Category: Movies

  • Dev D pockets Rs 95 million over weekend at BO

    MUMBAI: The new and contemporary Dev D, Anurag Kashyap’s latest directorial offering, has raked in Rs 95 million in its opening weekend in India.



    Producer by UTV Spotboy Motion Pictures, the small budget film was released with 450 prints in India on 6 February across various territories; it saw a very limited release in the US market.



    Says UTV Spotboy Motion Pictures CEO Vikas Bahl, “The film saw almost 76 per cent occupancy during Saturday and Sunday. Delhi witnessed roughly 90 per cent occupancy while Mumbai observed approximately 75 per cent.”








    Standing against perceived trends, Dev D has fared well not only amongst the multiplex audiences but has also notched good numbers from single screen theatre goers.


    Dev D has received extremely good response from the single screen viewers as well. Apart from Delhi and Mumbai, the film has batted quite well across single and multiple screen theatres in Pune, Bangalore, Chennai and the interiors of Punjab,” Bahl adds.

  • Dabke quits Percept Pictures as CFO

    MUMBAI: After a stint of over two years at Percept Picture Company, Milind Dabke has put in his papers as chief financial officer.



    As CFO, Dabke was also overseeing key relationships at PPC apart from handling the legal, production and commercial operations of the company.








    Dabke has played key roles in the co-production ventures of Percept with T Series and Sony Pictures. At PPC, he had overseen the production process of films like Tasveer, Aashayein and Firaaq.

  • Slumdog sweeps Baftas with 7 awards

    MUMBAI: Pacing up to set new records for itself, Academy Award winner Danny Boyle’s Slumdog Millionaire has bagged seven top honours at the British Film Academy Awards (Bafta) after being nominated in 11 categories.

    At the Bafta, the rags-to-riches story not only won Boyle the best director award, but also brought India’s coveted musician A R Rehman the award for best music. The other Indian to sweep a Bafta Award this year for Slumdog was Resul Pookutty for sound mixing.


    Also, apart from winning the best film title, the Mumbai-based story further notched top honours screenplay (by Simon Beufoy), editing and cinematography.








    Slumdog Millionaire tells the story of a young, uneducated man from the slums of Mumbai who appears on the Indian version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (Kaun Banega Crorepati– Hindi version) and exceeds people‘s expectations, arousing the suspicions of the game show host and of law enforcement officials.


    Meanwhile, Dev Patel, the lead protagonist in the film who was also nominated in the best actor category for Slumdog, lost the prize to Hollywood actor Mickey Rourke for The Wrestler.


    British actor Kate Winslet pocketed the best actress award for her role as a Nazi concentration camp guard in The Reader.


    While Spain‘s Penelope Cruz won the best supporting actress award for Vicky Cristina Barcelona, late Heath Ledger of Australia was named the best supporting actor for his outstanding role as the Joker in The Dark Knight.


    Meanwhile, Slumdog will be eyeing more honours at the Oscars where it has got 10 nominations including for best picture. The film already won the Golden Globe award for best drama.

  • PVR Pictures opts for Uday Singh as CEO

    MUMBAI: Last year it had two big success with Taare Zameen Par and Jaane tu Ya Jaane Na which notched up huge box office collections. Both were co prods with Amir Khan Productions.


    But PVR Pictures has been struggling to find its feet with films such as Contract not doing well as expected and the recently released Merein Khwabon Mein Jo Aayein getting thumbs down reviews from film critics.


    In mid 2008, it received $28 million in funding from ICICI Venture Funds Management and JP Morgan Global Special Opportunities Group in order to allow it to double its movie output to eight to 10 pictures in 2009.








    Hence, it is no surprise that the Bijli brothers have been looking for the right professional to come and steer their fortunes in building a production slate of films which will extend the PVR group‘s strength from just exhibition and distribution to production. This time they has opted for former Sony Pictures India executive vice-president –production Uday Singh who has joined PVR as its CEO.


    Singh has had almost 13 years of experience at Sony Pictures, on most occasions releasing international titles. He steered the international studio into domestic production with the Sanjay Leela Bhansali mega flick Saawariyan around a couple of years ago.


    Confirming the development, Singh said, “Yes, I will be joining PVR Pictures as CEO sometime next week and I would be handling the distribution and production aspects of the company.”


    Singh joined Sony Pictures India (then Columbia Tristar) in 1996 as managing director. Later, in early 2008, as a part of a major restructuring exercise, Singh was handed over the film production of the company.

  • Radical Media to produce opening film segment for Oscars

    MUMBAI: The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Ampas) in the US has engaged Radical Media (@radical.media) to produce the film segment that will open the 81st Academy Awards, to be telecast on 22 February.








    The piece, which will include guest appearances by some of the contemporory moviemaking icons, will look at celebrating the language of films and the spirit of moviemaking.


    It will be directed by Bennett Miller, who was earlier nominated for the Oscars in 2005 for Capote.


    The initiative will mark the second association of @radical.media with the Oscar show. In 2002, the production firm had produced the film segment that opened the 75th anniversary of the Academy Awards.


    @radical.media is a multi-platform integrated entertainment and media company that produces and distributes television, feature films, commercials, digital content and design. It has produced projects, including the Oscar winning documentary The Fog of War, the Grammy Award-winning Concert for George, the pilot episode of the Emmy and Golden Globe-winning series Mad Men and the Emmy-winning 10 Days That Unexpectedly Changed America.

  • Big Pictures bags ‘Kites’ worldwide marketing, distribution rights

    MUMBAI: Big Pictures, the motion pictures brand of Reliance Big Entertainment, has acquired the worldwide marketing and distribution rights of the Hrithik Roshan-starrer Kites. Produced by Filmkraft Productions, the film is slated for a Diwali release.


    A romantic thriller, Kites will be marketed and distributed worldwide by Reliance Big Entertainment. The company plans to utilise the strengths of all of its group companies, engaged in the media and entertainment space, to synergise benefits emanating through co-promotions, branding, joint promotions and 360 degrees marketing initiatives for the film.










    Commenting on the development, Filmkraft Productions (India) chairman Rakesh Roshan said, “This is the biggest film to come out of India ever; and a film targeted at both the Indian as well as the worldwide audiences. We believe that Reliance Big Entertainment will leverage its marketing machinery and distribution platforms to take this film to the widest possible audience the world over.”


    Kites, Filmkraft Productions‘ most ambitious project yet, is directed by Anurag Basu and also stars Mexican actress Barbara Mori, Kangana Ranaut, Nick Brown and Kabir Bedi. The music of the film has been composed by Rajesh Roshan.


    Reliance Big Entertainment president Rajesh Sawhney said, “Kites will have the widest release ever for an Indian film. Partnering with the visionary producer-director Rakesh Roshan is a landmark achievement in our endeavor to create India‘s dominant filmed entertainment company.”

  • Palador partners Blue Frog to form Cine-Club

    MUMBAI: The world cinema company Palador Pictures and Blue Frog, the night club which started in Mumbai in December 2007, have joined forces to launch ‘Palador & Blue Frog Cine-Club‘.


    As per the deal, best of Palador‘s world cinema titles will be screened on Sunday evening‘s at Blue Frog, giving a chance to all the cinephiles to relish the masterpieces.


    The club is starting with the screening of Martin Scorsese‘s music documentary Rolling Stones – Shine A Light on Sunday, 8 February at 8 pm at Blue Frog.









    Palador Pictures founder and MD Gautam Shiknis said, “This is going to be a unique experience for all the cine lovers in the city. Palador is an integrated media enterprise that spans production, content acquisition, programming and distribution in the areas of film, publishing and Internet and has always worked on quality than quantity. The alliance with Blue Frog is a tastefully designed initiative keeping in mind the club‘s existing client?le giving them taste of World Cinema. What better movie to open with than Shine A Light.”


    Forthcoming movies in the coming weeks will be In the Mood for Love, Down by Law, Coffee & Cigarettes among others.

  • Film Fest on disability issues commences in capital

    NEW DELHI: It is necessary to create awareness about the rights of the differently enabled and to treat them as members of the mainstream society if they are to contribute their bit to nation-building.


    This sentiment was expressed by most speakers who addressed the inauguration of the 6th We Care Film Festival on disability issues, which opened in the capital this morning.


    The four-day festival with 29 films from six countries including India has been organised by the National Trust and the non-governmental organisation Brotherhood in collaboration with the United Nations Information Centre (UNIC), New Delhi, Oxfam India and the Asian Academy of Film and Television at Siri Fort Auditorium-2.


    Children‘s Film Society India chairperson Nafisa Ali said that it was most important that the differently enabled get support from their families, the government and non-governmental institutions. She said life was the most important gift of God and humans should ‘join and celebrate this‘ by making a change.


    She stated that the government should act more aggressively and there should be political will. As an example, she said films for children screened by CFSI had been made free of charge because of the initiative taken by then Information and Broadcasting Minister Priyaranjan Dasmunsi. She further said that the CFSI was now showing films that were enabled for the hearing or visual impaired.


    Shalini Dewan, director of the UN Information Centre, said the world body was marking sixty years of Universal Declaration of Human Rights and one year of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD) which was passed on 3 May last year. She said the aim should be to give equal rights to all and not discriminate those who were differently enabled.


    She therefore said while it was important to provide amenities like opportunities, wheelchairs and hearing aids etc., it was equally important to show meaningful films that sent the correct messages and created awareness about the rights of the differently enabled. Noting that the festival had films from different countries, she said they would be judged on not only artistic merit but also as a starting point to start a movement for awareness.


    Kunal Verma, director of marketing and communication in Oxfam India, said the marginalisation of the differently enabled has to end and a change has to be brought about in the mindsets of the people by ‘bringing down mental barbed wires‘.








    The Festival showcases films which portray people with disabilities as role models living life with dignity and independence. Besides the Inaugural film from Manipur, there will be premier of films from Unites States and Philippines and also screening of documentaries from United Kingdom, Spain, and Israel and from various parts of India – all highlighting the positive contribution of people with disabilities to society.


    The festival aims to reach out to children, college students and people working in the corporate sector with the message of inclusion – that people with disabilities can be part and parcel of the country‘s economic and social growth. Research shows that in most countries, the majority of children with disabilities do not know any disabled adults and, consequently, many have a difficult time in imagining their future. This film festival is an opportunity for children with disabilities to observe adults with disabilities undertaking a wide variety of activities and leading a dignified and independent life. This film festival, in effect, will give an opportunity to children with disability to imagine their future and will introduce positive role models.


    22 out of 29 documentaries have been especially made for the festival by the filmmakers, students of Mass Communication, Journalism and filmmaking institutions from India and abroad. The festival also has documentaries from various parts of India like Delhi, Mumbai, Manipur, Kolkata, Chandigarh, Pune, Bangalore, Kerala etc in all the competitive categories – up to one minute, five minutes, 30 minutes and 60 minutes.

  • 10 semifinalists in Academy, MTV’s Oscar Correspondent Contest

    MUMBAI: The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Ampas) in the US and mtvU, which is the music broadcaster‘s college network, have announced that ten teams of college journalists are semifinalists in the first Oscar Correspondent Contest.


    Each contestant is vying for a position on the red carpet at the 81st Academy Awards in Los Angeles on 22 February 2009.








    Video entries from the semifinalist teams are posted online where students and other viewers can vote for their favorite college journalists until 6 February.


    On 9 February the three teams with the most online votes, and as agreed upon by the Academy and mtvU, will advance to the final round of competition, with online voting from 9-20 February. All three finalist teams will be flown to Los Angeles to cover Academy Awards pre-events, including the Animated Feature Symposium, Foreign Language Film Award Nominees Symposium, the Makeup Artist and Hairstylist Symposium and the Governors Ball preview.


    The Grand Prize team will be revealed on 20 February at an Academy press conference, and awarded a spot on the red carpet for the 81st Academy Awards arrivals as well as credentials for access to backstage press rooms. The two other teams will receive bleacher seats along the red carpet and admission to an Oscar viewing party.


    The ten semi-finalist teams were selected by the Academy and mtvU from videos submitted for the competition. These entries were judged based on equally weighted criteria including originality, creativity, and by which entries were most compelling. The competition was open to teams of two college students, one anchor and one videographer, residing in the United States.

  • Court blocks bid to stop Sag, AMPTP talks

    MUMBAI: Infighting within the Screen Actors Guild (Sag) in the US has finally led to court proceedings.


    The petition that had been filed by Sag president Alan Rosenberg to prevent a newly appointed task force from taking over negotiations for a contract between the union and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP) has been rejected.









    Rosenberg, along with three other union board members – Anne-Marie Johnson, Diane Ladd and Kent McCord moved the court action against the union and the 41 members of the national board who voted to oust the union’s executive director and chief negotiator last month.


    The court held that the notice and application for the injunction, as well as the underlying complaint, were procedurally defective and refused to issue the injunction at this time.


    The Plaintiffs’ counsel stated in court that they intend to amend their documents and notice a new hearing for 5 February, 2009.


    As a result, Sag and the AMPTP have decided to postpone further negotiations to a later date.