Category: Movies

  • Onir to release I Am Meghna in Kashmir, plans film workshops

    MUMBAI: Undeterred by the cancellation of Lamhaa in Kashmir recently, Onir, best known for his films like My Brother… Nikhil (2005) Bas Ek Pal and Sorry Bhai! is going ahead to release his film I Am Meghna in Kashmir shortly.


    I Am Meghna, which centres around the plight of Kashmir pandits who have to leave their homes in the middle of the night and restart their lives elsewhere, has been backed by several Kashmiris who have invested financially and emotionally.


    So much is the director fond of Kashmiris that he and his Kashmiri actor-friend Sanjay Suri have planned to go to Srinagar every year to conduct three-month workshops for young students that will expose them to cinema filmmaking techniques and the world outside.


    Meanwhile, Onir‘s first script Sabh has been picked up by the NFDC for the Screenwriters Lab 2010, the first of which would be held at Locarno from 6 to 11 August.
     

  • PVR taps Reliance Big Pictures COO to head its motion film biz

    BANGALORE: PVR Pictures has tapped a senior Reliance Big Pictures and BigFlix executive to head its operations.


    Kamal Gianchandani, COO at Reliance Big Pictures and BigFlix, has rejoined PVR Pictures as president. He will be based out of Mumbai and will lead the entire operations of PVR Pictures.


    Says PVR Chairman and Managing Directtor Ajay Bijli, “In his role at PVR Pictures, Kamal will build on the existing capabilities and strengthen our Motion Picture business; his experience will be of tremendous value to our organisation and in delivering our business objectives.”


    Gianchandani has spent his 15-year career in a range of general management, new media, film financing, co-production, distribution, licensing, syndication, film exhibition and multiplex operations positions.


    Prior to his current responsibilities at PVR Pictures, he was with Reliance Big Pictures from 2006 as COO with end-to-end responsibility of the company’s theatrical distribution and licensing business. Under his stewardship, the company acquired and distributed some of the biggest Indian hits of recent times including the 3 Idiots.


    Gianchandani is also credited with setting up and managing the company’s syndication arm successfully. In addition, as COO, BigFlix, his leadership was marked by inception and bolstering of the company’s online mail-order movie rental service as also a movie streaming portal i.e. Bigflix.com, a video portal for Indian movies and entertainment content.
     

  • DIFF and Cairo Fest to strengthen Arab film industry

    MUMBAI: The Dubai International Film Festival (DIFF) has alligned with the Cairo International Film Festival to further strengthen the Arab film industry.


    Basically aimed at lending momentum to regional film production, DIFF will partner the Cairo Film Festival through a collaboration of co-production markets of the two festivals.


    DIFF‘s successful co-production market, Dubai Film Connection (DFC) – established in 2007 will partner with the newly formed Cairo Film Connection to provide Arab filmmakers access to potential financial and infrastructure support as well as valuable industry connections.


    With the new partnership, filmmakers can apply to both DFC and Cairo Film Connection for support in realizing their film projects. DIFF will award a selected project from Cairo Film Connection and invite the selected filmmaker to attend DIFF to explore further funding opportunities there through meetings with established industry players who attend the festival.


    The Dubai Film Connection offers directors of Arab origin more than US$120,000 in prize money and invaluable industry connections. The co-production market also matches the short-listed director/producer teams with specialists in film production, sales, distribution and funding to further their projects.


    The seventh edition of Dubai International Film Festival 2010 will be held from 12 to 19 December.
     

  • Golden Apricot film fest ends on a rosy note

    MUMBAI: The Golden Apricot International Film Festival ended in Armenian capital Yerevan on Sunday.


    The festival, that was held from 11 to 18 July, had as many as 500 applications from around the world. 


    In the end, a total of 120 of these applications were selected for shows, including 45 films for participation on a competitive basis during the festival held July 11-18. Competion was held in three sections, with a five-member panel of international judges deciding which films to award prizes.


    Turkish director Reha Erdem annexed the top award for his film Kosmos in the international feature film competition.


    Russian director Pavel Kostomarov‘s film Together won an award for the Best International Documentary and in the Armenian Panorama Competition in which the prize-winning film was The Last Tightrope Performer in Armenia made by Arman Yeritsyan and Inna Sahakyan.


    The FIPRESCI (International Federation of Film Critics) Jury Award went to Jasmila Zbanic for the film On the Path. The Ecumenical Jury Award was given to Suren Babayan for his film Don‘t Look in the Mirror.


    The film festival was held with the support of the Ministry of Culture of Armenia.
     

  • RGV set to launch Department based on encounter cops

    MUMBAI: Giving the horror genre a push with both versions of Phoonk failing at the box-office, Ram Gopal Varma is back to doing films on the crime sector.


    The director, who made films like Company that was loosely based on Indian mafia organisation D-Company, is all set to make his next film Department that will be based on the lives of encounter cops Daya Nayak and Pradeep Sawant.


    Though the subject of the film will be the relationship between the police and the underwold, in Department the portrayal will be in a realistic manner. The film will deal with the forming of the encounter sqad and will follow the lives of the encounter cops and their friendship and rivalries.


    Forming the cast of the film would be Sanjay Dutt who had last worked with the director in Daud and Abhishek Bachchan. However, the selection of an actor who would portray the character of the current Director General of Police of Mumbai, D Sivanathan, is still underway.
     

  • South Asian lesbian film to get digital worldwide release

    NEW DELHI: The controversial film ‘When Kiran met Karen’ by America-based Manan Singh Katohora, which has failed to get an Indian release more than two years after its completion because of its controversial theme of lesbianism, has become the first South Asian lesbian film to get digital worldwide release barring India.


    This controversial cross-cultural film has already been screened at 52 International Film Festivals after its debut screening in Germany at the 18th Annual Verzaubert International Queer Film Festival.


    Written, produced and directed by Manan Singh Katohora, the film explores the theme of lesbianism and pushes the boundaries of a taboo romance within the South Asian culture. It stars Samrat Chakrabarti, Chriselle Almeida, Kelli Holsopple, Sonny Suri, Manish Dayal, Shetal Shah, Iggy Ignatius, and Emmy-nominated Tirlok Malik who is himself an eminent producer-director-actor. The film’s Producer/Cinematographer is Punit Chhabra while the Executive Producers are Iggy Ignatius and Mano Kesavan. The film features the music of Deadbeat Darling and Katherine Almeida.


    The story is about a famous Bollywood actress, Kiran, who meets a lesbian journalist, Karen – 3 days before the release of her international film – ‘A Himalayan Love Story‘.


    The film can be seen online on https://dingora. com/when- kiran-met- karen. The idea for Dingora came to Pankaj Sikka, a resident of the US, when he drove for eight hours to catch Ram Gopal Varma‘s Company, because no theatre close to him was showing it. This made him realise that only certain pockets of the NRI market were privileged to catch their favourite desi actor in all his glory.


    A surprisingly large number of non resident Indian Hindi film fans have no access to Bollywood, he says, adding that “Dingora is a combination of various technologies. Google helped us in mapping and we have tied up with Microsoft.”


    He also said there is no chance of the film being stolen while being streamed. Dingora mainly focuses on reaching 30 million NRIs. Big releases reach where the concentration of Indians is large — New York, Chicago.


    The film is also the first Indian-American film to be screened at the Pennsylvania State University in a screening organised by the Coalition of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Ally (LGBTA) Graduate Students in the One in Ten film festival. It also featured in the Delray Beach Film Festival, Florida, in May 2009 last year.
     

  • Umesh Kulkarni’s The Well to close London Film Fest

    MUMBAI: It‘s a rare honour for Indian cinema this year at the first annual London Indian Film Festival.


    While Dibakar Banerjee‘s Love, Sex aur Dhoka premiered on the opening night of the festival, Umesh Kulkarni‘s The Well (Vihir) will close the festival on 20 July.


    Producer and lead star of the film Girish Kulkarni, who will grace the Red Carpet for the festival‘s closing film, will be joined by an array of luminaries spanning industry stalwarts, VIPs and film celebrities.


    The Well has been feted globally following its World Premiere at the Berlin Film Festival. Stunningly filmed amongst the grandeur of the rolling Indian plains, the film is a moving ‘coming of age‘ tale that boldly captures the very essence of adolescence and the moments that define it.


    It tells the story of young Sameer as he leaves the city with his parents to visit their family in the countryside, who are preparing for a wedding. Sameer, however, has only one aim, to meet his cousin and best friend Nachiket.


    The two adolescent boys are inseparable and Sameer looks up to his older, free thinking cousin, who teaches him many truths as they stand at the cross-roads of their lives, with the innocence of childhood slipping away. This change is echoed by the fate of Sameer‘s female cousin, who is being forced into a marriage for the family‘s petty gains. Nachiket becomes increasingly distraught by this marriage, until he can take it no longer, leading to an action that will change Sameer‘s young life forever.


    India is the largest film producing country in the world, creating up to 1,000 films a year out stripping that of Hollywood. But apart from mainstream Bollywood, very few of such films are seen in the UK.


    Says Festival Director Cary Rajinder Sawhney, “We have been delighted with the response we have received thus far at the festival. UK is the largest consumer of Bollywood outside of India and we were fully aware of its relevance and significance here. Following the feedback we have received on the festival which has showcased a carefully selected repertoire of parallel Indian cinema, it‘s great to see the increasing appetite for independent Indian films and we do hope in time great movies such as The Well will be screened and talked about more broadly in the UK.”

  • Artificial Eye bags Peepli Live for UK distribution

    MUMBAI: Artificial Eye has bagged the distribution rights of Peepli Live, a farcical contemporary comedy set in rural India, for UK.


    The film, written and directed by Anusha Rizvi and produced by Aamir Khan and Kiran Rao along with Ronnie Screwvala, tells the story of an impoverished farmer who learns of a government scheme to aid the families of indebted farmers if they commit suicide and, thus, decides on a very drastic plan to save his land from re-possession.


    The film stars Khan along with Raghubir Yadav, television presenter Malaika Shenoy, Shalini Vatsa, Farrukh Jaffer, Nawazuddin Siddiqui and Vishal Sharma.


    Peepli Live was the first Indian film to release in the World Cinema competitive section at the Sundance Film Festival earlier this year before it was screened at this year‘s Berlin International Film Festival.


    Artificial Eye, a DVD distributor in the US and UK, specialises in foreign-language film distribution for the UK market.
     

  • Allan Amin’s stunt school in Mumbai soon

    MUMBAI: Action director Allan Amin is in talks with US-based Taurus Academy to open a stunt in the city.


    It is said that Taurus Stunt Academy, in its intention to branch out in India, approached Amin to set up a stunt school in Mumbai for them. “I think it‘s a great idea because they have the best stunt coordinators in the world,” avers Amin.


    Amin is now on the lookout for big names in the film industry who could be brand ambassadors of the Academy for which he has zeroed in on Sunil Shetty, Akshay Kumar and South star Akkineni Nagarjuna. All the three have evinced their interest of being involved with the upcoming Academy.


    Amin, who is presently working on the remake of Italian Job, was nominated for the Taurus World Stunts Awards for Dhoom 2 in 2006.

  • Icahn Lionsgate truce ends!

    MUMBAI: Though the temporary truce between Carl Icahn and Lionsgate lapsed yesterday, they were in the mood for further compromise. There was no public word from either party on their next moves. But it seems that the current ceasefire would either be extended till Tuesday without comment.


    The temporary truce could also provide a prelude to a final settlement between Icahn and Lionsgate, to include board representation and seats, including one for his son, Brett Icahn, and possibly Mark Cuban who earlier tendered a 5 per cent stake in Lionsgate to Carl Icahn.


    Icahn, who agreed to back off on his hostile bid for control of Vancouver-based Lionsgate ten days ago to jointly work on M&A deals, could renew hostilities by launching a new tender offer and by putting up a slate of directors for a proxy fight at the studio‘s upcoming shareholder meeting.


    Icahn, who has nearly 38 per cent stake in Lionsgate since 9 July has lent an ear to senior management‘s case for possible acquisitions including a run at an ailing MGM now being auctioned off.