I think as long as the standard of quality, the story-telling, film-making, acting etc. etc. remains consistent, then you've got a good change of making a decent anthology.
There have been a lot of horror anthologies as of late; movies like VHS and The ABCs of Death have brought the anthology back in style. We sort of felt like, "Why don't we do one and do our own thing?"
I believe in anthologies, although I know they offer only a glimpse.
I'd like to do an anthology. Maybe a collection of songs set in my world, or based on my world. I think that would be a lot of fun.
I am also working on a couple of short stories for anthologies. This is new to me and Im enjoying it.
The Psalms, the anthology of the hymns of Israel, are still used by Christians.
I like the anthology concept. I wish more shows would do it.
An anthology of quotations is a museum of utterances.
The original Greek meaning of the word anthology is a collection or gathering of flowers in bloom.
My show is sort of a short-film anthology, and I'm able to tell little stories that don't necessarily carry a whole episode in terms of narrative. I like the audience not being sure what they're getting. I think it's more fun to watch something when you're discovering it as you go along.
Anthology shows as a whole scare people. The networks can't quite get their heads around it.
Excellent anthology. . . a celebration of our goodness and our potential for growth. The sense of celebration is stretched by the beautiful photographs.
We talked to a lot of filmmakers who had worked on other anthologies and we looked at every anthology, and we wanted to just find a different way [for Tales of Halloween]. And being that unity was what the whole spirit of the project was - unity and friendship and community.
The laureateship [of U. S. Children's Poet] has brought me a couple of appealing contracts, including my first anthology, the 200-poem The National Geographic Book of Animal Poetry. Apart from the increased travel, I won't let anything interfere with writing poetry.
I'm so personally attached to all the characters I met and photographed over the years. . . the anthology is like a photographic reliquary that could potentially preserve their grace, fierce joy, and restlessness.
We know story collections end when they end, as well - the pages serving as a countdown - but nevertheless the standard story anthology hews closer to what makes being human so hard: it reminds you with each story how quickly everything we are, everything we call our lives can change, can be upended, can disappear. Never to return.
You apply the skills you use to produce your own book to make an anthology. Shaping. Rhythm.
Their violence (the jungle wars of the '70s), and all violence for that matter, reflects the neutral exploration of sensation that is taking place, within sex as elsewhere and the sense that the perversions are valuable precisely because they provide a readily accessible anthology of exploratory techniques.
Now, to read poetry at all is to have an ideal anthology of one's own, and in that possession to be incapable of content with the anthologies of all the world besides.
I had the idea to do an anthology about instrument-making.