Category: Movies

  • City of pearls all decked up to host 16th International children’s film festival

    NEW DELHI: Over eighty films from around twenty countries are to be screened during the 16th International Children’s Film Festival commencing here on Children’s Day, 14 November.


    The films include 15 films in the international competition, 18 in the Asian Panorama, 36 in Children’s World, sixteen films made by children for UNICEF, and a package of German shorts. A five-member international and ten-member child juries will judge both sections.


    The Festival is being organized by the Children’s Film Society, India, in collaboration with the Andhra Pradesh State Film, Theatre and Television Development Corporation. The Festival, which will have its inauguration and closing ceremonies at the Lalitha Kala Thoranam, will close on 20 November.


    Andhra Pradesh Information Minister J Geetha Reddy said at a press meet here that Union Information and Broadcasting Minister Ambika Soni and Andhra Chief Minister K Rosaiah will be present at the inauguration which will be managed by children. Filmmakers Gulzar and Vishal Bhardwaj are also expected to be present, in addition to stars like Venkatesh, Nagarjuna, Trishna and Darsheel Safary.


    She said a mini-film festival would also be held in the Andhra Bhavan in Delhi.
    CFSI Chairperson Nandita Das said the jury members include Nagesh Kukunoor, Revathy Menon, Ashish Vidyarthi, Geetanjali Rao, and Dr Shanta Sinha of the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights.


    She announced that the opening film will be ‘Mozart in China’ after a cultural programme by the Children.


    She gave an assurance that Hyderabad will continue to remain the permanent venue for the Festival.


    Ms Karin Hulshrof who represented UNICEF said around 15 films made by children from India and overseas will be shown in a special package put together by UNICEF at the 16th ICFF to mark the twentieth anniversary of the Convention of the Rights of the Child. The Convention was signed on 20 November twenty years earlier.


    She said the films in the package had been made by child reporters on issues affecting them. She reflected that children were able to make better films when they were able to talk to other kids and adults candidly. There will be a workshop on training children as reporters during the Festival.


    A total of around sixty delegates were coming from overseas for the Festival, which is held every second year and alternates with the Mumbai International Film Festival for Documentary, Short and Animation Films (being held in February 2010).


    Das said the Festival will also have an open forum on different subjects everyday. Two of the subjects for the open forums would include discussions on introducing films in school curriculum, and what constituted a children’s film.


    Nagesh Kukunoor who was present said cinema was an extremely strong platform to get the message across. But he regretted that children’s films do not sell that well.


    Mr Sushovan Banerjee, Chief Executive Officer of the CFSI, said around 16,000 children from different schools were expected to come for the festival, and at least two child delegates had come from each state in the country. He said there will be two shows everyday at Indira Priyardarshini for blind children. These will be CFSI films with audio description facilities.


    APSFTTDC Managing Director C Parthasarthi said after this festival, the films will be taken to several districts to be shown there. The Corporation will acquire the films from the CFSI.


    The Festival films will be screened in Prasad Multiplex and eight other screens. The open Forum will also be at Prasad’s Multiplex.
     

  • Entertainment Society of Goa launches contest to rate top 20 Indian films

    MUMBAI: With an aim to promote the ensuing annual International Film Festival of India to be held at the end of this month in Goa, the Entertainment Society of Goa (ESG) has launched a contest -‘T20 of Indian Cinema‘ to rate the top 20 among the 40,000 odd films that have been made in the country since the beginning of cinema in India 96 years ago.


    The contest that began on 10 November shall end on 29 November is being run on a made-for-the-occasion website www.t20ofindiancinema.com and is open to all.


    The first twenty entries that match a master list merged from the choices of 10 prominent directors and an equal number of film critics from different film regions in the country will win for the entrant an all expenses paid trip to Goa. The first twenty entries that match the best film will also fetch a similar award.


    Says ESG CEO Manoj Srivastava, “We want to create an awareness about the richness of Indian cinema to today‘s youth who are not even aware about the films made in the seventies and eighties.” 


    “Next year‘s edition will call for the best 20 male actors, the year after that the best twenty female actors and then during the centennial year we will have a contest to rate the best twenty directors,” Srivastava adds.


    “A contest such as this will definitely spread awareness about Kannada cinema, especially if one or more of Kannada films are picked among the top twenty best films ever made in India,” said Kannada Film Chamber of Commerce (KFCC) president and female actor Jaimala.


    “It is an opportunity to bring awareness about the greatness of Kannada cinema and culture across the world,” she added.


    ESG is the nodal agency appointed by the Government of Goa in 2004 in the auspices of the IFFI and its main objective is to frame a policy to help cultivate Goa into a world-class international entertainment nerve center of India and to work towards building global visibility and branding for the IFFI.
     

  • Dante Harper to script Hansel and Greetel

    MUMBAI: Writer Dante Harper has been asked to write the script for Hansel and Gretel: Witch Hunters.


    Dead Snow co-writer/director Tommy Wirkola is helming the project for Gary Sanchez Prods. and Paramount. The Norwegian pitched and plotted out the storyline that picks up the fairy-tale siblings 15 years after their traumatic gingerbread house incident that provoked them to become witch bounty hunters.


    Sanchez executives Kevin Messick, Adam McKay, Will Ferrell and Chris Henchy are producing the horror-action comedy that is pitched as having a gory-but-funny Shaun of the Dead vibe.
     

  • Academy receives 20 animation films viewing for Oscars

    MUMBAI: Up to five animated films could be nominated in this season‘s Oscar race after The Academy has announced that it had received twenty submissions for the animation films category for the upcoming Oscar awards of which up to five films could be nominated.


    Under the rules of the Academy, a total of five nominations may ensue when there are more than 16 eligible submissions.


    The entries are 9, Alvin And The Chipmunks: The Squeakquel, Astro Boy, Battle For Terra, Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs, Coraline, Disney‘s A Christmas Carol, The Dolphin – Story Of A Dreamer, Fantastic Mr Fox, Ice Age: Dawn Of The Dinosaurs, Mary And Max, The Missing Lynx, Monsters Vs Aliens, Planet 51 Ponyo ,The Princess And The Frog, The Secret Of Kells, Tinker Bell And The Lost Treasure, A Town Called Panic, Up, Alvin And The Chipmunks: The Squeakquel, The Dolphin – Story Of A Dreamer.


    Films submitted in the animated category also may qualify for Oscars in other categories, including best picture, provided they meet the requirements for those categories.


    The 82nd Academy Awards nominations will be announced on 2 February ahead of the ceremony on 7 March.
     

  • Essential, Gigapix team up on children’s films

    MUMBAI: Essential Entertainment has signed with Gigapix Studios for five G and PG-rated live-action children‘s films through its subsidiary Recess Films.


    The company‘s president of worldwide distribution, John Fremes will handle international sales on the slate while Anchor Bay has entered into a first-look deal to handle US distribution on the slate.


    Under the deal, Anchor Bay will distribute across theatrical, home entertainment and television platforms with a commitment from Gigapix to fund a minimum P&A outlay of $6 million and 600 screens per film.


    Depending on how well titles test in advance screenings, each release may go up to $20m P&A spend and 2,000 screens.


    Gigapix will produce the five live-action films ranging from $8 to 10 million each and a single $20m CG-animated film over the next three years. Financial consultant Dominic Ianno played an integral role in structuring the distribution relationships and will serve as executive producer on the slate.


    Gigapix said it expected to announce the next two live-action titles and the animated project within weeks.

  • Lux Digital’s Nightmares in Red, White and Blue wins Best Documentary award

    MUMBAI: Lux Digital Pictures has announced that its new film Nightmares in Red, White and Blue has been named the ‘Best Documentary‘ film at the prestigious Rhode Island International Film Festival.


    Nightmares in Red, White and Blue, the Company‘s widely praised feature length documentary film on the evolution of the American horror film written and produced by Joseph Maddrey, based on his book, and directed by Andrew.


    Speaking about this year‘s Festival, Rhode Island International Film Festival executive director George Marshall said, “Without question this was a strong year for entries and quality genre films.”


    LUX D comprises of several motion picture development, production, financing and distribution brands that have unique and dynamic strategies to compete in today‘s entertainment marketplace.
     

  • Four Reliance Big Pictures’ films to be screened at IFF

    MUMBAI: The 40th International Film Festival of India (IFFI) that will run from 23 November to 3 December will screen four major productions of Reliance Big Pictures in the Indian Panorama Section. These are Shob Charitro Kalponik, Ijjodu, Janala and Kutty Srank.


    Directed by Rituparno Ghosh, Shob Charitro Kalponik, starring Bipasha Basu and Prosenjit, follows the journey of a woman‘s recollection of her marriage and her radical steps outside it.


    Ijjod, directed by the veteran MS Sathyu and starring national award winner actress Meera Jasmine and Anirudh, is a story of young photo journalist‘s brief encounter with a woman of substance.


    Buddhadeb Dasgupta‘s Janala touches on the nostalgia of childhood and the quest to get back to the roots while struggling to keep one‘s neck above the waters of the present day muck.


    Shaji Karun‘s Kutty Srank, starring Mamooty, Kamilini Mukherjee, Padmapriya and Meenakumari, brings out three distinct personalities of a dead boatman from the perspective of three women each of whom claims to be his wife.


    Said Reliance Big Pictures COO Mahesh Ramanathan, “The unprecedented success of Reliance Big Pictures at international festivals has extended to the home turf as well. Our films have been honored in 35 top cities around the globe within the last one year.”

  • PVR, Ashutosh Gowariker launch Khelein Hum Jee Jaan Sey

    MUMBAI: PVR Pictures and Ashutosh Gowariker Productions (AGPPL) yesterday launched their next offering, Khelein Hum Jee Jaan Sey, with a muhurat on a set in Goa.


    Starring Abhishek Bachchan and Deepika Padukone, Khelein Hum Jee Jaan Sey is a period thriller based on a book ‘Do And Die‘ by Manini Chatterjee about the Chittagong Uprising of 1930.


    Said PVR chairman and managing director Ajay Bijli, “We are very proud to be associated with AGPPL for Khelein Hum Jee Jaan Sey. We are excited about the story idea and have tremendous faith that Ashutosh and his team will make a great film that will be remembered in the years to come.”


    The film, presented by AGPPL and PVR Pictures, will be jointly produced by Ajay Bijli, Sanjeev Bijli and Sunita Gowariker.


    Commented AGPPL producer Sunita Gowariker, “Khelein Hum Jee Jaan Sey is a film for which AGPPL and PVR Pictures have come together for the first time with their ‘Jee‘ and ‘Jaan‘.


    “We are excited to collaborate with them as our partners/ co-producers for this film. PVR being great exhibitors we look forward to a great association with both Ajay and Sanjeev Bijli.”

  • Cinemax launches third property in Nashik

    MUMBAI: Cinemax, the largest multiplex chain in Mumbai, has launched its third and largest property in Nashik.


    The new Cinemax property at Nashik will have a total of 1016 seats with 5 screens. The multiplex will also host 117 recliner seats. Cinemax already has two properties operational in Nashik.


    The new multiplex will have the Cinemax benchmarked technology, lighting, acoustic sound system.


    With this launch, the total number of Cinemax properties goes up to 17 in Maharashtra.

  • Secret of Kells in Oscar-qualifying run

    MUMBAI: Distributor of indie films for family and art house audiences, GKIDS has acquired US distribution rights of the animated film The Secret of Kells.


    A France/Belgium/Ireland co-production of Les Armateurs, Viva Film, Cartoon Saloon and France 2 Cinema, the movie about a magical quest features the voices of Brendan Gleeson, Evan McGuire and Christen Mooney has been directed by Tomm Moore.


    The film is set to receive an Academy-qualifying run from 4 to 10 December at the AMC Burbank 8 in Los Angeles and will be released theatrically in America in March.


    An official selection at the Berlin International Film Festival, Kells had its US premiere at the New York International Children‘s Film Festival and also was the first animated feature to win the Audience Award at the Edinburgh Film Festival.