![]() In an interview with this news organization, Sestoro explained why he likes to make “best-worse” kinds of movies. But Sestero also acknowledges that he’s not trying to go the prestige indie route with “Miracle Valley.” For one thing, “Miracle Valley” is a horror film, and the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences usually doesn’t reward horror. ![]() Sestero’s new project isn’t likely to return him to the proximity of Oscars conversations. The film becomes available for free Friday on the Tubi streaming service and is expected to screen in theaters around Halloween. Sestero now makes his debut as director with the equally audacious “Miracle Valley,” which he also wrote and stars in. Sestero gained more cinephile cred when “The Disaster Artist,” his 2013 New York Times best-selling book about the making of “The Room” - “the greatest bad movie ever made” - was transformed into a critically acclaimed 2017 film by the same name.Īudiences were charmed by the story Sestero told about his unlikely friendship with Tommy Wiseau, “The Room’s” eccentric writer-director-star, and the joys of being creatively audacious. The Alamo-reared actor, writer and first-time director became a figure in Hollywood lore for starring in “The Room,” the famously 2003 so-bad-it’s-good cult classic. He’s talking about movies that boast outrageous story lines, insane characters and such a miraculous embrace of schlock, exploitation and humor that they are truly fun to watch. ![]() Greg Sestero can’t get away from making bad movies, he’s actually proud to say. ![]()
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