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johnwaynebosley's profile image

johnwaynebosley

Joined Dec 2008
Born on an Air Force Base in North Dakota, John Wayne Bosley was named after the legendary actor John Wayne. He began writing screenplays at the age of twelve and was involved in drama and theater throughout school and college. In 2008, he completed his first feature film, "The Allan Carter Saga: Amnesia" (which he affectionately calls his “student film�), and toured the state of Maine with it. His second feature, "The House That Jack Broke", toured Michigan in various theaters and sold out when shown in the Detroit area.
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As a filmmaker, John wore all hats on his first two productions: including writing, directing, producing, editing, color correction, sound, effects, music scoring, DVD creation, and even acting. He learned how to cut costs while still being able to keep his artistic flair and create an entertaining cinematic story. John started filming commercials and events in 2013 and then began working as a contractual television editor from 2014 to 2017 at Rusted Rooster Media. (Rusted Rooster's TV shows are varied, airing on Animal Planet, Outdoor TV, Sportsman Channel, and Discovery.) While working for Rusted Rooster Media, he spearheaded J.B. Movies' first family-friendly feature, "The Heart of a Dancer", which has recently gained distribution. Currently, J.B. Movies is in the pre-production stage of it's female-driven, faith-based, survival film, "In the Valley of the Shadow".
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John resides in Michigan along with his wife and four kids.
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johnwaynebosley's rating
The Sensation of Sight

The Sensation of Sight

6.3
9
  • Nov 29, 2009
  • Memoriable

    American cinema doesn't have a history of taking risks. Instead it likes to put movies out into the public like cars on an assembly line. Same car, same make. They just change up the details. What the writer/director does in TSOS is to take risks and take on some difficult issues. Instead of having the actors explain everything as we're going along, he takes the risk of allowing the film to develop on its own.

    If you go to watch a film made from Hollywood you might get that "wow" effect... but what about the second, third, fourth time? Do you get more out of each time? Or do you just find the same? With TSOS it's more like a play or novel. There are enough layers that you don't completely understand the story in its full extent until you watch it over and over again. It's like strong medicine and some of the weaker critics who only like "fluff films" and "cheap entertainment experiences" won't appreciate what this film has to offer.

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