Category: Movies

  • Slumdog among EFA Award nominations

    MUMBAI: Slumdog Millionaire along with The White Ribbon and A Prophet figure prominently in the 22nd European Film Awards nominations that were announced last weekend.


    All the three films received nods as “European Film 2009” along with Fish Tank, Let The Right One In and The Reader.


    Michael Haneke, Jacques Audiard and Danny Boyle, the directors of the three films respectively, have also received nominations for ‘Best Director. 


    Also in the running are, Haneke, Audiard along with his co-writer on A Prophet Thomas Bidegain and Slumdog scribe Simon Beaufoy for the European Screenwriter award.


    Andrea Arnold‘s Fish Tank is a key nominee with film, director and actress nominations.


    The Awards will take place in Germany‘s Ruhr area on 12 December.

  • ‘A Christmas Carol’ debuts with $ 31 million at the box-office

    MUMBAI: In its first weekend, Disney‘s A Christmas Carol roped in an estimated $31 million at the North American box-office. It is surprising to note that the studio was expecting the good result.


    The Oscar contender Precious that is Lionsgate‘s select-theaters debut of Lee Daniels‘ drama grossed $1.8 million from 18 theaters in four cities for an average of $100,000 per-screen.


    The Michael Jackson documentary This Is It held on to the second spot, dropping just 40 per cent from its opening.


    The other releases found it tougher to secure a foothold.


    Overture‘s military satire The Men Who Stare at Goats clocked in at the third place with $13.3 million. Finishing in fourth place was Universal‘s horror thriller The Fourth Kind grossed over $12.5 million, while the weekend‘s other wide arrival, Warners Bros‘ The Box and Twilight Zone- tagged behind in the fifth and sixth place.

  • Coach 14 bags foreign sales rights of Castro‘s Daughter

    MUMBAI: Coach 14 has bagged the foreign sales rights of Bobby Moresco‘s Castro‘s Daughter, the story of Alina Fernandez, who was the product of a love affair between Fidel Castro and Cuban socialite Naty Revuelta.


    Moresco, an Oscar-winning screenwriter (Crash) who co-wrote the screenplay with Pulitzer Prize winner Nilo Cruz. WME will also be representing the film for sales and packaging.


    Fernandez was a child when Castro would visit her mother‘s home as he planned his first failed attempt to overthrow the government. She was ten years old when she learnt that Castro was her father. 


    After years of openly expressing her differences with him, Fernandez was branded a dissident and forbidden to leave Cuba. In 1993, she fled the country disguised as a Spanish tourist.


    Said Martinez In a statement, “We are very excited to have established a relationship with both Coach 14 and WME and are truly excited at Coach‘s enthusiasm toward the film and feel honored to have Alexis, who has such a high level of positive energy, representing the film.”

  • Actress Valeria Bruni Tedeschi to be part of French Film Delegation

    MUMBAI: French actress Valeria Bruni Tedeschi, elder sister of the first lady of France Carla Bruni-Sarkozy is to be part of a French film delegation to India.


    The 45-year-old actress‘ film Les Regrets has been chosen for second Rendezvous of French Cinema that is being organised by Unifrance and the Embassy of France.


    Among the highlights of the Rendezvous, eight films will be screened between 2 to 6 December among which Valeria‘s film is among the most awaited.


    A special highlight of this festival is the classic Pierrot le fou directed by Jean-Luc Godard. 


    The event that will take place in Mumbai will have Valeria along with a artistic delegation from France that includes some Oscar nominees, Palm d‘Or winners and filmmakers.


    On the occasion Valeria will interact with prominent Bollywood personalities like Yash Chopra, Vishal Bharadwaj and Anurag Kashyap.


    There is a strong buzz that the French President Nicolas Sarkozy and his wife Carla will reportedly be in India to visit the Taj Mahal when the French delegation is here. However, there is no word on whether they will even make a stop at Mumbai.
     

  • Mallika Sherawat to star in Hollywood film on Obama

    MUMBAI: Mallika Sherawat will star in Doug McHenry‘s romantic political comedy, Love, Barack, a film that tracks the romance between a Democratic campaign volunteer and her Republican counterpart in the run-up to last year‘s US Presidential election.


    The film has Sherawat‘s character Aretha Gupta inspired by Kamala Harris, the attorney general of San Francisco.


    Sherawat is presently working on an American accent for the film, which has an all-American cast.


    Says Sherawat,”It‘s an amazing role on which I‘m working hard at. One of the great things about western cinema is the diversity of female roles…Kamala is a great inspiration and to play a part inspired by her is an actress‘s dream.”


    Kamala is the first woman district attorney to be elected in San Francisco and the first African-American elected as district attorney in California. She is also a candidate for the prestigious post of attorney-general of California in 2010.


    Love, Barack has been scripted by Gary Goldstein who had earlier co-produced the Julia Roberts-Richard Gere film Pretty Woman.


    Incidentally, Sherawat‘s upcoming film, Jennifer Lynch‘s Hisss, has also been delayed for some unknown reason.
     

  • Slovakia film industry on revival track

    NEW DELHI: Although the growth of the film industry in Slovakia is hit by a financial crisis, most filmmakers feel they are happy that they are now free to make the kind of films they want without fear of censorship.


    According to director Juraj Nvota, filmmakers feel there is greater freedom now as compared to the time when these countries were part of the Soviet Union. Many filmmakers are, however, nostalgic of that period when finances were assured from the State.


    Nvota directed Music, a film about a young amateur musician playing his beloved music at a variety of events as a caricature of the communist regime. The film also shows how people yearn for freedom in various ways.


    Hollywood is beginning to cast its influence on Slovakian films, particularly after Slovakia became a member of the European Union.


    Slovakia, however, depends heavily on television for fuelling the growth of local cinema. “Unlike India, it is television which sustains cinema in my country, where a total of ten to 12 films are produced per year,” producer Katarina Vanzurova tells indiantelevision.com.


    Vanzurova’s feature film Gypsy Virgin depicts the lives of the gypsies living in her country, who number 50,000 out of a total population of five million. The movie is about the almost forgotten story of a young Roma violin player whose playing cast a spell over everyone, all the way up to the court in Vienna. She became the first woman bandmaster despite being a gypsy.


    Scriptwriter Lubomir Slivka, who had done the research on the film set on a folk lore of the 18th century, says a film had been made almost 35 years earlier in Czechoslovakia, but had not been a great success.


    More movies are set to be produced in Slovakia. Says actress Dorota Nvotova, “The film industry in our country is on a revival mode. I expect more films to be made over the next few years.”


    Agrees Slovakia counsel at the Embassy in IndiaTatiana Facikova, “While the state monopoly on film production including curbs against freedom of creativity were terminated, Slovak filmmakers lost their film laboratories and studios as a result of a murky privatisation. The creative teams dispersed which led to a huge decline in film production. But the industry has seen a revival in the past three years,” she avers.


    Slovakia, which is celebrating 20 years of freedom from the communist rule, recently held its first ever film festival in Delhi. Five films were screened over three days and the festival was organised by the Directorate of Film Festivals in association with the Slovak Embassy.


    The list included The City of the Sun, Blind Loves, Return of the Storks, Music and Gypsy Virgin.


    The City of the Sun looks in a tragic-comic manner at the social and economic decline of the miners who under the previous regime used to be a privileged elite amongst workers.


    Blind Loves uses actually blind actors to show how they spend their lives without the use of any person with sight. The film in an episodic format shows the lives of different groups of blind people.


    Return of the Storks uses the story of a young flight attendant to establishing a cross-cultural dialogue in the region which seems to be unimportant though it reflects issues present all over Europe.

  • Shankar Mohan is joint director in film festivals directorate

    NEW DELHI: Shankar Mohan has been promoted as Joint Director in the Directorate of Film Festivals, becoming the first officer in more than a decade to function in this post.


    Mohan has been with the Directorate for almost 20 years. He had joined the DFF as Deputy Director.


    Prior to that, Mohan was a documentary filmmaker and has several films to his credit. He had done a four-year course in the Film and Television Institute of India, Pune, in Direction and Screenplay writing and then made films for almost a decade before joining the DFF.


    Mohan had been promoted to the post of Senior Deputy Director in the DFF in 2003. Now 53, Mohan has for the past few years been in charge of the foreign films section of the annual International Film Festival of India.


    His present promotion has come just over a month before the 40th IFFI commences at Goa on 23 November.


    It is learnt that Malati Sahay had been the last Joint Director but had functioned as head of the DFF for several years before her retirement in the late eighties. Another officer had been given this promotion on the eve of his retirement but had not functioned in that post, Information and Broadcasting Ministry sources told indiantelevision.com.

  • Special Unicef package at International Children Film Fest

    NEW DELHI:To mark the 20th anniversary of the Convention of the Rights of the Child, Unicef, in a special package, has put together around 15 films made by children from India and overseas to be shown at the 16th International Children Film Festival (ICFF) in Hyderabad.


    Unicef representative Karin Hulshof said that 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.


    Children’s Film Society chairperson Nandita Das revealed that the festival will have 15 films in the international competition, 18 films including six from India in the Asian competition and 37 films in the non-competitive Children’s World, apart from the Unicef package and a German package.


    Das said two of the subjects for the open forums would include discussions on introducing films in school curriculum, and what constituted a children’s film.
    The festival is being held in collaboration with the Andhra Pradesh State Film, Theatre and Television Development Corporation.


    Answering questions, Das said that there was need to provide alternatives by way of clean entertainment to children to wean them away from violent television programming or whatever they saw on the internet or in the cinema houses. Her emphasis was on quality films rather than quantity.


    She said that the festival will have a five-day workshop for child reporters and an open forum on different subjects everyday.


    A five-member international jury and five-member child jury will judge both sections.


    Eminent poet and filmmaker Gulzar and filmmaker Vishal Bhardwaj will be present at the inauguration at the open air Lalit Kala Thoranam.


    60 overseas delegates will be attending the festival, that is held every second year and alternates with the Mumbai International Film Festival for Documentary, Short and Animation Films (being held in February 2010).


    The festival will start from 14 November, celebrated as Children’s Day.
     

  • NFDC to hold Film Bazaar at Goa film fest from 24 November

    MUMBAI: National Film Development Corporation Ltd. (NFDC) will hold Film Bazaar India‘ 09, an annual film market, designed to address the current needs of filmmakers at Goa from 24 to 26 November.


    The idea behind Film Bazaar is to provide a proficient stage for prospective buyers and sellers of film rights from India and abroad. It is a place to grow one‘s knowledge and information base solely focused on increasing international trade for film fraternity members from across the country.


    This year, the Hong Kong Trade Development Corporation, a delegation of distributors from Europa Cinemas and the American Film Institute‘s 20/20 programme, will be attending the Film Bazaar to further expand their global film network.


    Last year, over 300 delegates from 17 countries had attended the film market. 


    CineMart of the Rotterdam International Film Festival, one of Film Bazaar‘s earliest supporters, would be there to invite a select group of producers to attend the Rotterdam Labs at the CineMart to be held later this month. They will also present a Hubert Bals Award to one of the directors from an official selection of Film Bazaar co-production projects.


    Companies that will be attending the market with a sales and production interest include Fortissimo Films, Han Way Films, Goldcrest Films, Videovision Entertainment, Rapid Eye Movies, BBC Films, The Match Factory, Insomnia World Sales and MDC International.


    Film bodies attending the market include the UK Film Council and the Mauritius Film Development Corporation.

  • Cinemax forays into UP, launches plex in Kanpur

    MUMBAI: Cinemax India, which has a concentrated presence in Maharashtra, is foraying into Uttar Pradesh with the launch of a three-screen multiplex in Kanpur.


    The property has opened with the screening of Jail and Ajab Prem Ki Gjazab Kahani. The property has tax exemption benefit for five years.


    The multiplex will having capacity of 999 seats including 75 recliner seats.


    With this addition, Cinemax will have a total of 27 theatre properties with 86 screens and 23565 seats.


    The multiplex operator plans to invest Rs 1 billion and add 60 screens during the next fiscal, according to Cinemax India senior VP business strategy Devang Sampat.