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"Horses. Gallop; thoroughbred bay mare (Annie G) with male rider, 1872-1875" by Eadweard Muybridge. A motion picture version of the photogaphs can be seen in the trailer to "Nope." ...
Is the rider in the 19th-century photographic experiments really unknown, as Jordan Peele’s film implies? It’s complicated. By Ben Kenigsberg Near the beginning of “Nope,” Emerald (Keke ...
The story behind The Horse in Motion—the so-called “first motion picture”—has almost as many twists and turns as Nope, Jordan Peele’s latest horror romp that references the series of ...
Most of “Nope” takes place on a horse ranch northeast of Santa Clarita, California, where the skies — contrary to the old cowboy song “Home on the Range” — are cloudy all day.
When equestrian Randy Savvy saw “Nope,” he was impressed with Daniel Kaluuya’s ease around horses. Savvy knew it was a sign of the actor’s process coming to fruition: To prepare for his ...
In “Nope,” Horse wrangler O.J. (Daniel Kaluuya) suspects that the strange vessel he saw darting in the sky may be connected to the strange behavior of his horses, as well as the sudden death ...
Muybridge was commissioned to study the movement of a galloping horse; the name of the Black jockey he photographed riding one of those horses went unrecorded. In “Nope,” Peele creates a ...
Jordan Peele's Nope is finally here and, as you can imagine, the UFO story has an ending that deserves more detailed explanation. ... The horses are spooked. He spots a large, ...
The best, eeriest parts of director Jordan’s Peele’s third feature, “Nope,” are as good as anything in “Get Out” or “Us,” and they’re very different from either of those earlier ...
The best, eeriest parts of director Jordan’s Peele’s third feature, “Nope,” are as good as anything in “Get Out” or “Us,” and they’re very different from either of those earlier ...