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On the contrary, I only make note of the laziest presumptions that people might create for Stewart’s debut because of the visceral fearlessness with which she defies them. There isn’t a single ...
The hope paid off. “The Chronology of Water” isn’t some pretty good, prosaic, actor-directs-actors-how-to-read-the-script thing. It’s far more artful and captivating than that.
Kristen Stewart’s directorial debut, “The Chronology of Water,” is an awards-worthy audacious, poetic memoir adaptation with standout turns from Jim Belushi and Thora Birch.
Her directorial debut, “The Chronology of Water,” has earned good notices, but after fighting to get it made, the filmmaker wouldn’t mind a battle with reviewers.
Kristen Stewart’s feature directorial debut The Chronology Of Water was greeted by a 6 1/2-minute ovation by an enthusiastic audience in Cannes.
With The Chronology of Water, director Kristen Stewart infuses what could be a conventionally sequential biopic into splinters, shards and ripples.
It all started in March 2011 with the publication of her first book, a memoir titled “The Chronology of Water.” Among lovers of the memoir genre, poetry and experimental writing, it became a ...
Kristen Stewart's directorial debut "The Chronology of Water" premiered at Cannes Film Festival to a four-minute standing ovation on Friday night - and left many in the crowd wiping their eyes.
Premiering Friday at the Cannes Film Festival, “The Chronology of Water” stars a never-better Imogen Poots as Lidia, a woman who turns to swimming and later writing as salvation from a ...
Based on the 2011 memoir by American college swimmer Lidia Yuknavitch, Kristen Stewart’s The Chronology of Water rebukes the “vanity project” label often foisted on first time actors-turned ...
‘The Chronology of Water’ Review: Kristen Stewart Makes a Boldly Assured Directing Debut, Starring a Transformative Imogen Poots. Adapted from Lidia Yuknavitch’s memoir about surviving ...
“I bled, I peed, I cried, and vomited.” This sentence comes at the end of the second paragraph of The Chronology of Water, Lidia Yuknavitch’s extraordinary, extraordinarily raw 2011 memoir ...