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'Love Me' Wins Science-in-Film Feature Film Prize at Sundance

The film by Sam and Andy Zuchero portrays a post-human Earth where two machine-learning 'life forms' search for a cure to loneliness.

  • 'Love Me', a film by Sam and Andy Zuchero, wins the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation's Science-in-Film feature film prize at Sundance, awarded to films that focus on science or technology or depict a scientist, engineer or mathematician as a major character.
  • The film portrays a post-human Earth where two machine-learning 'life forms' search for a cure to loneliness.
  • Emily Everhard, Sara Crow and Daniel Rafailedes, and Lizzi Oyebode also receive Sloan fellowships and grants for their respective projects 'Tektite', 'Satoshi', and 'Inverses'.
  • The American Film Institute announces the 2025 class for AFI DWW+, a directing program supporting women and underrepresented narrative filmmakers.
  • David J. Krystal, orchestrator for 'The Flash', 'IT', and other films, launches David Krystal Music Service, aiming to blend classic Hollywood scoring with modern blockbuster film scores.
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