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  1. ER had pioneered long, continuous Steadicam shots, but those took a reprieve -- for the most part -- in the tunnel sequences as Chulack found a way to make them simultaneously epic and...

  2. ER had pioneered long, continuous Steadicam shots, but those took a reprieve -- for the most part -- in the tunnel sequences as Chulack found a way to make them simultaneously epic and...

  3. To mark the 20th anniversary of "Love's Labor Lost," TVGuide.com chatted with Edwards, producers John Wells and Christopher Chulack, director Mimi Leder, writer Dr. Lance Gentile, and guest stars...

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    "Hell and High Water" is the seventh episode of the second season of ER. It was written by Neal Baer and directed by Christopher Chulack. It first aired on NBC on November 9, 1995. The episode was the highest-rated episode in the second season of the show and was the most watched episode in the entire series (a total of 48 million viewers). It feat...

    After being removed from his fellowship in County General, Doug accepted a job in the private practice. After leaving the hospital, he gets a flat tire when suddenly, a frantic boy comes to him for help, saying that his brother is trapped in the flooded culvert. Doug becomes a media sensation as they are filming his rescue operation on the boy.

    Doug accepts an offer to work in a private pediatric practice. After his last ER shift he's on his way to a fund raiser when he gets a flat tire. In the pouring rain a boy comes up to his car because his brother is stuck in a flooded culvert. Doug doesn't hesitate and does everything he possibly can to save the kid. A news TV helicopter films part ...

    •George Clooney as Doug Ross

    •Anthony Edwards as Mark Greene

    •Julianna Margulies as Carol Hathaway

    •Noah Wyle as John Carter

    •Eriq La Salle as Peter Benton

    •Gloria Reuben as Jeanie Boulet

    •Sherry Stringfield (who portrayed Susan Lewis) was absent of this episode, making it the first time that one of the credited main cast member isn't present.

    •The episode received 5 Emmy nominations for "Writing" (Neal Baer), "Directing" (Christopher Chulack) "Cinematography" (Richard Thorpe), "Editing for a Single Camera Production" (Jacque Elaine Toberen) and "Sound Mixing."

  4. Mar 19, 2009 · At the time the early 1990s “ER” was labeled a “trunk job,” a script that had languished in some forgotten slush pile for years. And indeed it had, somewhere in the dark reaches of Steven...

  5. Christopher Chulack is an American motion picture producer and director. He worked in both capacities across all fifteen seasons of ER. He joined the crew as a Producer for the first season and rose to the senior position of Executive Producer. He has worked extensively with ER Executive...

  6. ER or Emergency Room is an American medical drama television series created by Michael Crichton that aired on NBC from September 19, 1994, to April 2, 2009, with a total of 331 episodes spanning 15 seasons.

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