Six years ago at the Toronto International Film Festival, the street outside the Ryerson Theatre was swarmed with people desperate to get into the world premiere of I Love You, Daddy, the new film by ...
The film, co-directed by Caroline Suh and Cara Mones, is based on the investigation into the comedian published by The New York Times, with the Times also producing together with Left/Right. By Scott ...
If there’s no easy answer to that, “Sorry/Not Sorry” takes issue with both the supposition that nobody was really victimized by Louis C.K.’s actions and the mentality of first looking the other way ...
Sorry/Not Sorry examines the cultural fixation with Louis C.K. and his comeback while revealing the backlash faced by the women who spoke up about his behavior. This is not just a story about how this ...
“Sorry/Not Sorry” co-director Caroline Suh entered her examination of Louis C.K. as a fan. When the documentary filmmaker first read the 2017 New York Times story detailing his years-long pattern of ...
"Sorry/Not Sorry" producer Kathleen Lingo expressed disappointment that famous women who once criticized C.K.'s behavior didn't want to participate in the film. Numerous stars, including famous women ...
Amid a Toronto Film Festival light on sales, Greenwich Entertainment has nabbed domestic distribution for a documentary on Louis C.K., TheWrap has learned. The film ...
TORONTO — As filmmakers Caroline Suh and Cara Mones began interrogating the sexual misconduct scandal that halted — at least, briefly — the career of comedian Louis C.K. at the height of the #MeToo ...
The thing about “open secrets” is: Everyone knows what the secret is, but no one wants to acknowledge or talk about it. Not really, at least — if somebody’s peers and colleagues are all privy to some ...