Noah Baumbach
NEW YORK, NY - APRIL 17: (EXCLUSIVE ACCESS, SPECIAL RATES APPLY) Noah Baumbach poses for a private photo shoot on the Highline on April 17, 2013 in New York City.
Quotes
Am I going to see Frances Ha? Ugh, no. I can't stand Noah Baumbach.
I don’t talk things out so much when I’m working alone, but with Greta, the talking becomes the work
I tend to start with things that are small ... I don’t really mean they’re small, because they have big reverberations.More quotes »
Newsday's coverage
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'Frances Ha' review: To be 29 again
film, and it comes from the combination of 29-year-old star Greta Gerwig and her director and co-writer, 43-year-old Noah Baumbach . (They're real-life partners who met while filming 2010's "Greenberg.") They've perfectly captured post-adolescent angst, but Read more »
Around the web
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'Frances Ha' o la explosión del amor sin sexo
Noah Baumbach (Brooklyn, 1969) coguionista de muchas películas -entre ellas La vida acuática , junto a Wes Anderson-, y director de siete largometrajes entre los que se encuentran Margot y la boda o Greenberg , acaba de presentar junto a su pareja Greta from The Huffington Post Read more »
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Foss Forward: Watching “Frances Ha”
The films of Noah Baumbach often find characters at unsettled moments in their lives. His brilliant debut, 1995’s “Kicking and Screaming,” focused on a group of directionless friends in the year following their college graduation. His 2010 film “Greenber from The Schenectady Daily Gazette Read more »
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Film : Happy-go-lucky Frances hunts for herself - Martha’s Vineyard Times
Martha’s Vineyard TimesFilm : Happy-go-lucky Frances hunts for herself Martha’s Vineyard Times The free-spirited subject of Noah Baumbach's latest movie, "Frances Ha," has happily settled halfway into adulthood when life starts throwing her curve balls. from Cape Cod Daily Read more »
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Greta Gerwig’s Moment
The film Frances Ha, written by Noah Baumbach and Greta Gerwig, is often gorgeous to watch and painful to behold at once. Shot in black-and-white, it softens the edges of New York in the way Woody Allen’s Manhattan tenderly captured the city, while its h from Brooklyn Based Read more »
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Frances Ha
The title of Noah Baumbach’s is an allusion to something at the very end of the film, a visual suggestion that part of the heroine has been amputated during the course of what we have seen during the previous 86 minutes — a part that has something to do from American Spectator Read more »