Category: Movies

  • Avatar is biggest worldwide release ever

    MUMBAI: Sources at Twentieth Century Fox have confirmed that Avatar had overtaken James Cameron‘s earlier film Titanic to become the biggest worldwide release of all time.


    By the end of Monday, the film reached $1.859 billion overtaking Titanic‘s $1.843billion mark.


    The next target that the film aims to achieve now is to become the first release ever to cross $2 billion. The international running total stands at $1.303 billion while that of the US has reached $554.9 million.


    The global theatrical run continues in 122 countries around the world on more than 16,000 screens. Approximately 72 per cent of the global box-office or $1.35 billion has come from 3D screens.


    In a statement a Fox spokesperson said, “We are deeply gratified that so many millions of people around the globe have embraced Avatar. The success, results from the efforts of literally thousands of people, who, over the course of several years, worked to bring James Cameron‘s vision of Pandora to life.”
     

  • Film exports from Korean drop in 2009

    MUMBAI: According to new data from the Korean Film Council (KOFIC), film exports from Korea fell by 32.9 per cent in 2009.


    Sales companies sold 279 films to 41 countries for a total of $14.1million (KRW16.4bn) last year. In 2008, 354 films sold to the same number of countries for a total of $21million.


    KOFIC‘s study attributes the fall to the slump in local production during 2007 and 2008, as well as the indirect effects of the global financial crisis.


    Asia still accounts for the majority of sales, taking up 72.43 per cent, up from 61.67% year-on-year with Europe taking 16.8 per cent, down from 42.7 per cent and North America buying 6.31 per cent, down from 71.6 per cent.


    While Japanese buyers accounted for 42.1 per cent of the total export, sales to China rose sharply 78.4 per cent to $1million. The figure is similar to that of sales to the much smaller market of Taiwan that also went up by 22.9 to $1 million.


    The government body also noted upon international business developments besides the export of completed films.
     

  • Tim Burton named Cannes jury president

    MUMBAI: Director Tim Burton has been named as president of the jury for the 63rd Cannes Film Festival.


    Burton follows in the footsteps of recent Cannes jury presidents as Wong Kar-wai, Stephen Frears, Sean Penn and actress Isabelle Huppert, who led the jury last year.


    After accepting the appointment from Cannes chiefs Gilles Jacob and Thierry Fremaux, Burton said, “After spending my early life watching triple features and 48-hour horror movie marathons, I‘m finally ready for this. 


    “It‘s a great honour and I look forward, with my fellow jurors, to watching some great films from around the world. When you think of Cannes, you think of world cinema. And as films have always been like dreams to me, this is a dream come true.”


    Added Cannes festival president Jacob, “It‘s the first time an artist whose origins are in animation will preside over the jury of the Festival de Cannes. A filmmaker with a heart of gold and silver hands, Tim Burton is first and foremost a poet.


    “He‘s a magician of visual delights who turns the screen into a fairy wonder. We hope his sweet madness and gothic humour will pervade the Croisette, bringing Christmas to all. Christmas and Halloween.”


    Burton was a member of the main jury under Isabelle Adjani in 1997. His feature Ed Wood screened at the festival in 1995. This year‘s festival runs from May 12 to 23.

  • New jury constituted for Berlinale’s international jury

    MUMBAI: Actress Renee Zellweger, Italian writer-director Francesca Comencini and veteran German actress Cornelia Froboess will be part of the international jury at the 60th Berlinale.


    Somali-born writer Nuruddin Farah; Spanish producer José Maria Morales and Chinese actress Yu Nan will also sit on this year‘s jury, festival director Dieter Kosslick announced.
    Herzog‘s appointment was announced last November.


    Meanwhile, this year‘s Amnesty International Prizein the UK will be decided by a three-person jury composed of German actress Barbara Sukowa; documentary filmmaker Pagonis Pagonakis and Chloe Baird-Murray of Amnesty International. They will choose from films nominated from the competition, panorama and forum. Last year, the prize went to Hans-Christian Schmid‘s political drama Storm .


    It has also been announced that veteran German filmmaker Michael Verheoven will head the three-person jury for this year‘s Best First Feature Award, which is open to debut feature films from the Panorama, Generation Kplus and 14plus sections as well as debut films from the Forum.


    Verhoeven will be joined in his deliberations by actor Ben Foster and the leading Asian film industry figure Lorna Tee.

  • Veer collects Rs 195 million in opening weekend

    MUMBAI: Salman Khan’s Veer had a mixed response, opening strongly in some pockets of the country.


    According to industry estimates, the first weekend collection of Veer totaled Rs 196 million. The film collected Rs 70 million on Friday, Rs 52.5 million on Saturday and Rs 73.5 million on Sunday.


    Said trade analyst Taran Adarsh, “On day one, the film did a 90 per cent business in single-screen theatres while the multiplexes witnessed around 50 to 60 per cent average through the day.”


    The film seems to have opened very well in north and central India, while in the west it received moderate response.


    Says Fun Republic COO Vishal Kapoor, “Though the film is doing average business, it is booked up to Tuesday in the afternoon and evening shows. We are keeping our fingers crossed and hope that the film does well in spite of the bad reviews.”

  • Producer Kathryn wins big at PGA Awards for Hurt Locker

    MUMBAI: The Hurt Locker took home the Darryl F. Zanuck Producer of the Year Award in the Theatrical Motion Pictures category at the 21st annual PGA Awards.


    The award was shared by producer and director Kathryn Bigelow, screenwriter Mark Boal, Nicolas Chartier and Greg Shapiro. Bigelow thanked the PGA, saying “no other group of filmmakers could so understand the logistical challenges of making a film — particularly a tough little war film — in the middle of the summer in the Middle East.”


    It may be recalled that Locker has so far picked up numerous critics awards.


    But at the Golden Globes, Avatar walked off with the best drama prize, while at Saturday‘s SAG Awards, Inglourious Basterds picked up the film ensemble award, that Guild‘s equivalent of the best picture award.


    In the other film categories, Up, produced by Jonas Rivera, floated to the top in the animated category. Rivera accepted on behalf of his grandfather, who recently returned home after an illness.


    In the documentary categoy, The Cove that investigates the exploitation of dolphins, was awarded with the trophy going to Fisher Stevens and Paula DuPre Pesman.


    The PGA also feted Sony Pictures Entertainment chairman and CEO Michael Lynton and co-chairman Amy Pascal with its 2010 Milestone Award, which was introduced by Will Smith.
     

  • Lionsgate acquires North American rights of Buried

    MUMBAI: Pulling off its first pickup at Sundance, Lionsgate, acquired the North American rights of the Ryan Reynolds man-in-a-coffin thriller Buried for a sum of $ 4 million. The studio plans to release the film this year.


    Besides Loinsgate, Screen Gems and Fox Searchlight were also in race to acquire the rights.


    Rodrigo Cortes‘ thriller launched the first heated bidding war in Park City after its Saturday midnight premiere.


    The thriller aims its camera at Reynolds as he attempts to break out of a coffin, from inside the coffin for 90 minutes.
     

  • Avatar closing in on Titanic box-office record

    MUMBAI: On Saturday, Avatar overtook Titanic‘s box-office record to become the biggest film of all time at the international box-office after it grossed $107 million in the weekend.


    Still showing on approximately 11,800 screens in 111 markets, the film grossed more than $100 million for the sixth consecutive weekend and is already ahead of Titanic‘s $1.242 billion international mark by $46m.


    Combined with North American gross of $552.8 million, Avatar‘s global running total stood at $1.84 billion and if everything goes well, the film is bound to overtake Titanic‘s $1.842 billion to become the biggest worldwide release in history.


    In another spectacular result in China, the film added $11.7 million from 1,013 screens to cross $100 million, despite losing 1,500 2D screens last week to Confucius. The running total stands at an extraordinary $102.3 million after three weeks.


    In its second weekend in Italy, Avatar added $13.6 million for $ 37.8 million. With France already on $123 million, several other territories are closing in on the $100 million mark. The film generated a further $8.9 million in Germany, $8 million in the UK and $3.9 million in Russia.


    Avatar has become the first non-South Korean film to cross 10 million admissions and is now the biggest film of all time in Spain, Australia, Hong Kong and Chile having previously attained the distinction in China and Russia.

  • Sandra Bullock, Jeff Bridges lead SAG acting honours

    MUMBAI: Inglourious Basterds won the SAG cast performance award as Jeff Bridges and Sandra Bullock took the lead individual acting honours at the body‘s 16th annual awards in Los Angeles on 23 January.


    Both Bridges and Bullock cemented their status as Academy Award front runners.


    While Bridges won for his performance in Crazy Heart, Bullock won for the box-office smash The Blind Side.


    Meanwhile Christoph Waltz for Inglourious Basterds and Mo‘Nique for Precious repeated their Golden Globe wins in the supporting actor category. At this stage it will take a major upset to deprive either of their Oscar come 7 March.
     

  • ‘Antaheen’ gets national award for best film, Hindi bags maximum awards

    MUMBAI: Bengali film Antaheen, directed by Aniruddha Roy Chowdhury, got the best feature film while AFSPA 1958 by Haabam Paban Kumar was named the best non-feature film for 2008.


    Bala, who directed the Tamil film Naam Kadauul, was named best director while Upendra Limaye and Priyanka Chopra got the best actor and actress awards for Jogva (Marathi) and Fashion (Hindi) respectively in the 56th National Film Awards announced in Delhi. Shams Patel won the best child artiste award for the film Thanks Maa in Hindi.


    Dibakar Banerjee‘s Oye Lucky! Lucky Oye! won the most popular movie award while K M Madhusudhanam‘s Malayalam film Bioscope won a special jury award.


    The awards will be given away in March by President Pratibha Devisingh Patil.


    Hindi films continued to dominate the feature films with as many as 13 awards while Marathi films got six (five for one film Jogva by Rajeev Patil) and Bengali films got five (four for Antaheen which had also featured in the Indian Panorama at the last International Film Festival of India at Goa). Tamil films got three awards, followed by Assamese, Malayalam, and Kannada films with two each. English, Kokoborok, Tulu, and Oriya got one award each. The best film on family values award went to a bilingual English-Gujarati film Little Jijou, by Sooni Tarporevala.


    Bollywood Melodies by Ganesh Anantharaman got the award for the best book on cinema while the book “The Director’s Mind” by Ujjal Chakraborty got a special mention. Assamese critic Altaf Mazid and Manipuri critic R K Bidur Singh shared the best film critic award.


    The Indira Gandhi award for the first film of a director went to Neeraj Pandey for his gripping Hindi thriller A Wednesday while the Nargis Dutt Award for the best feature on national integration was taken by Assamese film Aai Kot Nai by Manju Borah.


    Interestingly, Roadside Romeo by Jugal Hansraj,a film produced by the Indian subsidiary of a foreign production house – Walt Disney- got an award for best animation film while Land Gold Women, a film on honour killings in the United Kingdom made by a British-based Indian, Avantika Hari, got the award for best English film.


    The Marathi film Jogva by Rajeevi Patil got five awards: best film on social values (age old social customs), actor Upendra Limaye, male playback singer Hariharan, and music direction by Ajay and Atul. Playback singer Shreya Ghoshal won the award for both ‘Jogva’ as well as Antaheen.


    Antaheen also received awards for cinematography by Avik Mukhopadhyay, and lyrics by Anindya Bannerjee and Chandranil Bhattacharya.


    Fashion also received the award for supporting actress Kangana Ranaut.


    Nandita Das‘ Firaq won two awards: editing by A Sreekar Prasad who had until now won the largest number of national awards for any single film editor, and art direction by Gautam Sen. The monumental Jodha Akbar by Ashutosh Gowarikar won awards for costume design by Neena Lulla and choreography by Chinni Prakash and Rekha Prakash. Abhishek Kapoor‘s Rock On won the Best Hindi film award as well as the supporting actor award for Arjun Rampal.


    The Feature Film Jury was headed by famed filmmaker Shaji N Karun. Other members were Roshan Taneja, HM Ramachandra, Nagma, Satyabrata Kalita, Neelakanta, Dilip Ghosh, Swapan Mullick, Sudesh Syal, SK Srivastava, Archana, B Shashi Kumar, Subhash Sehgal, Santosh Desai and Sreelekha Mukherjee. They adjudged 126 entries.


    The non-feature jury headed by Arunaraje Patil with Krishnendu Bose, Anirban Dutta, Sandeep Marwah, RV Ramani, Sarfaraz Siddiqui and Reena Mohan as members saw 99 films.


    The Jury on Best Writing on Cinema headed by Sunil Gangopadhyay, with Sudhish Pachauri and Ziya-us Salam as members considered 20 book entries and 17 critics.


    Other awards were: Jianta Bhoota in Oriya by Prashanta Nanda for environment conservation, Gubbachigalu by Abhaya Sinha as the best children’s film, Moorthy V as make-up artist for the Tamil Naam Kadauul, Govardhan for special effects in the Hindi Mumbai Meri Jaan, and the Marathi film Gandha which won awards for screenplay for Sachin Kundalkar and audiography for Pramod J Thomas.


    The other regional language awards went to: Assamese – Mon Jai by M Maniram; Bengali – Shob Charitro Kalponik by Rituparno Ghosh; Kannada – Vimukthi by P Seshadri; Malayalam – Thirakkada by Ranjith; Marathi – Harishchadrachi Factory by Paresh Mokashi; Tamil – Veranam Airam by Gautam Vasudeva Menon; Telugu – 1940 Lookagramam by Narasimha Nandi, Kokborok – Yarwng by Joseph Pulinthanath, and Tulu – Gaggara by Shivadhwaj Shetty.


    In non-features, the Best Direction Award went to Umesh Kulkarni for his work Three of Us which also received the award for Cinematography by Sharqva Badar Khan.


    Additionally, the special jury award has gone to Rajesh S Jala’s Children of the Pyre which also gets the audiography award for Mateen Ahmed.