jiro dreams of sushi trailer vimeo

A Film About Coffee, the highly anticipated feature-length film on specialty coffee from seed to cup, is debuting this Saturday, April 26, in conjunction with the Specialty Coffee Association of America Event in Seattle. (more: Must-See Video: The Transparent Portafilter in Slo-Mo) Directed by Alabama native and and current San Francisco-based videographer Brandon Loper, the film moves from farms in Rwanda and Honduras to some of the best roasteries and cafes in Portland, New York and Tokyo. In total, Loper and the crew sifted through 34 interviews at 25 locations. And all of it is totally beautiful. (more: Seven of the Best Coffee Shops in Tokyo Right Now (Plus Hype Video)) In a recent interview with Loper, FastCompany has some insight into the filming process: The focus might oscillate between various technicalities of the craft (steeped vs. pour-over, burr-grind vs. roller, etc.), but the photography is consistently gorgeous. Loper, who’s represented by San Francisco production houseAvocados and Coconuts, had recourse to the company’s RED Epic camera.

It’s similar to the one used for Jiro Dreams of Sushi, another edible doc rich with luscious cinematography. Loper’s lens, too, takes the time to linger on its subjects, hovering patiently above a barista streaking the top of a cappuccino or poised at the edge of a table waiting for a customer to take his first sip. The film will debut at 7 p.m. at the AMC Pacific Place 11 at 600 Pine St., where it will be shown with 4k digital projection with Dolby 5.1 sound. Guests will be treated to one of the coffees profiled in the film, a Rwanda Huye Mountain sourced and Roasted by Stumptown Coffee Roasters. Here is the ticket information. (more: Short Film Beautifully Explores Stumptown’s Inner Workings) The film will be followed by a Q&A with several specialty coffee professionals who appeared as subjects. You might just have to go after seeing this trailer: A Film About Coffee // Theatrical Trailer from Avocados and Coconuts on Vimeo. Nick Brown is the editor of Daily Coffee News by Roast Magazine.

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sushi roll machine kopen By placing your order, you agree to our Terms of Use. Sold by Amazon Digital Services LLC. Additional taxes may apply. 5 star53%4 star11%3 star6%2 star8%1 star22%See all verified purchase reviewsTop Customer ReviewsI give all my thanks to Noma for sparking the ...|Very Interesting Look at What It Takes|A fantastic documentary that all chefs should see|Good doc. Should have focused more on the food ...|Great drama for a Food Documentary...|Most Recent Customer ReviewsSearch Customer ReviewsHave you seen any good documentaries lately? I’d love to share five great ones…Life Itself remembers beloved film critic and social commentator Roger Ebert. Known for his wit and candor (in his review of The Human Centipede, he refused to award it any stars at all, saying, “The star rating system is unsuited to this film.

Is the movie good? It is what it is and occupies a world where the stars don’t shine”), Ebert was the first film critic to win a Pulitzer, wrote over a dozen books and was regarded as one of the most powerful critics of all time. Ebert was diagnosed with cancer in 2002, which cost him the lower portion of his jaw. But even when he could no longer speak or eat, he wrote every day, right up until his death in 2013. We haven’t actually seen this documentary yet—it opens on July 4th—but early buzz has been fantastic. Finding Vivian Maier tells the story of a mysterious nanny who secretly took more than 100,000 photos of people on the streets of New York and hid them in storage lockers. Although she was one of 20th century’s greatest photographers, her work wasn’t discovered until a 26-year-old real-estate agent bought a box of old negatives at an estate auction in 2007. In this captivating film, her story is finally brought to light. The Queen of Versailles tells the extreme riches-to-rags tale of billionaires Jackie and David Siegel, owners of Westgate Resorts.

The film opens with the couple building the largest single-family house in America—a 90,000 square foot palace with 9 kitchens, 13 bedrooms and 25 bathrooms, plus a bowling alley and movie theatre. But over the next two years, they stop construction and put the property up for sale, as their company falters after the economic crisis. The Economist calls the film “an uncomfortably intimate glimpse of a couple’s struggle…What could have been merely a silly send-up manages to be a meditation on marriage and a metaphor for the fragility of fortunes, big and small.” Alex convinced me to watch When You’re Strange on vacation a couple years ago—and as soon as the movie started, I was hooked. Jim Morrison, the lead singer of the Doors, died mysteriously in 1971 at the age of 27—and ever since then, countless books and films have made him out to be a supernatural force: a modern day shaman, a genius poet, maybe even immortal. But that’s why we loved this documentary: It digs beneath the myths to look at the real person.