Category: Movies

  • Sofia Coppola bags Golden Lion for Somewhere

    MUMBAI: After Mira Nair bagged the Golden Lion for Monsoon Wedding at the Venice Film Festival in 2001, Sofia Coppola has bagged the same for her film Somewhere this year. Golden Lion is presented as a best film award.


    In 2003, Coppola became only the third woman to be nominated for an Academy Award for directing Lost in Translation that starred Bill Murray. Her other films include The Virgin Suicide and Marie Antoinette. 


    Spain‘s Alex de la Iglesia picked up the Silver Lion for Best Director for A Sad Trumpet Ballad. The film also nabbed the best screenplay award.


    Polish director Jerzy Skolimowski‘s political thriller Essential Killing received the Special Jury Prize.

  • Warner Bros to distribute Ramayana -The Epic

    MUMBAI: Warner Bros. India will distribute Maya Digital Media‘s animated feature Ramayana – The Epic.


    The film will be released in Hindi, Tamil and Telugu on 15 October.


    The film is the directorial debut of Chetan Desai and features voiceovers by Bollywood stars Manoj Bajpayee, Juhi Chawla and Ashutosh Rana for Ram, Sita and Raavan respectively.


    Said Warner Bros Pictures India deputy managing director Denzil Dias, “Chetan Desai‘s version of this epic has taken animation films in India to the next level and one has to see it to believe it. We are delighted to be associated with this project.”


    Added Maya Digital Media chairman and managing director Ketan Mehta, “We want to take the most popular Indian story to a global audience. Warner Bros, with its reach and expertise, provides the ideal platform to launch this new avatar of Ramayana, where the past meets the future and mythology meets technology. It‘s the story of the original Indian superhero.”


    Ramayana will be the second attempt by a Hollywood studio in the area of Indian animated feature content, after Walt Disney India‘s co-production with Yash Raj Films‘ Roadside Romeo.
     

  • Udaan and Paan Singh Tomar to showcase in London Film Festival

    MUMBAI: The London Film Festival, scheduled to be held between 13 to 28 October, will showcase UTV Motion Pictures‘ Udaan and the soon-to-be-released Paan Singh Tomar.


    While Udaan will be showcased in the UK market for the first time since its release in June last, Paan Singh Tomar will have its world premiere at this festival.


    Besides Udaan and Paan Singh Tomar other Indian films that will be showcased at the festival include Autumn (Harud), I Am Kalam, I Am Sindhutai Sapkal (Mee Sindhutai Sapkal) and Just Another Love Story (Aarekti Premer Golpo).


    Says UTV Senior Vice President- International Distribution and Syndication, Motion Pictures Amrita Pandey, “It‘s a very proud moment for us to have two of our films out of the seven Indian films that will be showcased at the most prestigious film festival in the UK this time. Our films have been doing well with the audiences at large, where London as a market has always been extremely encouraging, considering the strong and passionate movie watching crowd who are popularly known to appreciate good cinema. “


    Udaan was officially selected to compete in the Un Certain Regard (A Certain Look) category at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival and was the first Indian film to be part of Cannes‘s official section in seven years. The film also won awards at one of world‘s largest children‘s film festivals, Giffoni Film Festival in Italy, namely, the Audience Award and Best Music Score.

  • Guild recommends Balaji movie for IFFI 2010

    MUMBAI: The Film and Television Producers Guild of India Ltd. that has been entrusted by the Directorate of Film Festivals with the task of recommending 10 films for the Panorama Section of the International Film Festival of India (IFFI 2010), has recommended Milan Luthria‘s Once Upon a Time In Mumbaai for the said section.


    Commented Luthria, “When it rains, it pours! After an outstanding performance at the turnstiles, the film is now heading for IFFI and hopefully, will grab major awards. It is definitely turning out to be a major milestone for me!”
    The movie, produced by Balaji Telefilms, turned out to be a hit at the box office.
     

  • I am Kalam wins two international awards

    MUMBAI: Debutant filmmaker Nila Madhab Panda‘s I am Kalam has won the Best Feature Film Award at the Lucas International Film Festival in Germany.


    The movie has also won the Don Quixote Prize of the International Federation of Ciné-Clubs (FICC) awards.


    Set in Rajasthan, I am Kalam relates the story of Chhotu‘s hunger for education, something which he cannot aspire to have because of his family‘s poverty-stricken status.


    Through an engaging, entertaining and fast-paced narrative, the film takes the viewer to the world of Chhotu, who at one point starts referring himself as Kalam after watching ex-president APJ Kalam speak about how he got his education fighting several odds on TV.


    Naming himself as Kalam has more than a symbolic meaning for Chhotu (a name thrust upon him by people at the Dhaba, who, like most of us, care two hoots for the identity of little kids working at eateries, shops and other establishments, and insensitively calling all of them as ‘Chhotu‘ (the small one).


    Chhotu‘s life takes an unexpected turn as he befriends Prince Ranvijay, whose father, an erstwhile “king” of a princely state, is running a heritage hotel at his ancestral palace across the street, where Chhotu goes to deliver tea to the guests. What follows forms the crux of the film.


    A sensitive film on the plight of the underprivileged, I am Kalam is also about how the privileged class can play a role in the uplift of the less-privileged millions.


    Panda, who has made over 60 short films, documentaries and television drama for Doordarshan, the BBC, Discovery Channel, NGC and private producers across the globe, says, “I believe in telling stories that have a universal appeal and a sense of purpose to the art that I create. I believe that the more local you get, the more global your access will be; and so here is one such local story.”


    In all my films, I have explored the people‘s basic needs and problem of the marginalized. I find such stories purposeful and exciting. I am also interested in making cinema for children and family; a genre that is much neglected in world cinema and more specifically in Asia.”


    The film‘s cast that has Delhi slum boy Harsh Mayar in the title also includes veteran actor Gulshan Grover (as Bhati the dhaba owner), child actor Hussan Saad of Delhi 6 fame (as Prince Ranvijay), French actress Beatrice Ordeix, FTII-trained Pitobash Tripathy and Meena Mir.

  • Chattisgarh govt exempts entertainment tax for tickets up to Rs 50

    MUMBAI: In an initiative to save the film trade from rampant piracy and multiple taxes at various levels, the government of Chattisgarh has exempted all cinema halls from payment of entertainment tax on tickets priced up to Rs 50.


    The move will result in a significant rise in the final net collections of cinema halls despite the rate of admission being reduced to Rs 50.


    Chattisgarh was among the first states to exempt cinemas from payment of taxes in towns with population up to 25, 000. This was further extended to towns of population up to one 100,000


    State governments must realise that the cinema exhibition trade will die a miserable death if similar relief is not provided, since in today‘s times, films are available on satellite TV, cable TV, internet and pirated DVDs almost free that makes it tough for cinema halls to survive by paying entertainment and other taxes.

  • Mumbai fest to include Japanese film festival

    MUMBAI: To pay tribute to eight decades of Japanese cinema with a special section in its eight-day programme, the 12th Mumbai Film Festival (MFF) has collaborated with the Japanese consulate in Mumbai and The Japan Foundation to organize a film festival that will show 44 films, both classic and contemporary.


    The films cover eight decades of Japanese cinema from the early 1930s till date with a variety of genres and styles like traditional family drama, samurai epic and yakuza thriller amongst others.


    Some of the other films to be screened at the fest are Akira Kurosawa‘s No Regrets For Our Youth and Ran, Masaki Kobayashi‘s three-part magnum opus The Human Condition, Mikio Naruse‘s When A Woman Ascends The Stairs and also works of acknowledged masters like Yasujiro Ozu and Kenji Mizoguchi apart from recent films by Shuji Terayama and Takashi Miike.


    The section will be inaugurated with the all-India premiere of veteran director Yoji Yamada‘s melodrama, About Her Brother (2010). Popular Japanese contemporary director Takashi Koizumi and several international film historians and scholars are expected to attend the festival.

  • Toy Story 3 in $ 1 billion grossing films

    MUMBAI: Pixar‘s Toy Story 3 is expected to cross the $1 billion mark, that will make Disney the first company to field two $1 billion blockbusters in the same year.


    Earlier this year, Disney‘s Alice In Wonderland also crossed the mark and currently stands in the fifth place in the all-time worldwide rankings with $1.024 billion. 


    Disney‘s Pirates Of The Caribbean: Dead Man‘s Chest ranks fourth with $1.066 billion.


    On the North American domestic box-office all-time chart, Toy Story 3 ranks ninth with $404.6 million. Latin America contributed $138 million. The film also happens to be the most successful UK release in Disney history, currently standing as the fourth biggest title with $102.4 million in box-office receipts to date.


    In Japan, Toy Story 3 has taken in $111.2 million and spent five consecutive weeks as the No. 1 film.


    With Toy Story 3 making its way into the select circle of $1 billion grossing films, three of the seven entries in that exclusive club were made in 3D.


    Fox‘s Avatar tops the list with a gross of $2.74 billion.

  • Harold Gould departs for heavenly abode

    MUMBAI: Easily recognisable character actor in TV, films and theater, Harold Gould died of prostate cancer on 11 September. He was 86.


    Gould, best known for playing Marty Morgenstern, father of the title character in the 1970s sitcom Rhoda, is also remembered playing the con man Kid Twist in the The Sting.


    Gould was equally comfortable in comedy and drama. Starting in the early ‘60s, he appeared in episodes of such TV classics as The Twilight Zone, The Untouchables, Perry Mason, Mr. Ed, Get Smart, The Fugitive, Hogan‘s Heroes, I Dream of Jeannie, Columbo, The Love Boat and Gunsmoke.


    His final screen role was in an episode of the final season of Nip/Tuck that aired in February last.


    His film career included memorable turns in Woody Allen‘s Love and Death that featured Gould in a riotous pistol duel with a hapless Allen in Russia and Mel Brooks‘ Silent Movie.
     

  • PVR mulls acquisition of cinema chain

    MUMBAI: Multiplex operator PVR Ltd is evaluating proposals to acquire a cinema chain to speed up its growth.


    PVR CEO Pramod Arora has officially stated that his company was “evaluating proposals.” The talks were at an exploratory stage and “nothing concrete” had happened. 


    Arora also clarified that talks with DT Cinemas, owned by India‘s top realtor DLF, have yet not been revived yet.


    Earlier this year, PVR and DT Cinemas had mutually agreed to end a deal struck in November to buy DLF‘s cinema exhibition business.