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The Golden Boys, starring Bruce Dern, David Carradine, Rip Torn and Mariel Hemingway was investigated too.
FORBES: Oscar Glitter, Deal-making Backstory
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The show is the creation of Laura Dern and Mike White, who also star in it.
NEWYORKER: National Insecurity
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With Owen Wilson as a doomed bringer of punch lines and Bruce Dern as the mad gatekeeper.
NEWYORKER: Haunting, The
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The splendid supporting cast includes Ellen Barkin (as Calamity Jane), John Hurt, James Gammon, David Arquette, Diane Lane, and Bruce Dern.
NEWYORKER: Wild Bill
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Dern gives a virtuoso performance, albeit in an overwrought, numbing void.
NEWYORKER: Inland Empire
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Boeing spokesman John Dern said Mr. Keating's selection "was not decided by his party affiliation" but by his public-policy track record inside and outside of the aerospace industry.
WSJ: Lobbyists Put Democrats Out Front as Winds Shift
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With Jeff Goldblum, Laura Dern, Sam Neill, and Richard Attenborough.
NEWYORKER: Jurassic Park
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Chicago-based Boeing spokesman John Dern could not confirm whether the ID matched the American Airlines plane or the United Airlines plane hijacked by Islamic extremists on Sept. 11, 2001.
NPR: NY Officials Seek Human Remains Amid Plane Debris
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White poses his monomaniacs front and center with a lot of space around them and lets the actors (including Laura Dern and Peter Sarsgaard) speak their semi-satirical lines without interruption.
NEWYORKER: Year of the Dog
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Dern is also wonderful, but it's Cooper as the father who turns in the most remarkable job, playing a man who discovers that the only way to keep his son is to let him go.
CNN: Review: 'October Sky' best offering of a still-young year
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Laura Dern is brilliant as Ruth Stoops, a small-town paragon of irresponsibility, who, owing to glue sniffing, drinking, and general recklessness, has lost custody of her children and is homeless, under arrest, and under pressure from a liberal judge to terminate her pregnancy.
NEWYORKER: Citizen Ruth
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Apart from 12 Years a Slave, which was filmed in Louisiana, the movie Nebraska perhaps comes closest, but for very different reasons: its stark black-and-white shots of vast, windswept farmland are as important to the feel of the film as is its veteran star, Bruce Dern.
BBC: Does an Oscar really win tourism?