Bill Butler (born March 30, 1956) is a Scottish Labour Party politician and former teacher. He represents Glasgow Anniesland in the Scottish Parliament, and is a member of the Justice 2, Standards and Local Government & Transport Committees of the Parliament. March 30 is the 89th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (90th in Leap years). ... 1956 was a leap year starting on Sunday. ... The Labour Party is a a centre-left political party in the United Kingdom (see British politics), and one of the United Kingdoms three main political parties. ... The Scottish Parliament (Pàrlamaid na h-Alba in Gaelic, Scots Pairlament in Scots) is the national legislature of Scotland. ...
A graduate of Stirling University and Notre Dame College of Education, he taught at a number of schools in Renfrew District and in Rutherglen from 1980 to 2000. Looking out over Airthrey Loch on the main campus of The University of Stirling The University of Stirling is a campus university created in 1967 and is based in a custom-built campus situated on a greenfield site in the outskirts of Stirling, Scotland. ...
External link
Official biography (http://www.scottish.parliament.uk/msp/membersPages/bill_butler/index.htm)
Butler explains that the film is a character-driven story that mainly revolves around the interactions between the Meiks family and Doyle.
Butler panned off a profile onto a rain-streaked, dark window and the scene dissolved to images that complimented the memories Meiks was relating to Doyle.
Butler says his relationship with the dailies timer was essential, because he was shooting so much on the edge of darkness.
Butler is proud of the fact that he has never made a film that embarrassed him.
Butler was born in Colorado, where he spent the earliest years of his life living in a log cabin built by his father.
Butler also designed an underwater box and several special rafts that enabled Spielberg to heighten the visual tension and sense of reality by putting the camera on the surface of the ocean.