Category: Movies

  • YRF partners SOTC and Brandinvest for Switzerland tour

    MUMBAI: Yash Raj Films (YRF) has announced an agreement with Indian travel and tourism company SOTC and Switzerland-based enterprise Brandinvest AG to offer a ‘YRF Enchanted Journey‘ in Switzerland to movie fans.


    The tour visits sites and locations in Switzerland featuring in Yash Raj Films, as well as engaging with various themes and elements seen in the studio‘s most famous films like Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge, Mohabbatein, Veer-Zaara, Chandni, Darr and Bachna Ae Haseeno.


    The agreement was signed by Yash Raj Films chairman Yash Chopra, Kuoni India & South Asia CEO and MD Zubin Karkaria, and Brandinvest AG co-owner and CEO Marco Casanova.


    “We at YRF are convinced that this very special offering in Switzerland will provide a previously unattainable opportunity to a lot of Indians and fans of our films. It is a unique entertainment product that we are bringing to the market that promises to be a showcase offering for tourists visiting Switzerland,” said Yash Chopra.

  • Likely Story in capital investment deal with Top Shelf

    MUMBAI: New York-based production company Likely Story and media entrepreneur John S Johnson have purchased a 33 per cent interest in graphic novel publisher Top Shelf Productions.


    Under the terms of the investment deal, Johnson will join the board of Top Shelf and Likely Story will get a first-look deal of all new Top Shelf publications.


    The first project due for development through Likely Story is Alex Robinson‘s Too Cool To Be Forgotten that was named one of Amazon.com‘s top ten graphic novels of the year.


    Too Cool To Be Forgotten tells of a 40-something father of two who undergoes hypnotherapy to quit smoking, only to be transported back to his teenage existence in 1985.


    Forced to relive his high school life, the man must discover whether he can make amends for his past life or will be condmened to repeat prior mistakes.


    Bregman introduced Johnson to Top Shelf partner Chris Staros several years ago and the relationship grew from there.
    Staros joined Top Shelf founder as a partner in 1997, two years after Brett Warnock founded the company. The stable of more than 200 titles includes Alan Moore‘s From Hell and The League Of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Craig Thompson‘s Blankets and Jeffrey Brown‘s Clumsy & Unlikely.


    Among other initiatives Johnson founded the philanthropic Pacific Foundation that funds innovation in the arts, environment and social justice.
     

  • PPI hires Lauren Miller as evp finance

    MUMBAI: Paramount Pictures International (PPI) has roped in Lauren Miller as executive vice-president of finance.


    Miller will be responsible for all financial aspects across Paramount‘s global international theatrical businesses and previously served in senior financial and strategic roles at Levi Strauss & Co and most recently at Warner Bros, where she was vice-president of finance at Warner Home Video International.


    “[Miller] brings over 20 years of business and financial management experience to us,” Paramount Pictures CFO Mark Badagliacca, who made the announcement with PPI president Andrew Cripps, said.


    “Her financial acumen, leadership and interpersonal skills and industry experience will be very important to our building a stronger and more robust business in 2010 and beyond.‘

  • Letters To Father Jacob scores nine Jussi nominations

    MUMBAI: Klaus Haro‘s Letters To Father Jacob (Postia Pappi Jaakobille) has bagged nine nominations, including best film and best direction at Finland‘s Jussi Awards 2009.


    The film is also Finland‘s entry for the foriegn-language Academy Awards. 


    The nominations would be announced on 2 February.
    Jorn Donner‘s The Interrogation (Kuulustelu) and JP Valeapaa‘s The Visitor (Muukalainen) both received six nominations each.


    The winners will be announced at a gala evening in Helsinki on 31 January.

  • LA critics name David Lynch film as film of decade

    MUMBAI: The Los Angeles Film Critics Association has named David Lynch‘s Mullholland Dr as the best film of the last decade.


    Announcing its choice, the organization said, “Lynch‘s film stands as both a cautionary tale and a mascot for the triumph of art and personal vision in an industry that, from where we sit, often seems actively devoted to the suppression of both.”


    Mulholland beat 189 other selected titles that were chosen by 41 LAFCA members who participated in the vote.


    In 2001, Mulholland Dr. was the group‘s runner-up for best picture that placed Todd Fields‘ In the Bedroom to second spot.


    In addition to Mulholland, LAFCA‘s top films of the decade include Paul Thomas Anderson‘s There Will Be Blood; Michael Gondry‘s Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind; Ang Lee‘s Brokeback Mountain; Joel and Ethan Coen‘s No Country for Old Men, David Fincher‘s Zodiac; Edward Yang‘s Yi Yi; Cristian Mungiu‘s 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days, Peter Jackson‘s The Lord of the Rings; Hayao Miyazaki‘s Spirited Away; Paul Greengrass‘ United 93, Alfonso Cuaron‘s Y Tu Mama Tambien and Alexander Payne‘s Sideways.

  • The Vatican talks ill of Avatar

    MUMBAI: The Vatican, through its newspaper and radio station, has criticized James Cameron‘s Avatar for flirting with the idea that worship of nature can replace religion — a notion the pope has warned against. It calls the film a simplistic and sappy tale, despite its awe-inspiring special effects.


    “Not much behind the images” was how the Vatican newspaper, L‘Osservatore Romano, summed it up in a headline.


    As the second highest-grossing film ever, Avatar is challenging the record set by Cameron‘s earlier film Titanic. Generally, the film has been critically acclaimed and is touted as a leading Oscar contender.


    Bolivia‘s first indigenous president, Evo Morales, has praised the James Cameron film for what he calls its message of saving the environment from exploitation.


    But the film has also drawn a number of critical voices. Some American conservative bloggers have decried its anti-militaristic message; a small group of people have said the movie contains racist themes.


    Vatican spokesman the Rev. Federico Lombardi said that while the movie reviews are just that — film criticism, not theological pronouncements — they do reflect Pope Benedict XVI‘s views on the dangers of turning nature into a “new divinity.”


    In a recent World Day of Peace message, the pontiff warned against any notions that equate human beings with other living things in the name of a “supposedly egalitarian vision.”


    He said such notions “open the way to a new pantheism tinged with neo-paganism, which would see the source of man‘s salvation in nature alone, understood in purely naturalistic terms.”
     

  • Oren Aviv resigns as president of Walt Disney Studios

    MUMBAI: Oren Aviv has resigned as president of Walt Disney Studios Motion Picture Production.


    The studio, in a statement, said that a successor would be named “at an appropriate time.”


    Rich Ross, who succeeded Dick Cook as chairman of Walt Disney Studios last October, is keen to build a modern transmedia empire with an emphasis on promoting properties across the corporation‘s multiple platforms.


    He was instrumental to do away with Cook‘s most trusted lieutenants. Last November Mark Zoradi, a 29-year company veteran who oversaw global marketing and most recently served as president of Walt Disney Motion Pictures Group, quit his post.


    Since Disney wound up its specialty division this month, it was time for former Miramax president Daniel Battsek to leave also.


    Among Ross‘ new appointees are president of distribution Bob Chapek, chief technology officer Greg Brandeau and studio franchise, post-production and Disneynature chief Alan Bergman.


    Until his departure Aviv had also assumed oversight of physcial production. However it is understood he took the blame for box-office failures like Bedtime Stories, Confessions Of A Shopaholic, G-Force and more recently Old Dogs.


    Said Aviv in a statement, “I have loved every day that I have been at the studio and feel incredibly privileged to have been part of a team that enriched my life for 20 years.


    “I will miss all the amazing film-makers, the many talented actors and most importantly the lifelong friends I‘ve been so lucky to work with throughout my Disney career.lone, understood in purely naturalistic terms.”

  • Stephen Norrington set to direct The Lost Patrol

    MUMBAI: Blade director Stephen Norrington has been signed on to write and direct the super natural action thriller The Lost Patrol produced by Legendary Pictures.


    Of the project, Norrington said that it takes place during the second world war, “hits all of my geek-buttons: hardware, heroes, grime, insane monsters.”


    Norrington who is directing credits that include The League Of Extraordinary Gentlemen, is currently in development on The Crow.


    Warner Bros will be releasing Legendary‘s 2010 releases like Clash Of The Titans, Due Date and Inception, with Jack The Giant Killer scheduled for 2011.

  • NZFC promotes James Thompson as marketing chief

    MUMBAI: James Thompson has been promoted to head of sales and marketing of New Zealand Film, the sales division of the NZ Film Commission (NZFC), with immediate effect.
    Thompson was previously business affairs executive in the same division.


    He replaces Kathleen Drumm, who left the organisation last September. Thompson worked closely with Drumm prior to her departure and has been doing the role in association with NZFC chief executive Graeme Mason.


    Said Thompson that he and Mason shared the view that the agency needs to become more commercial. “Our remit is to promote New Zealand, New Zealand films and New Zealand filmmakers but there is a danger of spreading ourselves too thin. By default if we get our films to as many countries as possible we are promoting New Zealand,” he added.


    He also said that the Cannes Film Festival and American Film Market will remain the two most important markets for New Zealand, followed by the Berlinale and Toronto International Film Festival.


    “I will endeavour to continue the legacy left by Kathleen and previously Lindsay Shelton and to maintain close, cordial and collegiate relations with your buyers.”


    He said that while the US market was not fundamental to the sale of all NZ Film‘s pictures it continues to influence the behaviour of other buyers.


    His first international trip in his new role of head and sales and marketing will be to Sundance, where writer/director Taika Waititi‘s Boy (pictured) is in competition. Inspired by his Oscar-nominated short Two Cars, One Night, Boy is also in competition in Berlin. It is being released locally by Transmission.

  • Eros ups Jyoti Deshpande to CEO and MD

    MUMBAI: In his bid to split his role as chairman and CEO of Eros International Plc, Kishore Lulla has handed over the role of Group CEO and managing director to Jyoti Deshpande. He will, however, continue to drive the vision and strategy of the Group as executive chairman.


    Deshpande, a director of Eros International Plc since 2006, was Group COO and commercial director before being promoted.


    Says Kishore Lulla, “Having worked closely with Jyoti since 1998 when we set up B4U as well as later in Eros, I am delighted that she has agreed to take up the responsibility of Group CEO. She has been an integral part of Eros‘s exciting growth journey and I have seen her rise through the ranks with us. This move acknowledges her significant contribution to Eros‘s success over the years and her knowledge and passion for the business. I would like to take this opportunity to wish her the very best in her new role and I am confident the Group will continue to thrive under her leadership.”


    Eros plans to raise Rs 3.50 billion via an initial public offering in India.