After wrapping his first feature, helmer returns to ad arena
Director Tim Godsall, formerly of Biscuit Filmworks LA, has joined Anonymous Content for commercial representation in the U.S., U.K. and Europe. The signing grew out of a relationship that developed while Anonymous produced Godsall’s upcoming feature film debut, Len and Company.
In the spring of this year, Godsall began production on the feature, Len and Company, starring Rhys Ifans, Juno Temple and Jack Kilmer. The film centers on Len Black (Ifans), a successful but miserable music producer who flees to his house in upstate New York to start a period of self-imposed exile, only to have his solitude shattered by his estranged son (Kilmer) and the pop sensation (Temple) he has created.
About the experience of making a first film and landing at a new roost for commercial production, Godsall said, “Getting this movie made would have been almost impossible without the help of Steve Golin and the Anonymous team. Making a little independent feature is such a precarious and intense experience, but during the process of making it my respect for Steve and Anonymous kept growing. When the time came to get back into commercials, it made sense to do it with those guys. They’ve got great directors and very smart people running the place. Now I’m just excited to wade into a really good commercial project.”
Executive producer Steve Golin echoed the sentiment, saying, “We’ve long admired Tim’s work and wanted to be in business with him for quite a while. The filmmaking process went so well that we decided to join forces and work together.”
Godsall is an internationally acclaimed commercial director known for his offbeat brand of dialogue and performance-driven comedy. He has done high-profile work for brands like Axe, Old Spice, Southern Comfort, ESPN, FedEx and XBOX. An expert of visual storytelling, Godsall is the recipient of over two-dozen Cannes Lions, various Clios, Andys, BTAAs, as well as a DGA nomination, leading him to be named the most awarded commercial director in the world by the 2013 Gunn Report. Godsall's DGA nomination was for directorial achievement in 2010, earned on the basis of three entries: DirecTV's "Opulence" out of Grey New York, Hyundai's "Bull" from Innocean Worldwide Americas, and HBO's "Eastbound & Mom" for BBDO New York.
Godsall’s own transition from advertising to features, with the support of Anonymous, exemplifies the company’s ability to offer directorial talent opportunities to expand into various formats. The cross-genre network at Anonymous allows their directors to explore working in the commercial, feature, and television divisions, all under the same roof.
Len and Company adds to the list of longer-format projects in the works at Anonymous, including producing the much-anticipated next iteration of HBO’s drama True Detective. Anonymous produced and Cary Fukanaga directed all eight episodes of its freshman season, which earned Fukunaga the Emmy for Outstanding Directing. Anonymous also produced Steven Soderbergh’s new TV series, The Knick, the dark 1900s-era drama starring Clive Owen, which has helped to revitalize the Cinemax network brand.
In the features sphere, currently in pre-production is director Alejandro G Iñárritu’s latest film, The Revenant, about a fur trapper, who in the 1820s set out on a path of vengeance against those who left him for dead after a bear mauling. The film stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Tom Hardy, and begins shooting this fall. Also in pre-production is director Tom McCarthy’s Spotlight. The film is based on the true story of how The Boston Globe uncovered the massive scandal of child molestation within the local Catholic Archdiocese, and features an all-star cast that includes Mark Ruffalo, Michael Keaton, Stanely Tucci, Rachel McAdams, Billy Crudup, Liev Schreiber, John Slattery and Brian d’Arcy James.
DOC NYC Unveils Main Slate Lineup: 31 World Premieres; 24 Films Making Their U.S. Debut
DOC NYC--the documentary festival celebrating its 15th anniversary in-person November 13-21 at IFC Center, SVA Theatre and Village East by Angelika, and continuing online through December 1--has unveiled its main slate lineup. The 2024 festival presents more than 110 feature-length documentaries (including yet-to-be-announced Short List and Winner’s Circle titles) among over 200 films and dozens of events, with filmmakers expected in person at most screenings.
Opening the festival on Nov. 13 at SVA Theater will be the U.S. premiere of Sinead O’Shea’s inspiring portrait Blue Road--The Edna O’Brien Story, a breakout hit from the recent Toronto International Film Festival that honors the legendary Irish writer, who passed away just a few months ago at the age of 93.
Closing the festival on Nov. 21, also at SVA Theatre, will be the world premiere of Peter Yost and Michael Rohatyn’s Drop Dead City--New York on the Brink in 1975, a look back at the circumstances and players involved in NYC’s mid-70s financial crisis. The festival’s Centerpiece screening on Nov. 14 at Village East is the World premiere of Ondi Timoner’s All God’s Children (also part of the festival’s U.S. Competition), a chronicle of a Brooklyn rabbi and Baptist pastor who join forces to create greater unity between their two communities, against all odds.
Included are 31 world premieres and 24 U.S. premieres, with eight of those presented in the U.S. Competition, for new American-produced nonfiction films, and another eight featured in International Competition, for work from around the globe. The Kaleidoscope Competition for new essayistic and formally adventurous documentaries continues, while the festival’s long-standing Metropolis... Read More