Category: Movies

  • Cohen sued over new Bruno movie

    MUMBAI: Actor Sacha Baron Cohen is being sued by a woman in the US, who claims an incident that occurred while filming new movie Bruno left her ‘disabled‘. The woman Richelle Olson claims she was severely injured during filming following a struggle with Baron Cohen and his film crew at a charity bingo tournament.

    The legal action, filed in California, alleges that Olson, 37, now needs a wheelchair or cane to move around. She is seeking unspecified damages of more than $25,000 (?15,275).


    The legal action accuses Baron Cohen and NBC Universal, the studio behind the forthcoming film, of assault, battery and fraudulent misrepresentation, among other charges.


    The incident took place in Palmdale, California, after Baron Cohen – in the guise of Austrian fashion pundit Bruno – was invited to take part in a bingo tournament raising money for nursing students.


    According to legal documents, Ms Olson tried to remove the microphone from Baron Cohen after he began using obscene language while calling a bingo game.
    She claims the actor pushed her over and she was surrounded by cameramen, who attacked her, all the while continuing to film.


    Ms Olson alleges she ran from the stage and later fainted in a side room, hitting her head and suffering bleeding in her brain.
    Representatives for Cohen and NBC Universal have declined to comment on the allegations.


    According to legal documents, Ms Olson tried to remove the microphone from Baron Cohen after he began using obscene language while calling a bingo game.


    She claims the actor pushed her over and she was surrounded by cameramen, who attacked her, all the while continuing to film.
    Ms Olsen alleges she ran from the stage and later fainted in a side room, hitting her head and suffering bleeding in her brain.


    Representatives for Cohen and NBC Universal have declined to comment on the allegations.

  • ‘Total Recall’ to be remade

    MUMBAI: Arnold Schwarzenegger‘s 1990 sci-fi thriller Total Recall is being remade, according to reports.

    It has been reported that Kurt Wimmer, who penned the 1999 version of The Thomas Crown Affair, is currently working on a script. Columbia Pictures, which secured the film‘s rights in February, has said the remake will be a “contemporised adaptation”.


    It has however not been announced who is being considered for the lead role. The original film was based on the Philip K Dick story We Can Remember It for You Wholesale.

    The film follows a man who is haunted by a recurring dream of travelling to Mars – where he has never been – and a woman he has never met.


    The ultra-violent film, from the creators of Alien, has since become a cult classic. Sharon Stone and Rachel Ticotin also starred in the movie.




     

  • Comedy producers in two-year deal with Sony TV

    MUMBAI: Cathy Yuspa and Josh Goldsmith, creators of Til Death have inked a new two-year overall deal with Sony Pictures TV. Under the seven-digit pact, the duo will develop series projects for the studio they have called home since 1997.

    Yuspa and Goldsmith boast a perfect pilot-pickup record, with all four of their pilot scripts so far ordered to pilot: CBS‘ Stroller Wars (2005), Fox‘s Til Death (2006), ABC‘s Big Day (2006) and CBS‘ The Fish Tank (2009).


    Two of them, Death and Day, were picked up to series, with Death heading into its fourth season. Yuspa and Goldsmith no longer are involved day-to-day on the Fox show starring Brad Garrett and Joely Fisher — it is run by comedy veteran Don Reo — but they continue as executive producers.


    Before segueing into development, Yuspa and Goldsmith spent six years on the Sony TV-produced comedy The King of Queens which they joined after the pilot in 1998 as executive story editors, fresh out of graduating from USC‘s School of Cinema-Television.


    It may be noted that the husband-and-wife duo rose to executive producers/ show-runners on the hit CBS series, which they steered for three seasons from 2001-04.

  • Aishwarya, Rahman to receive special recognition at IIFA Award

    MUMBAI: The 10th Idea Iifa Awards will see Aishwarya Rai Bachchan and AR Rahman receive the special Idea Iifa Award for Outstanding Contribution by an Indian in International Cinema at Macau on 13 June.

    The Idea Iifa Awards ceremony will see performances by Anoushka Sharma, Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, Sonam Kapoor, Abhishek Bachchan, Lara Dutta and Riteish Deshmukh.


    Leading designers like Rocky S, Manav Gangwani, Anamika Khanna, Farah Ali Khan and Hong Kong designer, Chris Chang will showcase their designs at the event‘s Fashion Extravaganza on Day 2 of the Iifa Weekend.


    The extravaganza will feature show stoppers like Hrithik and Suzanne Roshan for Farah Ali Khan and Sonam Kapoor for Anamika Khanna amongst others. The extravaganza will be hosted by Zayed Khan and Sophie Choudhury.


    Adding glamour to the evening, international singing sensation, Peter Andre will perform at the Extravaganza.

  • Big Cinemas, plex owners still to sort out internal differences

    MUMBAI: With a view to end the strike, a vital meeting between the producers and distributors body UPDF and multiplex owners is in process.

    Though Big Cinemas has almost reached a consensus with the UPDF, other multiplexes that have been requested to toe the line are sticking to their earlier proposal of performance-based revenue share system.


    Indiantelevision.com was the first to report that Big Cinemas was spearheading the drive to arrive at a speedy settlement with the film producers and distributors.


    A meeting of multiplex owners was held just before the vital meeting in which multiplex-owners suggested a three-tier performance-based revenue sharing terms formula. For the big budget films, the share would be in the ratio of 52:48 (producers, multiplexes) for the first week and 42:58 for the second. The ratio for the medium budget films would be 50:50 and 42:58 while small budget films would have a share system of 48:52 and 38:62.


    It may be noted that Big Cinemas agreed to the terms of 50:50, 42:58, 35:65 and 30:70 (producers:multiplexes) for the first four weeks respectively for any budgeted film.


    “It all depends on the decision that other plexes take besides Big Cinemas in this important hour and make a breakthrough to arrive at a conclusion. The ball is now in their (multiplexes) court. All depends on how they play their part,” exclaims producer Harry Baweja.

  • National awardee film editor Aarif Sheikh directs dance extravaganza

    MUMBAI: Film editor Aarif Sheikh, who won the National Award for Samay – When Time Strikes and who has been the man behind the edits of noted films like Makdee, Maqbool, Taxi No. 9211, Parzania and The Blue Umbrella, is ready with his first directorial venture Let‘s Dance that is set to release on 19 June.
    “Although dancing is the DNA of the film, I always wanted my story to be solid. It needed to hold on its own. Although I was working with mostly new artistes, I never had any trouble extracting performances, as all my actors were perceptive,” says Aarif.

    Introducing the US-born-and-bred dancing sensation Gayatri Patel, the film has the debutante playing a simple but determined dance teacher, who on her path to fame changes course to motivate a group of underprivileged kids.

    Shifting base from US to Bollywood to pursue acting, Gayatri first spent time taking tips from theatre top-guns Satyadev Dubey and Makrand Deshpande, did an acting workshop with Veena Mehta and played the role of Ophelia in Neeraj Kabir‘s play Hamlet. She also did three music videos for Venus opposite Inder Kumar and Jugal Hansraj, till one day, Aarif decided to launch her as the lead in his directorial debut.

    Produced by Dr Arvind Patel, the film co-stars Ajay Chaudhary, Aqib Afzaal, Sugandha Garg, Asif Basra, Abhaas Yadav, Nikuunj Padaya, Paras Arora and Anjan Srivastav.

    “I‘ll never forget Let‘s Dance, it‘s imbedded in my soul. Every shot, every scene, every creative decision of mine,” adds an excited Aarif.

  • Disney, NBC Universal and Hearst Corp mull a JV

    MUMBAI: Disney, NBC Universal and Hearst Corp. are near a deal to create a new joint venture that would house cable networks A&E, History Channel and Lifetime.

    It may be noted that Hearst, Disney and NBC already are partners on A&E and History and a handful of spin-off channels (Hearst and Disney each owns 37.5 per cent and NBC has a 25 per cent stake) while Disney and Hearst co-own Lifetime.


    The three companies would create a new company combining all the networks that would be majority owned by Hearst and Disney, with NBC getting a stake that would be less than 25 per cent, according to sources.

  • States give Hollywood a bonanza in tax breaks

    MUMBAI

    : Many states that are cutting spending on schools, roads and other basics have been lavishing hundreds of millions of dollars in incentives on Hollywood studios to lure TV and movie productions – this, despite scant evidence that taxpayers come out ahead on such deals.

    A recent survey found that states competing for projects handed out $1.8 billion in tax breaks and other advantages to the entertainment industry from 2006 through 2008.


    Several states have even sweetened their incentives recently or are considering doing so, for fear that if they don‘t land the next major motion picture, someone else will.


    “The industry has been able to play off North Carolina against South Carolina against Louisiana against Georgia. Louisiana raises its incentives, and it puts pressure on South Carolina, North Carolina and other states to do likewise,” said Bob Orr, a former North Carolina Supreme Court justice who heads an anti-incentives group called the North Carolina Institute for Constitutional Law.


    Some states argue that the tax breaks pay for themselves in revenue. Many others contend that even if tax revenue takes a hit, the film industry boosts their economies with an infusion of cash and jobs.

  • Computer animation films peek

    MUMBAI: Planet 51 a forthcoming computer-animated movie about an astronaut who discovers happy green people, has game maker Sega and HarperCollins signed up as promotional partners. Hollywood stars (Dwayne Johnson, Jessica Biel) lend their vocal talents.

    Computer animation, once one of the most isolated corners of Hollywood, is rapidly becoming one of the most crowded. With the cost of computer animation coming down because of advances in technology and soaring box office receipts for family films, a broad range of new animation players are entering the multiplex.


    In 2009 14 animated movies – most of them computer-generated – will have a wide release, compared with 8 such films in 2005. Pictures from independent producers like Imagi Studios, which has “Astro Boy” lined up for an October release, are competing with the likes of “Up,” from Pixar, and “Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs,” set for release on July 1 by 20th Century Fox. Sony‘s own computer-animated movie, “Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs,” is scheduled to open on Sept. 18.

  • Jean-Luc Godard to film holocaust tale

    MUMBAI: Jean-Luc Godard, the icon of the French New Wave has been toiling away on “Le socialisme,” a political story that could be ready by this year.

    It is now being rumoured that he‘s looking at The Lost: A Search for Six of Six Million a first-person Holocaust book from New York Times writer Daniel Mendelsohn, as a possible directing vehicle.


    The book, a best-seller when it came out three years ago, traces the writer‘s quest to determine his relatives‘ fate in the small town of Bolechow, Poland, during World War II and expands into larger questions of guilt and collective responsibility.


    Lost won a National Book Critics Circle prize in the U.S. and made a splash in France, picking up the country‘s prestigious Prix Medicis.


    Godard, who turns 79 in the fall, never has taken on the Holocaust directly, but several of his films — including the Algerian war picture Le petit soldat, the anti-war pic Les carabiniers and his most recent work, the 2004 triptych Notre musique — deal with complex political and philosophical questions.