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Sideways is a 2004 American comedy-drama road film directed by Alexander Payne and written by Jim Taylor and Payne. A film adaptation of Rex Pickett's 2004 novel, Sideways follows two men in their forties, Miles Raymond (Paul Giamatti), a depressed teacher and unsuccessful writer, and Jack Cole (Thomas Haden Church), a past-his-prime actor, who take a week-long road trip to Santa Barbara ...
The effect of "Sideways" on the wine region in which it was set and shot is profound, with visitors flocking to California’s Santa Ynez Valley to experience “Sideways”-themed wine tours ...
Sideways appeared in the background of a group shot in Dan Jurgens' story in Action Comics #1000. Writer Grant Morrison co-wrote the series' first and only annual with Didio. [ 8 ] The annual was released in November 2018.
Sideways is a 2004 novel by Rex Pickett. [1] The novel is the first in the Sideways Series. Plot. The novel is the story of two friends, Miles and Jack, who take a ...
The series spans approximately eight years in the life of its main protagonist, a writer named Miles. At the beginning of Sideways, Miles is a mostly unsuccessful screenwriter and functioning alcoholic who is taking his best friend Jack, a successful TV director, on a trip to California's wine country the week before the latter's wedding.
Sideways, a Japanese remake of the 2004 film; Sideways Trilogy, three wine-related novels by Rex Pickett Sideways, the 2004 first novel in the trilogy; basis for the films; Sideways (comics), a DC Comics character; Sideways, a Transformers: Armada character
Wayside School is a series of short story cycle children's books written by Louis Sachar.Titles in the series include Sideways Stories from Wayside School (1978), Wayside School Is Falling Down (1989), Wayside School Gets a Little Stranger (1995), and Wayside School Beneath the Cloud of Doom (2020). [1]
Sideways" is a song written by American artist Clarence Greenwood, who is known by the pseudonym Citizen Cope. Although the song has never charted, [1] it has been widely featured in pop culture. The song was included on Santana's 2002 album Shaman. Citizen Cope then included it in his 2004 album, The Clarence Greenwood Recordings.