Fiction
Elegance Bratton to helm Hellfighters documentary
MUMBAI: Five Fifty Five and Rainshine Entertainment announced the production of a new feature documentary Hellfighters, to be directed by marine corps veteran, and Sundance and Tribeca Film Festival alum, Elegance Bratton.
The film profiles African American Jazz pioneer and music mogul, James Reese Europe, who was a lieutenant in the 369th Infantry Regiment known as the Harlem Hellfighters, the African American military unit to fight on behalf of the United States during World War I.
“As a veteran and artist like James Reese Europe, I immediately knew I wanted to tell his story,” said Bratton. “WWI was driven by Europe’s desire for control of Africa – there is a cruel irony in that the Hellfighters believed the only way to gain full meaning of U.S. citizenship was to sacrifice their lives for an America consumed with their own degradation. I am grateful to Five Fifty Five and Rainshine for creating a platform for this project."
Bratton began making films as a U.S. Marine after spending a decade homeless. He previously directed the documentary Pier Kids: The Life and the short film Walk for Me. His short film Buck premiered at this year’s Sundance Film Festival.
Hellfighters reunites the descendants of James Reese Europe and Noble Sissle (Shuffle Along) to explore their legacies, and features interviews with former secretary of State and four-star general Colin Powell, music director of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert and musician Jon Batiste, Grammy award winning rapper Black Thought of The Roots, Grammy Award-winning jazz musician Wynton Marsalis, Zora Neale Hurston Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University Robert O Meally, and many more.
Chester Algernal Gordon will produce the film alongside Kate Baxter, founder & CEO at Five Fifty Five. Rainshine’s Neeraj Bhargava and acclaimed film producer Sunil Doshi will executive produce the documentary film.
James Reese Europe was born in 1888 to Henry Europe, a formerly enslaved man and employee of the Internal Revenue Service, and Loraine Europe, a teacher. At a time where there was no clear path to prosperity for Black Americans, he would become the most prolific composer of the ragtime era, igniting the Harlem Renaissance and inventing Afro-Latin Jazz, as well as founding the first Black musicians union. At the peak of his music career, he enlisted in the U.S. military during World War I. With him, he brought jazz and Black culture to France and the global stage.
“The film packs a punch of perspective considering our director’s uncanny interrelatedness to the story. Elegance is a saxophone-playing, Harlem-residing, ex-military, French-speaking student of African American Studies," said producer, Kate Baxter (Five Fifty Five), who after pursuing the story as her next project, found the perfect collaborators in Elegance and co-producer Chester Algernal.
“It’s not very often you get to tell stories about people whose shoulders you stand on. Without the Hellfighters’ sacrifice 100 years ago, we wouldn't be able to make this film," said producer Chester Algernal.
Rainshine Entertainment, chairman & CEO, Neeraj Bhargava said, “Five Fifty Five and Rainshine Entertainment recently announced a joint venture to provide a platform for communities globally to tell their own unique stories. Hellfighters, our first production together, is a story that is highly relevant in the current times and a testimony to our vision of bringing meaningful and extraordinary stories to audiences worldwide.”
Fiction
GUEST COLUMN: How content leaders decide what gets greenlit
MUMBAI: As audiences spread across TV, OTT, and short-form platforms, deciding what gets greenlit has become more strategic than ever. Content leaders now weigh clarity of concept, platform fit, pacing, and distinctiveness to ensure a story connects with the right audience in the right format.
In this piece, Dhruv R Jain content head TV at Rose Audio Visuals, explains how greenlighting decisions are shaped by concept strength, platform behaviour, and the need for unique storytelling. Drawing from his experience at Rose Audio Visuals, he outlines how these factors influence which ideas move from pitch to production.
In recent times the Indian entertainment landscape has changed in many ways leading us to also modify our process in deciding what should be greenlit in terms of content. As the options for audiences to view content change from the traditional TV space to OTT and even social media the stories that are told on different platforms also differ. Multiple factors play a part in deciding not just the story told but also the way they will be told.
Firstly the primary filter in the process is the clarity of concept. Whenever content leaders approach a story they tend to simplify it in terms of it being written and told through the screen. The crew involved in making the story should have an inside out idea of all the factors of the story for it to resonate and be understood by the audiences. We dissect the story into the smallest components to spread it through the writing and format the story in a way that would build intrigue giving it hooks, drops points and defined execution. A concept that is executed properly with details will be understood and appreciated by the audience irrespective of its genre.
The content that is being chosen to be greenlit also highly depends on the platform it is being made for. Different mediums like TV channels, Ott platforms and short format apps etc have different sections of audiences that look for a specific kind of story to watch depending on multiple factors again. So while choosing a story for them one needs to study their audience, the structure that works for the platform, the pacing in which the story will be understood and the kinds of story that would fit the platform. While TV is a medium which is highly expository in its telling with slower pacing, on the other hand Ott platforms give us a space to tell a story with the approach of less is more with faster pacing of the story itself. This becomes an important factor in choosing stories and their way of telling.
Another factor that plays an important role is the distinctiveness of a concept. A concept with a unique approach, set up and characters bring freshness. At Rose we have always attempted to tell stories that stand out with our most recent Itti Si Khushi by setting up the show in a unique location like Kotachiwadi, a historic unique set up in the south of Mumbai that has not been shown on TV before we gave the already iconic Shameless an interesting Indian twist. At the same time the show in itself follows an unique storyline that brought something different to the medium of TV. So telling a different and unique story that stands out always brings in curious audiences which we sustain then with strong characters, hooks and plot points.
In addition to these factors many others become prominent in deciding what gets greenlit. It is on the content leaders to find the right time and space for the concept that they believe will be received well by the audiences. One needs to be a multitasker to understand, organise and execute a project properly.
Note: The views expressed in this article are solely the author’s and do not necessarily reflect our own.
Fiction
Series Mania Forum names Korea as first country of honour for 2026
PARIS & LILLE, FRANCE: Series Mania Forum has named the Republic of Korea as its first-ever Country of Honour, marking a major milestone for the European television industry gathering set to run alongside the Series Mania Festival in Lille in March 2026.
The announcement was made by Laurence Herszberg, founder and general director of Series Mania, underscoring Korea’s rising influence in global content creation and distribution.
As part of the initiative, the Korea Creative Content Agency (KOCCA) will bring a delegation of eight leading companies to the forum, including Channel A Corporation, CJ ENM, EO Content Group, KBS Media, MBC, SLL Joongang, Studio S and Whynot Media. The programme will feature dedicated sessions spotlighting upcoming Korean projects, high-level conference panels, networking events and industry showcases.
The move is backed by France’s CNC following a memorandum of understanding signed with Kocca at Series Mania 2024, aimed at strengthening co-production, investment and cultural exchange between the two countries.
The honour coincides with the 140th anniversary of diplomatic relations between France and Korea and follows last year’s Broadcast Worldwide event in Seoul, which highlighted France as its guest country.
Korea’s content market was valued at $43.169 billion in 2024, up 5.7 per cent from the previous year, ranking eighth globally. Demand for Korean series in France has surged, with Netflix reporting viewing time up more than 200 per cent year on year.
Herszberg said the initiative reflects Korea’s recognised excellence in film and television, while Kocca France general director Moonju Kim, said the partnership would deepen cooperation across production and investment.
Fiction
Here’s how much Disney is paying its new CEO
CALIFORNIA: Disney has finally named its next ruler and slapped a glossy price tag on the throne.
Josh D’Amaro, heir to Bob Iger, steps into the chief executive role on a base salary of $2.5m, before the real money kicks in. His annual bonus target is set at a punchy 250 per cent of salary, with long-term stock awards worth $26.2m a year. Add a one-off incentive grant of $9.7m to mark the promotion and D’Amaro’s opening package lands at about $38m.
Dana Walden, the other front-runner, does not leave empty-handed. Elevated to president and chief creative officer under a contract running to March 2030, she will earn a $3.75m base salary, with a performance bonus targeted at 200 per cent. Annual stock awards are valued at $15.75m, topped by a one-time incentive of $5.26m. All told, her first-year take comes to roughly $24m.
The board’s decision ends a two-year succession drama that has hovered over Disney’s share price and morale. D’Amaro, previously in charge of parks and consumer products, gets the top job. Walden, until now co-chair of Disney Entertainment, is handed a newly minted creative super-role, reporting directly to him.
Both appointments take effect on March 18, at Disney’s annual meeting. Iger slides into the background as senior adviser and board member, before bowing out for good in December.
The message from Burbank is unmistakable. Continuity, creativity and a very expensive handover. In the House of Mouse, the magic still pays.
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