Scott Cooper, Bruce Springsteen and Deliver Me
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Deliver Me From Nowhere is a somber, deeply human biographical musical drama that refuses to play by the usual rhythms of the rock
Director Scott Cooper worked extensively with The Boss on 'Deliver Me From Nowhere.' Step one? Don't tell the 'Born In the U.S.A.' tale.
Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere' director Scott Cooper tells PEOPLE how Bruce Springsteen himself moved Cooper's family into his Los Angeles home after the Coopers "lost everything" in January's wildfires — and sent his daughter one of his own guitars to replace the one she lost in the blaze.
Author and music historian Warren Zanes, who served as an executive producer on the newly released Bruce Springsteen biopic, revealed that the “Born to Run” singer led director Scott Cooper and a small crew on an expedition up and down the Jersey Shore before filming was officially underway.
Deliver Me From Nowhere tries to tell the story behind the Boss’s most daring album while itself playing it safe.
Deliver Me from Nowhere and recalls the moment he first heard Jeremy Allen White sound like Bruce Springsteen while in the recording studio. Plus, he talks about the “gift” it was to have Bruce on set.
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Who Is ‘Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere’ Actually for?
Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere' focuses on a tough period in The Boss' life and career. Why does the marketing make it look like a fun hang?
When Aaron Sorkin, Steven Soderbergh, Scott Cooper and Denis Villeneuve are looking to cast their films, they turn to casting director Francine Maisler. This year alone, Maisler has worked on “Sinners,
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