Category: International

  • Swedish film wins top feature award at Durban International Filmfest

    Swedish film wins top feature award at Durban International Filmfest

    NEW DELHI: ‘The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared’ by Swedish director Felix Herngren won the Audience award for features at the Durban International Film Festival (DIFF).

     

    Based on the internationally best-selling novel by Jonas Jonasson, this energetically black comedy begins with irrepressible pensioner and dynamite expert Allan Karlsson’s escape from a retirement home. His subsequent cross-county shenanigans are interspersed with flashbacks to a past studded with extraordinary events and famous historical figures. The film received nearly unanimous votes of excellent from the DIFF audience.

     

    While ‘The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared’ won the best feature, the DIFF 2014 audience award for best documentary went to ‘1994: The Bloody Miracle’ directed by Meg Rickards and Bert Haisma.

     

    As South Africa celebrates the 20th anniversary of the advent of democracy, ‘1994: The Bloody Miracle’, chronicles the many deaths and widespread chaos in South Africa during the early ‘90s when the country made its transition into democracy.

     

    More than 700 industry guests from around the world attended DIFF and its sister event the Durban FilmMart (DFM). The festival had 202 films spread over nine venues and more than 350 screenings. With just over 30,300 seats occupied, including workshop and attendance at DFM, attendance at the festival increased slightly, with the number of sold-out venues increasing dramatically.

     

    More than 2800 people attended the beach screenings, including the annual Wavescape opening event as well the additional four outdoor screenings funded by the British Council and the National Film and Video Foundation. As a visual literacy programme, the festival once again presented a programme of youth-oriented films for more than 4000 students from schools in the region.

     

    The Durban International Film Festival took place from 17-27 July in Kwazulu Natal.

  • Nimrat Kaur to be seen in popular American TV series ‘Homeland’

    Nimrat Kaur to be seen in popular American TV series ‘Homeland’

    NEW DELHI: Nimrat Kaur, who was noticed for her quiet but powerful role in the internationally acclaimed film ‘The Lunchbox’ last year, has been chosen to act in American TV series ‘Homeland’.

     

    “Pretty fun for someone who watched the pilot after the screen test! Season 4 HOMELAND it is,” tweeted Kaur.

     

    ‘Mad Men’ star Mark Moses and Art Malik will also appear in the series. Moses and Kaur have joined the series for several episodes.

     

    Malik will appear in at least one episode, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

     

    Kaur will be seen as a high-level operative within Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence, while Moses’ character Dennis is described as an academic teaching political science at Islamabad’s Quaid-I-Azam University.

     

    Malik, best known for playing the villain in 1994 action-thriller ‘True Lies’, is playing an old friend of Saul’s retired Pakistani general Bunran ‘Bunny’ Latif.

     

    ‘Homeland’ is currently shooting its fourth season in South Africa, where Cape Town is doubling for Islamabad.

     

    Produced by Fox 21, the series’ main cast includes Claire Danes and Damian Lewis, among others. ‘Homeland’ returns on 5 October.

     

     

  • ‘Edge of tomorrow’ clocks in as the weekend’s #1 film worldwide

    ‘Edge of tomorrow’ clocks in as the weekend’s #1 film worldwide

    MUMBAI: Warner Bros. Pictures’ and Village Roadshow Pictures’ ‘Edge of Tomorrow’ grossed $111.1 million, making it the weekend’s #1 film internationally and worldwide.  The announcement was made by Domestic Distribution president Dan Fellman and Warner Bros. International Distribution president Veronika Kwan Vandenberg.

     

    Internationally, the film has been in limited release for 12 days, including Wednesday openings, and debuted in an additional 36 countries over the weekend, earning an impressive $82 million, including outstanding returns in Russia with $8.6 million, China with $25 million and Korea at $16.6 million.  The international cumulative gross now stands at $111 million.  On the domestic side, in its first three days of release, ‘Edge of Tomorrow’ has grossed $29.1 million, bringing the worldwide total to $140.1 million and counting.

     

    In making the announcement, Fellman stated, “‘Edge of Tomorrow’ has received terrific critical acclaim, which has been echoed by audiences who have responded to the film and the fantastic performances of Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt.  Word-of-mouth is extremely strong, which should continue to drive moviegoers to the theatre, either for the first time or to enjoy the film again.”

     

    Kwan Vandenberg said, “‘Edge of Tomorrow’ has risen above the crowded summer marketplace and continues to gain momentum, from our massive opening in Korea to the incredible results we’ve seen in Russia and China.  We congratulate Doug Liman, Tom Cruise, Emily Blunt and the remarkable filmmakers, cast and crew on reaching this terrific benchmark.” 

     

    Oscar nominee Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt star in Warner Bros. Pictures’ and Village Roadshow Pictures’ action thriller ‘Edge of Tomorrow’ under the direction of Doug Liman.

     

    The epic action unfolds in a near future in which an alien race has hit the earth in an unrelenting assault, unbeatable by any military unit in the world.

     

     Major William Cage (Cruise) is an officer who has never seen a day of combat when he is unceremoniously dropped into what amounts to a suicide mission.  Killed within minutes, Cage now finds himself inexplicably thrown into a time loop—forcing him to live out the same brutal combat over and over, fighting and dying again…and again.

     

    But with each battle, Cage becomes able to engage the adversaries with increasing skill, alongside Special Forces warrior Rita Vrataski (Blunt).  And, as Cage and Rita take the fight to the aliens, each repeated encounter gets them one step closer to defeating the enemy.

     

    The international cast also includes Bill Paxton, Brendan Gleeson, Noah Taylor, Kick Gurry, Dragomir Mrsic, Charlotte Riley, Jonas Armstrong, Franz Drameh, Masayoshi Haneda and Tony Way.

     

    Liman directed ‘Edge of Tomorrow’ from a screenplay by Christopher McQuarrie and Jez Butterworth & John-Henry Butterworth, based on the novel entitled All You Need is Kill by Hiroshi Sakurazaka.  Erwin Stoff produced, along with Tom Lassally, Jeffrey Silver, Gregory Jacobs and Jason Hoffs.  The executive producers are Doug Liman, David Bartis, Joby Harold, Hidemi Fukuhara and Bruce Berman, with Tim Lewis and Kim Winther serving as co-producers.

  • Eros International to acquire controlling stake in Techzone

    Eros International to acquire controlling stake in Techzone

    MUMBAI:  Eros International Media (Eros) has announced that it has signed a term sheet to acquire a controlling stake in Universal Power Systems, trading by the name Techzone, a mobile value added services (MVAS) provider for telecom operators based in India for an undisclosed sum. 

     

    Established in 1999 by Naveen Bhandari, Techzone is an aggregator, developer and distributor of entertainment content via mobile platforms in India.  Techzone is particularly focused on the Bollywood films and music markets and has significant region-specific content in Tamil and Telugu.  The company has relationships and billing integration with major telecom networks in India to distribute its content and also has its own ‘Mobile Shortcode’ 56060. Techzone makes its content available to end-users via various methods such as caller ring-back tones (CRBT), mobile radio, short message service (SMS), wireless application protocol (WAP) and interactive voice response (IVR). 

     

    Techzone has done an average of 25 million SMS, WAP or IVR transactions per month over the past three years across 12 major telecom operators in India for which it bills the customers directly through its billing platform. This excludes CRBT transactions which are also marketed and distributed by Techzone but billed by the telecom operators directly. In a given month, a single customer may engage in multiple transactions.

     

    “Techzone will be a strong addition to our ErosNow strategy where content meets technology and distribution,” said Eros CEO Jyoti Deshpande.  “With Techzone’s billing integration and distribution in place across major telecom operators and average transaction traffic of over 25 million monthly over the past three years, we expect this deal to complement our existing ErosNow service. With 870 million mobile subscribers (including over 60 million internet enabled smart phones) in India as of year-end 2013, this is an exciting space for us.”

     

    Techzone CEO & managing director Naveen Bhandari said, “This is indeed a proud moment for Techzone to align with a market leader such as Eros. The consumption of content through mobile platforms is on the increase and the timing of this alliance could not have been better.”

     

    The transaction is subject to customary closing conditions and execution of definitive agreements. 

     

  • We intend to launch localised channels in APAC countries: Sushruta Samanta

    We intend to launch localised channels in APAC countries: Sushruta Samanta

    MUMBAI: It’s been a hectic time for Zee Entertainment Enterprises Limited (Zeel), having forayed into the Thai market with Zee Nung just last week.  However, Zeel Asia Pacific (APAC) business head Sushruta Samanta took time out from his busy schedule to speak to indiantelevision.com about the future roadmap of the newly-launched channels as well as further expansion plans of the company in the APAC region. Excerpts…

     

    What is Zeel’s strategy in the APAC region?

     

    There are two kinds of markets in APAC. One is the already developed markets including Japan and Korea, China could also be a part of it but it’s still developing in terms of GDP and Media at a faster pace. These three together would probably be 65 per cent of APAC, excluding India. The remaining are the emerging markets that are growing at a very fast rate in terms of pay TV penetration as well as economy and GDP size. In terms of sizing, excluding India, pay market in the rest of APAC would be approximately $45 billion in terms of net ad and subscription revenue put together.

     

    From the Zeel perspective, we have a two-prong strategy: one is how do we enter bigger markets that are already kind of Red oceans in nature, second is the new emerging fast-growing markets where we believe it is the right time to enter. Pay business is such that the later you enter, the higher are the entry barriers, issues like bandwidth, placement, carriage and others. So, timing is very critical.

     

    In the emerging markets, where we did our feasibility research first, there are three kinds of business models we target. The first part is where we take our Indian channels and connect with the Indian viewers. This is the NRI and PIO population. They are the ones who want to connect and consume Indian content the Indian way, with the same language and packaging, probably with additional subtitling only.

     

    The second is the local audience. This is a much bigger segment and the one we prefer to connect through repackaging and redirection of our content. When we conducted our research in selected APAC countries, we identified specific countries we wanted to enter first. These are the markets where we saw a huge connect and an affinity for Bollywood and Indian content. The general population in these markets would love to consume Indian content if it is repackaged well as per their taste, language and culture. In some markets, dubbing works well while in others, they prefer to consume the content in the subtitled format. The third is to create content locally when the time and opportunity is right.

     

    How has the APAC business shaped up for Zee Bioskop and what are the plans for Zee Nung?

     

    We started with research and focus groups in key cities in Indonesia and designed the product based on those inputs. We are already on four key platforms in Indonesia including Aora TV, Kompass, Orange TV, Transvision and are scheduled to launch on two more now. Zee Bioskop is currently reaching out to half a million pay TV homes there. Indonesia is an interesting market as it has more than nine DTH operators along with cable operators operating separately. It is a small pay penetration market but growing at a quantum speed now. The 2013 subscriber base saw a growth of more than 35 per cent over 2012. This trend is expected to continue and is hence an important market for us at this point of time. We have an office in Jakarta for the first time and a local team under Maria Liza, country head Indonesia, driving this business.

     

    Once we launched Zee Bioskop, we realised that the model was working well in Asia Pacific and we looked at the second market identified earlier during our research and entered Thailand with Zee Nung. One critical aspect of this business model is that we are very clearly a pay channel model, which means we make platforms believe in our product and they are then ready to share the revenues per subscriber basis. In Thailand, we launched on Cable Thai Holding (CTH), the biggest pay operator in the market, because they thought the product will work really well. Zee Nung is on FTA mode till 15 June for mass trial after which we will convert it to pay mode. Veria Living is next in line. In Thailand, CTH has a market penetration of 65 per cent and we are in talks with them for other products as well including Veria. We also opened an office in Bangkok headed by Vaishali Kasturia, Country Head Thailand who is driving the business locally.

     

    3) What is the long term goal for Zeel in APAC?

     

    We were the first to launch channels targeting Indians across the world but their number in APAC will be very less, less than even 1 per cent of the total population in the region. The main audience will have to be the locals in these countries, which is the mainstream segment and a far bigger revenue pie. Once our strategy of these repackaged & redirected channels is successful, the next step will be to move to the next level and create locally produced content and probably a completely local channel.

     

    In Indonesia we are planning to do local production with Zee Bioskop once we start our ad sales for the channel. We are currently not doing ad sales because we want to give the initial value to consumers and boost to the channel. We will start with a reality show down the line and a year or a year and a half later, we will look at regular production of local content for the market. These will compete directly with the local channels.

     

    Launching movie channels first is the base for understanding the market insights and viewing behaviour, setting up a strong local team and then slowly getting in with local content production. We first want to establish the Zee brand at the household level. Brand Zee has a very strong equity in APAC but we need to transfer that to the viewer level. Once that happens, we will extend it to local channels.

     

    4) What is the business model for movie channels?

     

    We have a library of more than 3,500 Indian movies, one of the largest in the world, and we can use that to our advantage to launch channels. We are focusing on subscriber revenue more than advertising because it is bigger and growing faster in this region. At Zee, we are also very particular on our branding and positioning strategy in each of these countries. We have some of the best agencies working for us, eg Grey for Zee Nung, FCB Jakarta for Zee Bioskop and Lowe for the upcoming channel in Vietnam. These initiatives will also play a crucial role in popularising Bollywood to the masses in these countries.

     

    5) What is the contribution of the APAC business to Zeel’s entire international business?

     

    The contribution of APAC to our international business is relatively low as compared to the other territories at this point of time. However, with the series of channel launches planned, we are looking at quantum growth and increase of our share in the next couple of years. The APAC ARPU at consumer levels fluctuates widely by country; however, the average is about $7.5. Markets like Thailand and Indonesia are above the average on key platforms that we are targeting. 

     

    6) Which are the other APAC markets that Zeel is targeting?

     

    We are the only Indian channel to have been given the hotel landing license in China which is a big deal, we are now looking at making that business grow big and also create possible products targeting the mainstream Mandarin audience. We would also like to look at markets like Philippines, Cambodia, Myanmar and Sri Lanka with a cost effective model to launch since their market sizes are not that large yet but growing fast. Japan, Australia and New Zealand are also big markets and we are currently doing our feasibility researches to identify and design suitable products targeting the local population. For Australia and New Zealand, we already have a team in Sydney working on this. In the next three years, all our new launches will start bearing fruit increasing our market share in the region significantly. In the next five to seven years, we should be a leading local player in these markets. In line with our corporate philosophy and goal, to become a leading player at a global level will be possible once we are localised and mainstream across markets.

  • Big B to open Indian Film Festival in Melbourne next month

    Big B to open Indian Film Festival in Melbourne next month

    NEW DELHI: Bollywood megastar Amitabh Bchchan, whose latest film ‘Bhootnath Returns’ was released this week, is to open the Indian Film Festival Melbourne 2014 on 1 May.

     

    The 2014 festival programme was launched in Melbourne by Louise Asher, Australian Minister for Innovation, Tourism and Major Events and Employment and Trade, and Bollywood diva and Festival Ambassador Vidya Balan. The Festival CEO Mitu Bhowmick Lange was also present.

     

    According to Asher, Bachchan is widely regarded as one of the greatest and most influential actors in the history of Indian cinema. So total was his dominance of the movie scene in the 1970s and 1980s that the French director Francois Truffaut called him a “one-man industry”.

     

    Addressing media persons, Asher said that the festival will be held from 1 to 11 May and feature over 40 films, with more than half being Australian premieres. “Films will be shown in 20 languages and we will have five free screenings at Federation Square,” Asher said. “Victorians and all visitors to Melbourne are in for a treat of Indian films this year.

     

    “It will be an honour to have Bachchan here, just a year after he opened the Cannes Film Festival with his Great Gatsby co-star, Leonardo DiCaprio,” Asher said.

     

    “In response to community feedback, the festival has also added to the programme an exciting new section called New Voices, which will feature six films from first time filmmakers,” Asher said. 

     

    Other industry guests include Konkona Sen Sharma, Vijay Krishna Acharya (director of Dhoom 3), Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra (director of Bhaag Milkha Bhaag), Hassan Waqas Rana and  Shaan Shahid (producer and star respectively of Waar, Pakistan’s highest-grossing box office hit of all time), and South Indian actor-producer Suhasini Maniratnam.

     

    Asher said this year’s festival would see the return of Festival favourites, such as the interactive master classes, Western Union Short Film competition and the Telstra Bollywood Dance Competition, to be judged by the incredible actor/producer Malaika Arora Khan, a judge on TV show India’s Got Talent.

     

    Asher said “Balan is a great friend of Victoria, and known for her roles portraying strong female protagonists. She launched the 2012 and 2013 Festivals and it is an honour and a pleasure to have her back this year.”

     

    She added: “The Indian Film Festival of Melbourne brings prominent Indian filmmakers and screen professionals to Melbourne, helps promote Victoria as an international screen production destination, and provides opportunities todevelop Victorian and Indian screen partnerships.”

     

    Balan said she felt at home in Melbourne and would come back again with her husband soon. She thanked the Victorian government for supporting the IFFM 2014 and she considered the festival as a personal achievement.

     

    IFFM Festival director Lange said the 2014 IFFM would be the most exciting and ambitious festival yet. “We could not have asked for a better chief guest than the patriarch of Indian cinema and one of the most iconic Indians of all times, Amitabh Bachchan, to open the festival on 1 May.”

     

    “The inaugural IFFM Awards takes the festival to a new level and we are all very excited to see who the winners will be. I hope you will all join in with your friends and family to celebrate the magic of cinema!,” Lange ended.

  • Kirsten Dunst’s film to open 57th San Francisco International Film Festival

    Kirsten Dunst’s film to open 57th San Francisco International Film Festival

    MUMBAI: In a statement released this week, the 57th San Francisco International Film Festival (SFIFF) held from 24 April – 8 May, announced its highly-anticipated Opening Night and Closing Night selections.

    SFIFF kicks off with the Opening Night presentation of Hossein Amini’s (The Wings of the DoveDrive) gripping adaptation of Patricia Highsmith’s bestselling novel, The Two Faces of January starring Oscar Issac (Inside Llewyn Davis), Viggo Mortensen (The Lord of the Rings trilogy) and Kirsten Dunst (Spiderman trilogy) gorgeously filmed on location in Greece and Turkey. The film is set in 1962 where a well-heeled couple (Mortensen and Dunst) come to know an American expatriate acting as an Athens tour guide (Isaac). But an incident at the couple’s hotel puts all three in danger and creates a precarious interdependence between them.

     

    The Festival will come to a stirring conclusion with Chris Messina’s (The Mindy Project, Argo) drama Alex of Venice, starring Mary Elizabeth Winstead (Scott Pilgrim vs. the World), Messina and Don Johnson (Django Unchained). With this film, Messina creates a winning mix of wistful comedy and heartfelt drama in this tale of accepting the unexpected. The film revolves around Alex (Mary Elizabeth Winstead), an environmental lawyer whose job often keeps her away from the home she shares with her son, husband (Messina) and actor father (Don Johnson). When her husband rebels against being a stay-at-home dad and takes a time out from the marriage, Alex’s world quickly becomes very complicated.

     

    “We are delighted to offer these exceptional films by first-time directors who are best known for their work in other areas of the film world,” said San Francisco Film Society Executive Director Noah Cowan in the statement. “Championing talented artists who aren’t afraid of taking risks is at the heart of the Film Society’s mission and our ongoing support of filmmakers around the world. I can’t think of a better pair of films to kick off and wrap up what is going to be an amazing festival.”

    The 57th San Francisco International Film Festival, organised by the San Francisco Film Society, runs at the Sundance Kabuki Cinemas, Castro Theatre and New People Cinema in San Francisco and the Pacific Film Archive in Berkeley. Held each spring for 15 days, the festival is an extraordinary showcase of cinematic discovery and innovation in one of the country’s most beautiful cities, featuring 200 films and live events, 14 juried awards and nearly $40,000 in cash prizes, upwards of 100 participating filmmaker guests and diverse and engaged audiences with more than 65,000 in attendance.

     

  • Zurich Film Festival’s New World View: India

    Zurich Film Festival’s New World View: India

    MUMBAI: For its tenth edition, the Zurich Film Festival (ZFF) welcomes India as its New World View section guest for the film festival held this year between 25 September and 5 October. In doing so, ZFF highlights a country with a tradition spanning more than 100 years of cinematic history and a production output.

    In explaining the decision to choose India, the co-directors of ZFF, Nadja Schildknecht and Karl Spoerri said in the official statement, “New Indian cinema has experienced an upsurge in recent years, and not just on the subcontinent.” It is among young filmmakers that the change is most visible. The festival-directors go on to say, “New projects have been realised over the past few years that undermine common stereotypes. The movement from mainstream to independent cinema is unmistakable. This development is incredibly exciting.”

    Even the large festivals such as Cannes have discovered the potential of Indian cinema for themselves. There has not been a line-up in recent years that did not include an Indian film. Schildknecht and Spoerri are certain for this reason that “focussing on India can only serve to enrich the 10th ZFF.” M.K. Lokesh, the Ambassador of India to Switzerland, is delighted by the festival’s choice: “Over the years, the Indian film industry has achieved a very high level of technical standards and directional skills. In the Indo-Swiss context, the Indian cinema, by capturing the natural beauty of Switzerland in many films, contributed to Swiss popularity among Indian tourists. It is befitting that the Zurich Film Festival is showcasing India as the guest country this year.”

    Indeed, Indian festival entries are usually and rightfully praised for their thematic freshness and high cinematic quality. The best examples of these attributes include Vasan Balas’ promising debut Peddlers, a captivating relationship drama in the form of a thriller; the romantic comedy The Lunchbox by newcomer Ritesh Batra, and the family/gangster saga Gangs of Wasseypur, Anurag Kashyap’s Indian Godfather, with a budget of $ 45 million, the most expensive non-Bollywood production to date.

    It was not only with the launching of The Lunchbox in 2013 that ZFF reacted early to the subcontinent’s cinematic signals; guest in Zurich and highly successful producer Guneet Monga (The Lunchbox, The Gangs of Wasseypur and Peddlers) also offered a preview of things to come during her ZFF Master Class. Bollywood bastion Yash Raj Films hired Guneet Monga for the international sales and distribution of the adolescent drama Titli – an indication that the traditional Indian film scene is giving independent domestic cinema a commercial chance.

    The programme of this year’s New World View section will showcase ten new feature and documentary films by emerging Indian filmmakers and a short film block. The short film block is selected through our collaboration with the Internationale Kurzfilmtage Winterthur. Details of the programme will be released at a later date.

  • Culinary comedy Jadoo to be Closing Night Gala Film at the 12th annual IFFLA

    Culinary comedy Jadoo to be Closing Night Gala Film at the 12th annual IFFLA

    MUMBAI: On Tuesday, 18 March, the Indian Film Festival of Los Angeles (IFFLA) announced its 2014 lineup of narrative and documentary features and short films for this year’s festival. The impressive program reflects the rich diversity of Indian cinema, as well as the future of Indian filmmaking, with filmmakers bringing their acclaimed films to Los Angeles (LA).

     

    The festival, widely recognized as the premiere showcase of groundbreaking Indian cinema globally is celebrating its 12th year. The IFFLA will run from 8-13 April at ArcLight Hollywood in Los Angeles, the festival’s home since its inception.

     

    The culinary comedy, Jadoo has been chosen as the Closing Night Gala Film. Jadoo, a delightful and delicious exploration of family bonds amidst two feuding brothers’ restaurants in England, will screen as the festival’s Closing Night Gala. Jadoo is written and directed by IFFLA alum Amit Gupta, and first premiered at the 2013 Berlinale (Berlin Film Festival). It features a wonderful ensemble cast that includes Kulvinder Ghir, Amara Karan, Harish Patel, Tom Mison, and Madhur Jaffrey. The red-carpet screening will be followed by an exclusive after-party at Nirvana-Bombay Palace in Beverly Hills.

     

    As previously announced, IFFLA will open with Jeffrey D. Brown’s Sold, produced by Jane Charles, and executive produced by Emma Thompson.

     

     IFFLA’s Artistic Director Jasmine Jaisinghani expressed his excitement in a press release stating that he is proud of this year’s IFFLA line-up which includes an especially diverse range of cinematic experiences, covering many regions of India and the diaspora. Jaisinghani said, “We would like to thank our Programming Advisor in India, Uma Da Cunha, for helping our programming team source some of these exceptional films.”

     

    Program highlights also include the North American premiere of Anurag Kashyap’s latest, Ugly, an intense, masterfully directed psychological thriller that premiered in the 2013 Director’s Fortnight section of Cannes; Liar’s Dice, the remarkable directorial debut of South Indian actress Geetu Mohandas that premiered at this year’s Sundance Film Festival; Anup Singh’s latest feature Qissa: The Tale of a Lonely Ghost, starring Irrfan Khan (Life of Pi, Slumdog Millionaire), winner of NETPAC Award at the Toronto International Film Festival, and Dioraphte Award at the International Film Festival Rotterdam; the Audience Award winner at the 2013 Slamdance Film Festival Hank & Asha, an exploratory, romantic look at two people bonding in the digital age by newcomer James E. Duff; Nagraj Manjule’s Fandry, a highly praised debut feature for its multilayered emotion and realism on the subject of caste discrimination; Brahmin Bulls, starring Roshan Seth (Gandhi, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Mississippi Masala) and Sendhil Ramamurthy (Beauty and the Beast, Heroes) as an estranged father and son unexpectedly brought together to confront the family’s past; and Siddharth, a nuanced look at a family whose son goes missing, by lauded Canadian director and IFFLA alum Richie Mehta (Amal).

     

    The festival’s feature documentary competition includes an eclectic mix of films from established and upcoming filmmakers that consider India’s unique traditions and dynamic future. The films include: the world premiere of The Auction House, an intimate and funny look at two brothers trying to keep their anachronistic family business going in the digital age; festival favorite Powerless, which depicts intense struggles over electricity in a mid-size Indian city; Faith Connections, IFFLA alum Pan Nalin’s beautiful and rare look at the Kumbh Mela; and the National Award-winning Shepherds of Paradise, about an arduous, mountainous trek through an animal drive in the Kashmiri winter.

     

    The popular Bollywood by Night series returns this year with Bombay Talkies and Monsoon Shoutout. Premiering at last year’s Cannes Film Festival, Bombay Talkies is a quartet of short films that celebrates 100 years of Indian cinema. The omnibus film features work by four of India’s most exciting contemporary directors: Karan Johar, Dibakar Banerjee, Zoya Akhtar, and Anurag Kashyap, as well as a stellar cast that includes Amitabh Bachchan, Rani Mukerji, and Katrina Kaif. Monsoon Shootout is a thrilling debut by IFFLA alum writer/director Amit Kumar, about how a split-second decision made by a rookie police officer has rippling effects in his life and the lives of those around him.

     

    The shorts competition showcases a diverse selection of 15 films that include narrative, documentary, experimental, and animated works. Highlights of this year’s program include Academy Award shortlisted Kush; Sundance award winner Love.Love.Love; and the world premiere of acclaimed director Umesh Kulkarni’s The Fly.

  • University of Southern California introduces three more chairs endowed by George Lucas

    University of Southern California introduces three more chairs endowed by George Lucas

    MUMBAI: On Thursday, 13 March, Lucas continued his philanthropy by endowing faculty chairs named for Sergei Eisenstein, George Méli?s and Williams Cameron Menzies. Eisenstein, Méli?s and Menzies are considered filmmaking pioneers. Their theories and practices are taught in film programs around the world.

     

    At a dedication event at the School of Cinematic Arts (SCA), professors Bruce A. Block, Michael L. Fink and Alex B. McDowell were installed as the first holders of the new endowed chairs. Block was named the Sergei Eisenstein Endowed Chair in Cinematic Design; Fink as the George Méli?s Endowed Chair in Visual Effects; and McDowell as the William Cameron Menzies Endowed Chair in Production Design. The total number of endowed positions at SCA is currently at twenty-four, more than any other cinematic arts program in the country.

     

    SCA Dean Elizabeth Daley said the chairs celebrate the importance of continued innovation. “In the mold of the filmmakers they are named after, these new chairs represent innovation in the cinematic arts,” she said in a press statement. Bruce Block, Michael Fink and Alex McDowell have each made singular contributions to their fields and are doing important work in the industry, while simultaneously preparing the next generation of innovative storytellers.

     

    At the dedication event Lucas said he was naming the chairs as a way to say “don’t forget the basics. Don’t get enamored with new technology…it doesn’t change anything. The art of what we do is exactly the same. The goal that we have is exactly the same as George Méli?s, Williams Cameron Menzies and  Sergei Eisenstein. It’s beyond technology. It’s the art of movies.”

     

    Bruce Block has been teaching Filmic Expression, a course that Eisenstein originated for more than 35 years. Block’s producing and consulting credits include What Women WantSomething’s Gotta GiveThe HolidayAs Good As It GetsStuart Little and Father of the Bride I and II. Block directs documentaries and animated films for museums, commercials, the IMAX format, and NASA simulations. Additionally, he conducts seminars in visual structure for studios including Blizzard, Blue Sky, Disney, Dreamworks, ILM, Lucasfilm, and Pixar. His book, “The Visual Story” has been published in six languages and is used as a reference text by filmmakers around the world.

     

    “Eisenstein’s ideas influenced all of Hollywood’s filmmakers from the montages of Frank Capra’s films to the MGM dance extravaganzas of Busby Berkeley to Disney’s animation,” Block said during a speech at the dedication, noting that Eisenstein lectured at USC. “His teachings became part of our curriculum and were taught here by Slavko Vorkapich, Les Novros, Woody Omens and then by me.”

     

    Michael Fink, who has been pioneering visual effects for more than thirty-five years, began his career on The China Syndrome in 1977. His other credits include Star Trek: The Motion PictureBlade RunnerBatman ReturnsThe Golden CompassAvatar and Life of Pi. He was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Achievement in Visual Effects for Batman Returns in 1993 and won the Oscar in that category in 2008 for The Golden Compass. Fink is on the Executive Committee of the Visual Effects Branch of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, and is a founding member, board member and current Vice-Chair of the Visual Effects Society.

     

    “I believe this Chair is the first endowed chair in Visual Effects at any university,” he told the crowd gathered in the Ray Stark Theatre. “Naming it after George Méli?s, truly the father of all that we do in visual effects today, is not only appropriate, but the least we can do to carry his name forward in our teaching.”

     

    Alex McDowell has more than thirty years’ experience as a narrative designer and is creative director of USC’s World Building Media Lab and the thought leadership network, USC 5D Institute. His credits as a production designer include Fear and Loathing in Las VegasFight Club, Minority ReportWatchmen and Man of Steel. McDowell was a visiting scholar to MIT’s Media Lab from 2006 to 2011. He is a Getty Research Institute scholar and on the executive board of the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences Designers Branch. In 2006, he was awarded Royal Designer for Industry by the UK’s Royal Society of Arts, and in 2013 the Designers & Art Directors President’s Award. He remains a practicing designer, working in multiple media with the company he leads, 5D Global Studio.