Tag: Chicago

  • Filmmaker K Bikram Singh dies after prolonged sickness

    Filmmaker K Bikram Singh dies after prolonged sickness

    NEW DELHI: Renowned filmmaker and critic K Bikram Singh, who had quit government service to take to his passion of making films, died yesterday after a prolonged liver complication.

    Aged 75, Singh is survived by his wife Urmila, son Rishi and daughter Ruchi.

    Born on 26 May 1938, Singh started his career in 1961 as a Lecturer in History.

    He worked as a senior civil-servant with the Union Government from 1962 to 1983 in the Traffic and Planning departments of the Indian Railways, and later in the Directorate of Film Festivals as joint director and director of Film Policy in the Information and Broadcasting Ministry.

    Because of his interest in cinema, he took voluntary retirement from government service in April 1983 and became a full time filmmaker.

    His interest in serious cinema goes back to the 1960s when he became a member of ‘Film Forum‘, a film society of Mumbai.

    He produced ‘Andhi Gali’ by the filmmaker Buddhadeb Dasgupta where he was also associate director.

    His production ‘New Delhi Times’ starring Shashi Kapoor directed by Ramesh Sharma in 1986 was in the Indian Panorama. ‘Tarpan’ made for the National Film Development Corporation in 1995, which he wrote, produced and directed, won the Aravindan Award for debut director and was a part of the Indian Panorama.

    ‘Tarpan’ was shown at Moscow, Montreal, and Chicago, apart from winning an award at Cairo.

    Later in 1997, he assisted Basu Bhattacharya in the making of ‘Aastha’ starring Rekha with Om Puri and Dinesh Thakur.

    He has produced and directed more than 60 documentaries. Some of these have participated in the International Film Festivals, in India and abroad. A few of his well-known documentaries/TV series are ‘Contemporary Indian Painting‘, ‘Greening of Ralegan Shindi‘ (On the work of environmentalist Anna Sahib Hazare), ‘In Search of Limelight‘ (On the Junior Artistes of film industry), ‘Bonded Labour‘, ‘Looking Beyond‘ (a tourism series), ‘Satyajit Ray: Introspections‘, ‘Jhilmili Story‘ (on the empowerment of rural women) and ‘A Painters Portrait‘ (a 13 part series on contemporary Indian painters).

    ‘Satyajit Ray: Introspections‘ that was completed in 1990 was his personal tribute to Satyajit Ray. This has been shown in several countries including Japan, Australia, Sri Lanka, France, U.K. and U.S.A. and was in the Indian Panorama Section of India‘s International Film Festival in 1991. Museum of Modern Art, New York (MOMA) has acquired the non-theatrical rights of this film for U.S.A. and Canada.

    He was also an author and a veteran film critic.

    Singh had a deep interest in issues relating to environment and tourism. He made more than 20 documentaries related to environmental and social issues. Some of these are ‘Rebirth‘, ‘A Friendly Place‘ (1997) and ‘Roots of Datia‘. This film on the natural regeneration of barren land was awarded Special Jury Prize at the Romaninan Film Festival, 1998. The theme and story outline of his television serial,‘Kahin Ek Gaon‘ produced in 1995-96 was conceived by him in 1987-88 while shooting the documentary ‘Greening of Relegan Shindi‘. This deals with the environmental regeneration of a village in Maharastra, led by the well-known environmentalist Anna Saheb Hazere.

    In 1988-89 he had made a 10 part series on the lesser-known destinations of tourists interest called Musafir for Doordarshan. An year later he collaborated with the well known travel writers Hugh and Collen Grantzer to make a six part series called Looking Beyond for tourism promotion for Doordarshan. He has made two films for the Department of Tourism , Govt. of India called Musafir (1992) and The Hill Trail (1993) and two films for the Department of Tourism, Govt. of Rajasthan called Mewar a Living Legend and The Desert Triangle.

    During 1993-94 he researched, directed and produced a 12 part video series on the ‘Story of Indian Painting‘. This was followed by a 13 parts series called ‘A Painters Portrait‘ on 13 contemporary Indian painters. In 1997 he made an hour-long video film on ‘Glimpses of indian Painting‘ for the Ministry of External Affairs and in the same year made another hour-long film on ‘Progressive Artists Group‘ featuring Souza, Raza, Hussain, Ara, Bakre and Gade for the National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA). This was followed by another film for the NGMA on the art of printmaking called ‘The Art of Multiple Originals‘ in 2002 and a film on the painter K G Subramanyan called ‘A Rabbit‘s Leap In the Moonlight‘ in 2004. The critics have hailed theses films as landmark works on contemporary Indian painting.

    In 1999-94 he did an eight part series called ‘Kavita Shati‘ and another four part series called ‘Kavi Aur Kavita‘ on the contemporary Hindi poets for Mahatma Gandhi Antarrastriya Hindi Viswavidyalaya. He has also made film for the the two eminent Hindi poets Kedarnath Singh and Kunwar Narain.

    In 1995 he produced and dircted a telvision feature film called ‘Srijan‘ on the theme of environment and rural development. This has been shown on Doordarshan i.e. Indian national television feature film called ‘Srijan‘ on the theme of environment and rural development.

    In 1997-98 he produced and directed a television series called ‘Without Malice‘ for Star TV. This is a satirical review of the history of post-Independent India (1947-1998) through published political cartoons. This series has received very wide critical notices in the press.

    In 2001, he completed a video documentary on Lester James Peries, the celebrated Sri Lankan film director called ‘The World of Peries‘. Apart from exploring his work as filmmaker this film also deals with the lifelong friendship of Peries with Satyajit Ray. In the same year he made another video documentary called ‘Of Life And Death‘ for the Public Service Broadcasting Trust (PSBT) that explores the meaning of life, death and immortality in contemporary times. Both these were in the Competitive Section of Mumbai International Film Festival 2002. Since then he has made two more films for PSBT ‘A Middle Class Rebellion‘ (2002) on changing values of Indian middle class and ‘Passing On‘ (2003) that deals with the problem of transmitting the folk music tradition of the Langa and Manganiyar communities of Rajasthan, to the next generation.

    He was President of North India Films Association, Member Central Selection Panel for the Featdure Films for Indian Panorama Section of the Indian International Film Festival (1991), Chairman, Selection Panel for the Non-Feature Films of Indian Panorama (1992), and Chairman, Short Films Jury for the NISCORT Film Festival (1999). He was the member of the Selection Panel for films for the 8th Mumbai International Film Festival for Documentary, Short and Animation films (2004). He is a life member of Indian Film Director‘s Association, member of Indian Documentary Producer‘s Association, Western India Film Producer‘s Association and Indian Film Writers Association.

    He wrote a fortnightly column on life, literature and the arts called BIMB PARTIBIMB in the major Hindi daily Jansatta. Cine Arts India Arts India was his proprietary concern for making film and video productions.

  • Ashley Judd joining Shailene Woodley in Divergent

    Ashley Judd joining Shailene Woodley in Divergent

    MUMBAI: Ashley Judd has been added to the cast of Divergent, the big-screen adaptation of Veronica Roth‘s dystopian YA bestseller.

    Judd, who recently walked back on her bid for one of Kentucky‘s U.S. Senate seats, will play Natalie Prior, the mother of Divergent‘s heroine Tris (Shailene Woodley).
     
    The film, that has gone on the sets in Chicago last week, has Aaron Eckhart reportedly playing Judd‘s onscreen husband Andrew while Ansel Elgort (who made his big-screen debut in Carrie)will play her son Caleb.

    The film is being helmed by Neil Burger who had earlier directed Limitless and The Illusionist, with a script written by Vanessa Taylor.

    Divergent is scheduled to open on 21 March, next year.

  • Chicago real estate developer gifts 1,088 orginal film posters to Academy

    Chicago real estate developer gifts 1,088 orginal film posters to Academy

    MUMBAI: A Chicago real estate developer has gifted more than 1,000 original movie posters from the golden era of Hollywood to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

    The posters document the studio era of “B” movie filmmaking in the first half of the 20th century and include a variety of genres like westerns, war films, musicals, biblical tales and films regarding social problems.

    “The 1,088 posters were donated to the Academy by Dwight Cleveland, a Chicago real estate developer, who continues to collect even today,” said the Academy in a statement.

    “B-movies tap into the public consciousness and provide rich fodder for better understanding the times,” observed Academy Library Director Linda Mehr while Anne Coco, the Herrick‘s graphic arts librarian called it as a “dream” gift.

    “Not only was it very well organized, but the posters also were in excellent shape. Our staff is fairly certain he was a librarian in another lifetime,” she said.

    It may be noted that Cleveland began collecting posters in 1977 while still in high school after being inspired seeing film posters in an art teacher‘s classroom. “I really think that film posters are one of the very few truly indigenous art forms of our country. By making these gifts, I hope to excite an appreciation for the works themselves among members of the general public and also set a good example for other collectors,” he observed.

  • Sean Penn gets Peace Summit award

    Sean Penn gets Peace Summit award

    MUMBAI: Sean Penn, actor and founder and CEO of J/P Haitian Relief Organization has been presented with the 2012 Peace Summit Award at the recently held 12th World Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates.

    Said Honorary co-chair of the World Summit Host Committee Mayor Rahm Emanuel “Chicago is honored to be the first North American city to host the World Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates, and we look forward to welcoming distinguished guests from around the globe in April. The decision to host this event in Chicago reflects the profile of our city as an international leader in civic dialogue and community involvement. While the Summit is a global event, it will have a local impact and leave a lasting legacy on our city.”

    Penn has been honoured for “making an outstanding contribution to international social justice and peace,” according to a press statement.

    The three-day event was scheduled for April 23-25 in Chicago, IL, with eleven Nobel Peace Prize-winning individuals and nine Laureate organizations in attendance. Penn thanked the organization for its recognition of his efforts to assist the victims of the 2010 earthquake in Haiti, and “his ongoing advocacy for peace and human rights protection worldwide.”

    “IThis is an extraordinary honor in an extraordinary moment on Earth. I‘m very grateful,” said Penn.

  • MPI Pictures launched

    MPI Pictures launched

    MUMBAI: Chicago-based MPI Media Group is launching a new theatrical distribution division, MPI Pictures, to handle six to eight theatrical releases per year – focusing on foreign-language films, indies and high-end genre fare.

    While Greg Newman, executive vice president of MPI Media Group, will oversee the new division, Marie Therese Guirgis has come aboard as head of theatrical distribution. Additionally, Emily Woodburne and marketing executive Dan Goldberg have been hired to help oversee the initial slate.

    “The mission is to buy films and release films theatrically that appeal to at least a broad niche demographically,” Guirgis has reportedly said.

    The new entity is kicking off with an initial slate of seven films, which it has been assembling since last fall, and Newman and Guirgis will be heading to the upcoming Cannes Film Market to scout additional titles.

    While MPI is primarily a home entertainment company, it has also begun producing and releasing genre movies, through its Dark Sky Films, such as Ti West‘s horror tale The Innkeepers, released through Magnolia, and Jim Mickle’s Stake Land, released by IFC. By creating its own distribution company, it will be able to release its own future productions itself.

    MPI’s initial slate has films from Petra Eopperlein and Michael Tucker’s mixed martial arts documentary Fightville, which received a limited theatrical release April 20, since it is primarily intended for the VOD and digital markets, to the French feature Little White Lies, directed by Guillame Canet, which is scheduled to open Aug. 24 as a traditional platform New York/Los Angeles release before expanding to the top 20 markets or more.

    The slate also includes: A Bag of Hammers, starring Jason Ritter and Rebecca Hall and directed by Brian Crano, May 11; Americano, directed by Mathieu Demy and starring Demy and Salma Hayek, June 15; The Big Picture, directed by Eric Lartigau and starring Romain Durais and Catherine Deneuve, October; Yelling to the Sky, directed by Victoria Mahoney and starring Zoe Kravitz and Jason Clark, January, 2013; and The Heineken Kidnapping, directed by Maarten Treurniet and starring Rutger Hauer.

  • Choreographer Pony Verma seeks assistant via crowd sourcing

    Choreographer Pony Verma seeks assistant via crowd sourcing

    MUMBAI: All these days we heard filmmakers resorting to crowd sourcing to fund their films. What is new is that choreographer Pony Verma has resorted to crowd sourcing in association with Talenthouse to find herself an assistant.

    “My partnership with Talenthouse will help bridge the gap between Indian terrains with its capacity to reach out to the masses through the internet and crowd sourcing. It is a brilliant initiative that will help aspiring performers to showcase their creativity and get the much needed exposure and recognition,” Verma said in a statement.

    Globally, many mega events are done through crowd sourcing. The well known hip-hop band, The Black Eyed Peas, had interestingly used crowd sourcing to excite and hook the audience to their performance at Oprah`s 24th season kickoff party in Chicago last year,” she added.

    Crowd sourcing has become a lucrative way of searching for talent, said Talenthouse India CEO Arun Mehra. “Bollywood is currently using crowd sourcing to find new talent and through this creative invite, we want to reach out to dance choreographers and give them an opportunity to be a part of the ever growing film industry thus bringing them one step closer to fulfilling their Bollywood dream, he observed.

    The selected winner will get to work at Verma‘s dance academy ISPA as head-trainer and a chance to assist her in her future Bollywood projects.

    While the online submission deadline is 3 May, the winner will be announced on 31May.

  • McQueen’s Shame grosses $ .36 million on debut

    McQueen’s Shame grosses $ .36 million on debut

    MUMBAI: This week‘s release Steve McQueen‘s Shame was one of the top debuts ever for a film given a NC-17 rating. The film grossed $361,181 from 10 theaters for a location average of $36,118.


    Fox Searchlight, that is planning an aggressive awards campaign for the film has decided to first test the appetite for the film in Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, Washington, D.C. and San Francisco.


    Searchlight, that acquired Shame from the Telluride Film Festival, believes that the film will play well throughout awards season, despite the challenges associated with the NC-17 rating.


    Two awards contenders landed on the top 10 box office chart. Martin Scorsese‘s Hugo expanded into an additional 500 theatres over the weekend. The 3D family friendly film-named best film of the year by the National Board of Review last week, garnered $7.6 million from 1,840 locations.


    In another victory for Searchlight, Alexander Payne‘s The Descendants climbed to No. 7 on the box office chart after grossing $5.2 million as it added 141 locations for a total theater count of 574.


    Descendants, starring George Clooney has now grossed $18.1 million and is the first limited release to ever cross $10 million in 12 days. And the film is already the No. 2 limited release of the year after Woody Allen‘s Midnight in Paris that has roped in a total $56 million.


    The tally of Midnight in Paris includes $274,518 million grossed over the weekend as Sony Pictures Classics made one last push before the DVD comes out on December 20 and re-released the film in nearly 300 theaters.

  • Disney/ABC in deal with Katie Couric for talk show

    Disney/ABC in deal with Katie Couric for talk show

    MUMBAI: US media conglomerate Disney/ABC Television Group (DATG) has signed a multi-year, multi-platform agreement with journalist and television personality Katie Couric to host and produce her own nationally syndicated talk show and to join the ABC News team.

    The programme will be distributed by Disney/ABC Domestic Television and will premiere in September 2012.  
         
      Couric, the former “Today” co-anchor who was most recently anchor and managing editor of the ‘CBS Evening News with Katie Couric’, a ‘60 Minutes’ correspondent and host of the weekly online interview series, @katiecouric, will be reunited with Jeff Zucker, who will be an executive producer on the yet-to-be-named syndicated series, which will be based in New York and produced in conjunction with Disney/ABC.

    In addition to hosting the new syndicated program, Couric will join the ABC News team, contributing to all programmes and platforms. Beginning this summer, Couric will anchor specials, contribute interviews, participate in special events coverage and bring her many talents to bear on some of the most important and interesting stories of the day.

    DATG president Anne Sweeney said, “Katie Couric is one of television’s iconic figures and we are thrilled to have forged such an exciting partnership with her. We look forward to having Katie join the best News team in the business, and to working with her to create a dynamic and successful talk show franchise.”

    Couric said, “I’m very happy to be returning to the network where I began my career as a desk assistant in 1979. It is tremendously exciting to have the creative freedom to develop my own show with Anne Sweeney, the Disney/ABC TV Group and Jeff, and to contribute to such a vibrant, innovative news division.”

    The eight ABC Owned stations in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Houston, Raleigh/Durham and Fresno, which represent nearly 23 per cent of the nation’s TV households, have already cleared the new show in the 3 pm time slot.

    As part of the announcement, the network is set to return the last hour of its Daytime network block to affiliates no earlier than September 2012, but continues to support “General Hospital,” and the plans to launch “The Chew” in September of this year and “The Revolution” in January 2012.
     
     

  • CNN to double newsgathering presence in US

    CNN to double newsgathering presence in US

    MUMBAI: CNN plans to double its domestic newsgathering presence with new operations in 10 US cities, resulting in an aggressive expansion of its newsgathering in the US. The announcment was made by CNN US senior VP newsgathering Nancy Lane.

    The new operations will be based in Columbus, Ohio; Denver; Houston; Las Vegas; Minneapolis, Minn.; Orlando, Fla.; Philadelphia; Phoenix; Raleigh-Durham, N.C.; and Seattle. This expansion will also allow CNN to build stronger partnerships with affiliates in new and existing locations across the country. CNN already has bureaus in Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, New Orleans, Los Angeles, Miami, New York, San Francisco and Washington, D.C.

    The newly expanded newsgathering operation will be staffed with a mix of traditional general assignment reporters with CNN’s current roster of “show-based correspondents” who are attached to many of CNN’s daytime and prime-time programs, and newly designated “all-platform journalists.” All-platform journalists will combine new technologies with traditional journalism skills to gather news from the heart of America for all CNN’s networks and services, especially CNN’s growing digital platforms.

    Lane said , “CNN’s rapid adoption of new technology over the years put us in the enviable position to be able to expand at a time when others are cutting back. Our technological innovations allow our reporters to be at the center of more breaking news events and developing stories across the United States, with greater independence and mobility than ever before. This expansion is a critical component of CNN Worldwide’s overall strategy for increased content ownership.”

    CNN’s most recent development of technology in newsgathering includes the use of lightweight kits that combine cameras, editing tools and advanced satellite and Internet communications technology into a laptop-based system. This suite of technologies enable CNN’s journalists to employ immediate live and video FTP submissions, real-time content monitoring, editing and voice communication from anywhere in the field.

  • Steve Askew exits Star, Laureen Ong appointed COO

    Steve Askew exits Star, Laureen Ong appointed COO

    MUMBAI: Confirming news that has been doing the rounds for a while now, Star has announced that its long serving COO Steve Askew has resigned from the company. Replacing Askew as chief operating officer is Laureen Ong, whose appointment is effective June.

    A company release issued today cites the reasons for Askew’s departure as personal.

    Star chief operating officer Laureen Ong

    Ong joins Star from National Geographic Channel where she was the founding president of the network, having spearheaded the 2001 launch of NGC.

    Prior to launching National Geographic Channel, Ong served for two years as vice president and general manager of WTTG-TV in Washington where she was the first Asian-American woman to lead a top 10 market affiliate. Ong also helped launch SportsVision in Chicago, where she served for seven years eventually becoming executive producer and VP broadcasting for the World Series-winning Chicago White Sox baseball team (in which she continues to hold an ownership stake).

    Speaking about Askew’s exit Star CEO Paul Aiello said, “Steve has been with Star for over 10 years and has played a key leadership role in virtually every aspect of our operations. He has been an instrumental force in shaping the company and growing it from a relatively small broadcaster into the industry leader it is today. We thank Steve for his tremendous contributions and wish him all the best in his future endeavors.”