Tag: Beta Film

  • Beta Film adds shows to its successful Spanish series slate

    CANNES: After the tremendous success of its Spanish slate of Velvet, Grand Hotel and Embassy, Beta Film is further extending its engagement in the Iberian series sector by boarding two new Atresmedia/Bambu-shows as international co-producer. The epic historical drama Morocco – Love in the Times of War (WT), for which13 episodes have already been greenlighted, and the drugs&crime-series Farinia – Snow on the Atlantic (WT), both based on true events and characters, are set to begin shooting in spring and expected to be delivered later this year.

    Both series are the next stage of the long-standing partnership between Beta and Atresmedia. With their unique blend of emotion and suspense based in a combination of lush, often historic settings with trademark dramatic storytelling, the shows have been sold to more than 100 territories around the globe with multiple remakes in various countries.

    Beta Film’s EVP Acquisitions & Sales Christian Gockel: “With Morocco – Love in Times of War (WT) and Farinia – Snow on the Atlantic (WT), Atresmedia and Bambu have raised the bar yet again by taking the unique blend of romance and drama we know so well from outperforming predecessors like ‘Velvet’ to true-to-life characters and dramatic historic backdrops. We are extremely proud of being partners in this ongoing success story from its early days through to today.”

    Atresmedia Television director of acquisitions and sales Mercedes Gamero said, “After the international success of “Grand Hotel” and “Velvet” we at Atresmedia are very proud of this agreement with Beta Film for these projects. We are confident Series Atresmedia continues its international development as a label of quality, presenting universal stories around the world as a leading factory of Spanish content.”

    Morocco – Love in Times of War (WT) is set in 1921s war-torn Spanish Morocco where a group of young, upper class nurses seeking to find valid cause in their lives clash with their lower class but more achieved colleagues already on the scene. Arriving in the northeastern Moroccan city of Melilla, they find the city assaulted by local rebels and retreating Spanish troops in need of medical care. Among the new arrivals is 25 year-old Julia who, devoid of any nursing experience, has conned her way to Morocco search for her fiancé Andrés and brother Pedro, both missing in action. Love triangles and dramatic downstairs-upstairs conflicts abound among nurses and doctors, soldiers and locals in a lush and dramatic setting where love and life are won and lost by the whims of fate.

    The idyllic countryside of northwestern Spanish Atlantic Coast provides the backdrop of new the crime series Farinia – Snow on the Atlantic (WT). Framed by the 1990 true-to-fact razzia of almost the entire Galician drug cartel, the show depicts the dramatic transformation of simple but sly fisherman Sito into the prosperous, blood-stained, cocaine smuggler he became by providing the South American cocaine czars with the much desired entry gate to Europe for their packets of white powder resembling so much, in appearance, the locally produced flour, Farinia – Snow on the Atlantic (WT).

    Morocco – Love in Times of War (WT) and Farinia – Snow on the Atlantic (WT) will be presented to the international audience by Beta at this fall’s MIPCOM in Cannes.

  • Gomorrah: Beta Film signs deals in Africa and India

    MUNICH: The hot-selling Italian mafia series Gomorrah continues its international roll-out. Beta Film has sold the Sky Italia mega-hit to M-Net, the biggest subscription TV network in Africa, where it will be screened from 1 April 2017 on the new foreign language TV series block on M-Net 101, M-Net’s flagship channel.

    The South Africa–based, MultiChoice Group-owned TV service has only recently opened up to European productions and will broadcast the show in its original version with English subtitles as well as subtitles in local languages throughout the continent. Gomorrah, sold to the US (Sundance TV) and numerous other territories worldwide, will also travel to India’s DTH television service Tata Sky for its Tata Sky World Series service.

    Tata Sky is a joint venture between Tata Sons and 21st Century Fox. The subcontinent is traditionally dominated by a strong local film- and TV industry with difficult conditions for non-English shows.

    Sky Italia, Cattleya, Fandango and Beta Film are working on Gomorrah’s third installment, which is currently in post-production.

    In addition, Beta Film closed a multi-hour deal with the African telecommunications group Econet for its recently launched Pay TV service Kwesé TV, containing 50 German and French movies and European feature films, among them the Emma Watson thriller Colonia, Berlinale Golden Bear-winning Child’s Pose and The White Masai. All shows will be broadcast in Sub-Saharan Africa in their original language with English subtitles as well as in local languages.

  • MIPTV: Beta Film opens curtains for ‘Babylon Berlin’, ‘1993’ & ‘Professor T’

    MUMBAI: Beta Film will, at this year’s MIPTV, open its red curtains for Babylon Berlin, presenting first-look excerpts of the extraordinary event series by Tom Tykwer, Henk Handloegten and Achim von Borries.

    The writer/director trio will introduce the show during the MIPDrama Screenings in Cannes with a 20 minute glimpse of what is currently in post-production and has been sold to numerous territories throughout the world. At its International Screening, Beta will feature Professor T., an eccentric but brilliant forensic scientist, who assists police investigations with special charm. The German remake for ZDF, which launched very successfully, is based on the Belgium series original.

    Another remake for TF1 in France is in post-production. 1993 marks the second season of the Italian high-end success series 1992 and follows in the footsteps of corruption and a merciless game of politics. First scenes will be shown at the traditional Beta Brunch on MIPTV-Tuesday, 12.30 pm.

    Babylon Berlin (The Hollywood Reporter: “game changer for high-end TV”) with its 16 episodes and a 40 million Euro budget will premiere on Sky Germany this coming fall, all of Europe including UK as well as overseas and German Free TV ARD will follow. Berlin in the Roaring Twenties is a metropolis for those with talent and ambition. But beneath the glittering surface, the impoverished masses strive for a better life. It is a time for organized crime and political extremism with old militaristic elites not yet abolished while an even more dreadful monster starts flexing its muscles. The show follows a police officer investigating with his own agenda in the capital. Babylon Berlin is produced by X Filme Creative Pool, ARD Degeto, Sky and Beta Film.

    Rome, 30 April 1993: A crowd throws coins at Italian Prime Minister Bettino Craxi – as if the Civil War has begun. It is the setting of 1993 (8 hours; “1992”: 10 hours), the highly ambitious Sky Italia series about political corruption, the mani pulite bribery investigations, the collapse of a political system and the chance for new powers to rise out of the ashes. 1993 is a Sky Italia production realized by Wildside (“The Young Pope”).

    Further highlights among Beta’s event miniseries lineup are Sacher (4 hours), a moovie/Constantin/MR/Beta Film production about the renowned Grand Hotel and glamorous hotspot for the élite of Vienna’s Golden Age and the second season of legal thriller series Shades of Guilt (10 hours, moovie/Oliver Berben), centering on defense lawyer Friedrich Kronberg, who is struggling for justice, no matter how guilty his defendants are. The event movie The Light of Hope (2 hours, Distinto Films Miriam Porté), based on a true story, tells the harrowing tale of Elisabeth Eidenbenz and her female co-workers who saved the lives of almost 600 infants and their mothers who suffered unbearable conditions in refugee and prison camps in Southern France during World War II.

    Formats are flying high at Beta Film, with Professor T. (Rowboat) gaining record ratings on Germany’s ZDF and the French version premiering on TF1 (6 hours, VEMA Production) later this year. The crime format is the latest example of successful shows being adapted abroad, just like the Spanish series Grand Hotel (39×70′, bamboo) with its offspring in the US, Italy and the Middle East or Red Bracelets (German version produced by Bantry Bay), which goes into its third season on Germany’s VOX, even extending the Spanish/Catalan original run.

    The kids’ slate comes with the brand-new scripted show Five2Twelve (26 x 24′) about five teenage boys between 14 and 16 who have their last chance to get it right. All of them already hear the prison doors closing when a judge gives them the option for a new perspective in a mountain boot camp. The series is produced by BR/TV60. Also available are seven new family entertainment features like Timm Thaler (Constantin), the boy who sold his laughter or the friendship adventure of Wendy (Bantry Bay) on vacation at her grandparent’s horse ranch.

    Last but not least, there are new entries in Beta’s movie cycles. Inspector Dupin (16 hours, filmpool) solves murders at Brittany’s seaside and completed its sixth part, while Murder by the Lake (20 hours, Rowboat) presents its seventh case at the three nation border in the heart of Europe.