugs, The Execution Machine: Texas Death Row, Soldiers in the Army of God, and Gladiator Days. Thug Life in D.C. won the 1999 National Emmy for Outstanding Non-Fiction Special. Gang War: Bangin' in Little Rock won the CableACE Award for Best Documentary Special of 1994. The sequel, Back in the Hood, premiered on HBO ten years later. They also produced Heir to an Execution, a documentary feature following Ivy Meeropol’s journey on the 50th anniversary of the execution of her grandparents, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. Heir was in competition at the Sundance film festival and aired on HBO.

In 1998, Levin was awarded the prestigious duPont-Columbia〔http://www.journalism.columbia.edu/page/412-past-dupont-award-winners/166〕 award for CIA: America's Secret Warriors, a three-part series that aired on the Discovery Channel. From the mid-seventies through the eighties he teamed up with one of America's most respected journalists, Bill Moyers. In 1988 Levin won a national Emmy award as a producer/editor of Moyers' The Secret Government - The Constitution in Crisis. He directed The Home Front with Bill Moyers, which was honored with the duPont-Columbia Gold Baton Award in 1992. Levin and his father, Al, teamed up on Portrait of an American Zealot which was made part of the Museum of Modern Art's permanent film collection.
Levin made his on-camera debut in Protocols of Zion, his street level look at the rise of anti-Semitism since 9/11 and the renewed popularity of the anti-Semitic text, The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, was released theatrically in the fall of 2005 and on HBO the spring of 2006.
Mr. Untouchable, the story of the original Black Godfather, Harlem heroin kingpin, Nicky Barnes, was released in theatres in 2007. It tells the true-life story of a real American Gangster from the point of view of law enforcement, associates, and Nicky Barnes, who appears for the first time in over a quarter century. "It makes American Gangster look like a fairy tale," declared E!
Marc Levin has also assumed the role of Executive Producer on a number of projects. In 2008 Levin was Executive Producer alongside Beyoncé Knowles on Cadillac Records, the Chess Records story starring Jeffrey Wright, Adrian Brody, and Beyoncé. In the same year he executive produced the indie feature documentary Captured, the story of artist activist Clayton Patterson, the man who videotaped the 1988 Tompkins Square Park Riot and who has dedicated his life to documenting the final era of raw creativity and lawlessness in New York City's Lower East Side, a neighborhood famed for art, music and revolutionary minds. Levin executive produced a follow-up feature in 2010, Dirty Old Town, an absurdist valentine to a disappearing downtown Bohemia, by his son Daniel B. Levin, Jenner Furst and Julia Nason.
Levin continued his twenty-year working relationship with HBO with a trilogy on labor and the economy: "Triangle: Remembering the Fire", "Schmatta: Rags to Riches to Rags", and "Hard Times: Lost on Long Island", a film about the white-collar fallout of the Great Recession, which will air on HBO in 2012. "Hard Times" won the Audience Award at the Hamptons International Film Festival in October. Levin's first film for HBO Sports, "Prayer for a Perfect Season", a film on the top high school basketball team in the country, premiered to widespread acclaim on HBO in October 2011. His next film, Hard Times: Lost on Long Island, about white-collar professionals hit by the Great Recession, won the Audience Award for Best Documentary Film at the Hamptons International Film Festival and premiered on HBO July 9, 2012.
Levin's most recent project with longtime collaborator, Marc Benjamin, chronicled the historic 2012 Presidential election. A partnership between Brick City TV, BET and Academy Award nominee Sam Pollard, "Second Coming? Will Black America Decide 2012?" aired on BET in October 2012.
Levin also periodically directed episodes of the classic TV series, Law and Order.

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