Category: International

  • Film Independent announces nominees for next year’s Spirit Awards

    Film Independent announces nominees for next year’s Spirit Awards

    MUMBAI: Wes Anderson‘s Moonrise Kingdom and David O. Russell‘s Silver Linings Playbook dominate the field with five nominations each at the 2013 Spirit Awards.
    They will compete for best feature award alongside Beasts of the Southern Wild, Bernie and Keep the Lights On.

    Moonrise also scored nominations for director Anderson, its screenplay by Anderson and Roman Coppola, supporting actor Bruce Willis and Robert Yeoman‘s cinematography. The Focus Features release that debuted at the Cannes Film Festival was also named best feature at the 22nd Gotham Independent Film Awards.

    In addition to Moonrise‘s Anderson, other directors who have been nominated include Playbook‘s David O. Russell, Beasts‘ Benh Zeitlin and Lights‘ Ira Sachs. The fifth directing slot went to The Loneliest Planet‘s helmer Julia Loktev.

    Playbook‘s two lead actors – Bradley Cooper and Jennifer Lawrence – both earned nominations in the acting categories. The Sessions, the account of a man living with an iron lung who seeks out his first sexual experience, also picked up two acting nominations — one for lead actor John Hawkes and another for supporting actress Helen Hunt. The mother-daughter movie, Middle of Nowhere, was represented by three acting nominations, with Emayatzy Corinealdi in the best actress category, Lorraine Toussaint in supporting actress and David Oyelowo in supporting actor. Matthew McConaughey was not only nominated as lead actor for playing the title role in the crime movie Killer Joe but also as supporting male for emceeing a club full of male strippers in Magic Mike.

    Rounding out the list of lead actors were Bernie‘s Jack Black; Lights‘ Thure Lindhardt and Four‘s Wendell Pierce. The lead actress contingent also included Return‘s Linda Cardellini, Smashed‘s Mary Elizabeth Winstead and Beasts‘ young Quvenzhane Wallis.

    On the documentary front, the Spirit nominations singled out David France‘s How to Survive a Plague, which looks at the gay community‘s response to the AIDS crisis, Matthew Akers‘ Marina Abramovic: The Artist Is Present, a portrait of the Serbian performance artist, The Central Park Five, an account of injustice in New York City from Ken Burns, Sarah Burns and David McMahon, Kirby Dick‘s The Invisible War, which investigates rape within the military and Peter Nicks‘ The Waiting Room, which examines the health crisis by focusing on one public hospital.

    In the best international film category, two of this year‘s most celebrated films from Cannes — Michael Haneke‘s Amour and Jacques Audiard‘s Rust and Bone — will compete with Nuri Bilge Ceylan‘s Once Upon a Time in Anatolia, from Turkey; Ursula Meier‘s Sister, from Switzerland; and Kim Nguyen‘s War Witch, from the Democratic Republic of Congo, which also happens to be Canada‘s submission for the foreign-language film Oscar.

    Film Independent also announced that it will give its annual Robert Altman Award, which recognizes a film‘s director, casting director and ensemble cast, to Sean Baker‘s Starlet.
    Among distributors, Fox Searchlight could boast of the most nominations. It collected nine nominations for Beasts, Sessions, Ruby Sparks and Sound of My Voice. Music Box Films also had surprisingly strong showing with seven noms spread among Lights, Abramovic and Starlet. IFC Films, Focus and Sony Pictures Classics each collected six nominations.

    Winners of the Spirit Awards will be announced Feb. 23 at the annual awards luncheon held in a tent on the beach in Santa Monica. The ceremony will be broadcast that evening at 10 p.m. ET/PT on IFC.

  • Cate Blanchett in talks to play evil grand mom in Cindrella remake

    Cate Blanchett in talks to play evil grand mom in Cindrella remake

    MUMBAI: It has been reported that Oscar winner Cate Blanchett is in talks to play the evil stepmother in Disney‘s live-action Cinderella remake produced by Simon Kinberg. The film will be directed by Mark Romanek (Never Let Me Go) with screenplay by Chris Weitz (A Better Life, About a Boy).
    The Cinderella project was first set up at Disney in May 2010, in the wake of the studio‘s success with Alice in Wonderland, the live-action adaptation of the Lewis C. Carroll book that starred Johnny Depp, Ann Hathaway Mia Wasikowska and Helena Botham Carter and was directed by Tim Burton. Devil Wears Prada writer Aline Brosh McKenna wrote the initial draft of the script.
    Blanchett was once set to play the evil witch in Disney‘s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs but that project failed to take off.
    The Australian actress‘ next appearance will be in The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, which hits the theatres on 14 December. She also has two Terrence Malick films and a Woody Allen project on the anvil. She has recently joined the star-studded cast of George Clooney‘s The Monuments Men.

  • DreamWorks in talks to acquire feature film rights to Stedman’s debut novel

    DreamWorks in talks to acquire feature film rights to Stedman’s debut novel

    MUMBAI: DreamWorks Studios co-chairman and CEO Stacey Snider has revealed that it is in exclusive talks to acquire the feature film rights to M.L. Stedman‘s debut novel "The Light Between Oceans".
    Heyday Films‘ David Heyman (Harry Potter series, Gravity) will produce the film adaptation along with Jeffrey Clifford. Rosie Alison, who brought the book into Heyday, will be the executive producer.
    The film is based on a remote Australian island in the years following World War I, where a lighthouse keeper and his wife are faced with a moral dilemma when a boat washes ashore with a dead man and a two-month-old infant. When they decide to raise the child as their own, the consequences of their choice are devastating.
    "M.L. Stedman has crafted a visually stunning and emotionally harrowing love story with a confounding moral dilemma at its center," said Stacey Snider in the media. "We were completely transfixed by the story and instantly imagined it as a sweeping, classic film. David Heyman is an ideal partner to bring Stedman‘s story to the screen," he added.
    "I was deeply affected by M. L. Stedman‘s powerful and primal story of human choices and their consequences," said Heyman. "It‘s a novel which tackles grand emotions, but everything is rooted within an intimate yet universal story of marital and parental love. I am excited to be working with such sympathetic partners in Stacey and the team at DreamWorks."
    ‘I‘m both thrilled and incredibly honored that filmmakers of the caliber of DreamWorks and David Heyman are combining their brilliance in plans to bring the book to the big screen," said Stedman.
    ‘The Light Between Oceans‘ was published in the United States in July 2012 by Scribner and has appeared on both the New York Times and USA Today‘s bestseller lists, and others internationally, as well as being selected as Amazon‘s Best Book of the Month for August. It is due to be translated into nearly 30 languages.
    Negotiations are being handled by Nick Marston of Curtis Brown in association with Sue Armstrong of Conville and Walsh.

  • MPSE to honour Ang Lee

    MPSE to honour Ang Lee

    MUMBAI: Life of Pi director Ang Lee will be receiving the 2013 Filmmaker Award from the Motion Picture Sound Editors at the 60th MPSE Golden Reel Awards on 17 February at the Westin Bonaventure in Los Angeles.
     
    “Ang Lee is a fascinating innovator. He continually breaks ground through the use of the latest technology both visually and sonically. That continues with Life of Pi where his use of Dolby Atmos guides audiences into the emotional intimacy of the sound experience,” MPSE president Bobbi Banks was quoted by the Hollywood Reporter.
     
    Lee‘s other films include The Wedding Banquet, Taking Woodstock, Lust, Caution, Hulk, Ride with the Devil, The Ice Storm and Sense and Sensibility. His film, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, received Academy Award nominations for best picture and best director in 2001 and he won the Oscar for best director in 2006 for Brokeback Mountain.
     
    The MPSE Golden Reel Awards acknowledge work in editing dialogue, ADR, sound effects, Foley and music.

  • Jury selected for Made In Germany Young Filmmaker Prize

    Jury selected for Made In Germany Young Filmmaker Prize

    MUMBAI: Germany – Award-winning German director Hans-Christian Schmid ( of the Home for the Weekend fame), actress Nicolette Krebitz (who starred in Bandits) and producer Heino Deckert (In The Fog) have been selected to form the jury for the 2013 Made in Germany – Perspective Fellowship honour. The award includes $20,000 (€15,000) fellowship and is given to an up-and-coming German filmmaker to help them complete their next film.
    The jury will pick next year‘s winner from the lineup of this year‘s Perspektive Deutsches Kino – the Berlin Film Festival‘s German cinema sidebar.
    The award was inaugurated last year and was won by director and screenwriter Annekatrin Hendel for her documentary Vaterlandsverraeter. Hendel has just completed her script for Disko (Disco), a documentary about the 1986 terrorist bombing of a West Berlin disco frequented by U.S. soldiers. Hendel is developing the prohject in collaboration with public broadcaster RBB and is expected to go into production by late 2013.
    The Made in Germany fellowship is backed by German watchmaker Glashutte Original.

  • The Twilght Saga notches $ 97.5 mn; stands tall even is second week

    The Twilght Saga notches $ 97.5 mn; stands tall even is second week

    MUMBAI: Even after dropping 51 per cent from its opening-round gross, The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn — Part 2 still stood strong in the foreign theatrical circuit for the second consecutive weekend drawing $97.5 million from some 13,500 locations in 73 overseas territories.
    The fifth and final film based on Stephenie Meyer‘s series of novels about a young woman (Kristen Stewart) in love with a vampire (Robert Pattinson), has reached an international tally of $350.8 million, about $80 million less than the franchise‘s all-time offshore box-office champ, last year‘s The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn — Part 1 ($430.9 million).
    Breaking Dawn Part 2 — held the top spot in most major markets although it dropped to No. 2 in Australia and in Russia. It stood at No. 3 in South Korea (finishing third after a pair of local-language titles).
    The film generated $15.2 million from 765 sites in Germany opening while the film‘s Austria debut managed to accumulate $1.8 million.

  • Danny Boyle, Judi Dench honoured

    Danny Boyle, Judi Dench honoured

    MUMBAI: Oscar-winning director Danny Boyle and Judi Dench were among the winners at the 58th London Evening Standard Theatre Awards in London on Sunday evening.
     
    Boyle and his creative team were honoured with the Beyond Theatre award for their work on the London 2012 Summer Olympics opening ceremony. British cycling star Victoria Pendleton presented the award.
     
    It may be recalled that Boyle served as the art director for the ceremony that featured many nods to British culture and theater.
     
    Dench received the Moscow Art Theatre‘s Golden Seagull award for her contribution to world theater. Though Oscar winner Cate Blanchett was among the nominees in the best actress category, she lost out to Hattie Morahan who won for her role as a housewife in A Doll‘s House.
     
    The best musical award went to Sweeney Todd, the latest stage version of the play that Tim Burton had brought to the big screen with Johnny Depp under the title Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street in 2007.

  • Odisha born producer to make Hollywood debut

    Odisha born producer to make Hollywood debut

    MUMBAI: Odisha born US based producer – writer Solila Parida is making Hollywood debut with film ‘Desires of the Heart‘ which deals with reincarnation and love between two people living world apart.
    The film is set against a historical backdrop of the custom of ‘Sati‘ and the movie showcases love between two Indians. It is a blend of romance and mystery informed Parida. Desires of Heart is directed by James Kicklighter (Followed, The Car Wash, Final Acts).
    Hollywood actors Val Lauren and Alicia Minshew along with the veteran Bollywood actor Gulshan Grover and National Award winning actor Harsh Mayar feature in lead roles, another Odishan filmmaker Jitendra Mishra, the associate/executive producer of the critically acclaimed film ‘I am Kalam‘ is the associate producer of ‘Desires of the Heart‘.
    The whole shooting schedule spanning over five weeks, production of the movie is completed recently. The first part of the movie is shot in Savannah, Georgia (USA) while the second part is shot in Bikaner, Rajasthan (India). The producer‘s plan is to send the film to the Berlin film festival (EFM) in February and going for a worldwide release in April 2013.

  • Hollywood films look to appease growing market in China

    Hollywood films look to appease growing market in China

    MUMBAI: A Hollywood studio Metro Goldwyn Mayer has digitally removed all Chinese villains from its action flick Red Dawn, which recently released in the United States, in order to avoid antagonising Beijing.

    The plot of the film revolves around a Chinese invasion of America in which a hit squad of teenagers from a high school football team saves the day. When the authorities at MGM realised the storyline could offend Beijing – jeopardising the film’s chances of making it to the lucrative Chinese market – they digitally removed all references to China.

    As a result the villains now belong to North Korean (in the movie) and all reference to the Chinese flag and symbols have been replaced with North Korean ones. The film is a remake of a 1984 Cold War film of the same name, which starred Patrick Swayze and Charlie Sheen where the Russians were shown as the invaders.
    China is one of the fastest growing markets for Hollywood movies at nearly $1.5 billion. Moreover, the new Chinese president Xi Jinping is said to be a big fan of Hollywood war films.

    DMG Entertainment owner Dan Mintz was quoted in the LA Times as saying that if the movie had gone out in its original form “there would have been a real backlash. It’s like being invited to a dinner party and insulting the host all night long. There’s no way to look good … The film itself was not a smart move.” The company is a leading producer and distributor of movies in China.

    In the past too, Beijing has stopped its business dealings with US studios which have criticised its government like the 1997 film Seven Years in Tibet starring Brad Pitt.
    The latest James Bond movie Skyfall is currently not due for release in China either. The distributors of the movie are in negotiations with Beijing over the its release in the country owing to a part in the film that shows a former secret agent being tortured by the Chinese.

  • Helen Mirren will be awarded special prize at European Film Awards

    Helen Mirren will be awarded special prize at European Film Awards

    MUMBAI: Oscar winners Helen Mirren, Bernardo Bertolucci, and Danish actor Mads Mikkelsen (Casino Royale) and Dutch actress Cairce van Houten (Game of Thrones) are among the VIPs from Europe set to attend this year‘s European Film Awards in Malta on 1 December.
    Mirren will be honoured with a special prize for her contribution to world cinema while Bertolucci will receive the European Film Academy‘s lifetime achievement award.
    More than 1,000 of Europe‘s cinema elite will be on hand when the EFAs are handed out for the 25th time. They include German actor Moritz Bleibtreu (The Baader Meinhof Complex) and Irishmen Jim Sheridan – the Oscar-nominated director of In the Name of the Father and My Left Foot – and Michael Gambon – perhaps best known for portraying Professor Albus Dumbledore in the Harry Potter films.
    Highlighting the EFAs pan-European scope, this year‘s guest list includes directors from Russia (Alexei Popogrebsky) and Bosnia (Danis Tanovic); Spanish actors Marisa Paredes and Sergi Lopez as well Maltese actress Marama Carlett (Sinbad).
    This year the contenders for the top prize of European Film 2012 include Michael Haneke‘s Palme d‘Or winner Amour, Oscar hopefuls The Intouchables, Barbara and Caesar Must Die, Danish drama The Hunt and Steve McQueen‘s Shame featuring Michael Fassbender.