Tag: James Gandolfini

  • Gandolfini starrer ‘Enough Said’ gets a release date

    Gandolfini starrer ‘Enough Said’ gets a release date

    MUMBAI: The comedy film written and directed by Nicole Holofcener will be released on 20 September. The movie stars Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Catherine Keener as well as James Gandolfini as Louis-Dreyfus’ love interest. Gandolfini died of a heart attack on 19 June.

     

    The film centers on Eve (Louis-Dreyfus), a divorced soon-to-be empty-nester wondering about her next act. Then she meets Marianne (Keener), the embodiment of her perfect self. Armed with a restored outlook on being middle-aged and single, Eva decides to take a chance on her new love interest Albert (Gandolfini), a sweet, funny and like-minded man – who also happens to be Marianne’s dreaded ex-husband.

     

    Toni Collette, Ben Falcone, Eve Hewson, Tavi Gevinson and Tracey Fairaway co-star, and Anthony Bregman produced.

     

    Gandolfini had been working on many projects at the time of his death. Release dates of the others are still not known.

  • James Gandolfini a.k.a.Tony Soprano of the hit HBO drama bids adieu at 51

    James Gandolfini a.k.a.Tony Soprano of the hit HBO drama bids adieu at 51

    MUMBAI: The 51 year old James Gandolfini, best known for his role on the HBO drama The Sopranos as Tony Soprano, passed away on Wednesday, 19 June while on his vacation in Italy. His sudden death has sent a shock wave across millions of his fans as friends and colleagues tweeted and made statements after hearing news of the actor‘s death.

    Gandolfini‘s death was confirmed by HBO. He was vacationing in Rome, and was scheduled to attend the Taormina Film Festival in Sicily this week. The exact cause of death is not known, but his managers said it was possibly a heart attack.

    Gandolfini, the Emmy Award-winning actor who grew up in Park Ridge, in Bergen County, N.J., played a cold and curt crime boss with an anxiety ridden exterior but a rich interior life in The Sopranos. The television drama that made its debut in 1999 and ran for six seasons on HBO revolved around his struggle to balance his family life and career in the Mafia. His other roles include the woman-beating mob henchman Virgil inTrue Romance, enforcer/stuntman Bear in Get Shorty, and the impulsive Wild Thing Carol in Where the Wild Things Are.

  • Zero Dark Thirty bags four Oscar nominations

    Zero Dark Thirty bags four Oscar nominations

    MUMBAI: Kathryn Bigelow‘s ambitious film Zero Dark Thirty has bagged four prestigious nominations at the 70th Annual Golden Globe Awards. The film is the story of history‘s greatest manhunt for the world‘s most dangerous man.
    These include Best Motion Picture – Drama, best performance by an actress in a motion picture (Drama) – Jessica Chastain, best director (Motion Picture) – Kathryn Bigelow and best screenplay (Motion Picture) – Mark Boal.
    The film explores a relentless, decade-long pursuit that leads to the daring midnight raid of Osama bin Laden‘s compound, even as she unzips the body bag to verify that the bloody corpse inside is indeed that of the slain Al-Qaida leader, Jessica Chastain‘s CIA officer character is defined primarily by her femininity in this male-dominated world.
    The film has bagged four prestigious nominations at the 70th Annual Golden Globe Awards. These include Best Motion Picture – Drama, Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture (Drama) – Jessica Chastain, Best Director (Motion Picture) – Kathryn Bigelow and Best Screenplay (Motion Picture) – Mark Boal.
    Besides, the film has received many accolades and awards at prestigious award ceremonies including Washington D.C. Arena Film Critics Association, National Board of Review, New York Film Critics Circle and Boston Society Film Critics.
    Directed by Oscar winning director Kathryn Bigelow; the film stars Jessica Chastain, Jason Clarke, Joel Edgerton, Chriss Pratt, James Gandolfini, Edgar Ramirez and Mark Strong.
    PVR Pictures is gearing itself torelease Zero Dark Thirty in India on 1 February next year.

  • ‘With Revenge the studio, network and production company were all on the same page’ : Revenge executive producer Marty Bowen

    ‘With Revenge the studio, network and production company were all on the same page’ : Revenge executive producer Marty Bowen

    Next year Star World will air the show ‘Revenge‘. It is about a woman who returns to The Hamptons to seek revenge on those who were responsible for her father‘s imprisonment and death.

     

    Marty Bowen is one of the executive producers of the show. He spent many years as an agent representing talent like Charlie Kaufman and James Gandolfini before surprising the industry and leaving UTA to pursue a career in producing in 2006. Bowen partnered with veteran producer Wyck Godfrey, to create their own production company, Temple Hill Entertainment.

     

    Their first film was ‘The Nativity Story‘ but the big break came in 2008 when they embarked with Summit Entertainment on production of the ‘Twilight‘ movie franchise. The films have made well over $1 billion at the box office.

     

    Temple Hill Entertainment has gone on to make a television show ‘Revenge‘, created by Mike Kelley and starring Emily VanCamp, Madeleine Stowe and Henry Czerny. It is currently airing in the US on ABC.

     

    Known in Hollywood for his solid work ethic Bowen is very much hands on during the production process. This includes the casting decisions. Indiantelevision.com‘s Ashwin Pinto caught up with Bowen to find out more about ‘Revenge‘ as well as the challenges of being a producer in Hollywood

     

    Excerpts:

    How did the idea for ‘Revenge‘ come about?
    Temple Hill Entertainment the company that I work for had made a deal with ABC. They asked us to come up with some ideas that we thought could speak to audience that we generally like to produce programming and entertainment for. We had always been interested in doing a drama set against the backdrop of The Hamptons for which I am sure there is an Indian equivalent.

     

    It is an area where very wealthy people go to for their vacations. It was a world that we wanted to explore. We loved the idea of having rich people coming for the summer interacting with the people who live there the year round. We thought that there was really interesting drama to explore. ABC continued to challenge us to find an interesting story engine that might make it really compelling to have audiences go watch. Through a process of elimination we thought that it might be interesting to loosely use the structure of The Count of Monte Cristo to do that.

    You have had a huge amount of success with ‘Twilight‘. What were the learnings from that which you incorporated into this show?
    There are certain fundamental themes that one gets to explore in the ‘Twilight‘ series that we have learned from and have tried to incorporate a version of them within the story structure.

     

    I don‘t know if I want to be more specific than that but certainly there is a reason why audiences that see ‘Twilight‘ like to see it with groups of people. There is a reason why they enjoy that collective consciousness. We try to learn from that and try to instill the show with some of our elements.

     

    The television landscape is crowded with shows vying for attention. What separates ‘Revenge‘ from the rest of the pack?
    The show has a healthy old fashioned storytelling that we have not seen in a long time.

     

    The shows that I grew up with included ‘Dynasty‘, ‘Dallas‘ and all those fun soap opera from the 1980s. I think people nostalgically want to tune in to ‘Revenge‘ as they miss those kinds of programmes. At the same time our storytelling remains modern enough to have audiences seem to want to come back again and gain.

    As a producer how hands on were you in the casting and creative process for the show?
    I was very hands on. Certainly when it came to the pilot as it was an idea that we had generated in terms of finding a writer, picking a director and all levels of casting we were in all the meetings and were very active.

     

    But at a certain point once your baby learns to walk, you have to let them bump into furniture on their own. So we tried to keep a healthy distance to allow our writers to generate stories and write their teleplays in the best environment they can while at the same time steering the ship in the right direction.

    ‘We have a handful of very smart people at our company who constantly throw ideas against the wall to see if something sticks‘

    Was it a challenge to stick to the budget and production schedule?
    It was at the very beginning absolutely. You are all learning to work with one another for the first time. You have to have a tremendous amount of energy to launch a show. This only becomes more efficient as you get into the flow of things. So it was a challenge at first but we have managed to figure it out in a way that it runs very smoothly.

    Could you talk about the talent involved with the show?
    Let me start with Mike Kelley who is our writer, our showrunner. We were fans of his and were aware of the things he had written over the years. I loved his show ‘Swing Town‘ which was autobiographical and was something he really slaved over.

     

    I saw how good his writing was and how good that show was. When this idea came about he was literally at the top of our list of people who we thought could do the show. Actor Emily VanCamp is someone who is sympathetic. She is likeable but is also someone that you believe is capable of vengeance. Phillip Noyce made the pilot and he is one of the finest directors in Hollywood. He has made movies like ‘Salt‘.

    As a producer how many scripts and ideas come your way in a month and what qualities do you look for?
    We look at hundreds of ideas a month. We come up with dozens of ideas on our own from reading books, and watching other shows, documentaries, reading articles. We find themes that we are interested in.

     

    That is the nature of our business. We have a handful of very smart people at our company who constantly throw ideas against the wall to see if something sticks.

    This year some high profile shows like ‘Charlie‘s Angels‘ bit the dust after a few episodes. What separates a successful show from a failure?
    I think that there has to be something that an audience can connect with. I think that it is great to have a big title and it is great to have an intellectual property that people are familiar with.

     

    But you ultimately have to be engaged in what the characters are doing. I cannot speak about ‘Charlies Angels‘ as I did not watch the show but this factor is what separates great storytelling from average storytelling.

    Why are channels impatient in terms of letting a show find its feet?
    Many times they are impatient. But you can also point to many other times when they have been the opposite.

     

    Some of my favourite television series are shows where the networks believed in the show but which the audience did not get at first. Later on the audiences went on to love those shows. I think that it goes both ways.

    In terms of how the production process works what is the difference between film and television? 
    In film there is beginning, middle and an end. Television never ends. You could be finishing one episode, editing another, starting production on another. A smaller budget project could more challenging than one that costs hundreds of millions of dollars.

    In 2006 you left your job to establish a producing partnership. What prompted you to shift track?
    I wanted a creative outlet. While I loved what I was doing earlier I felt like working as a producer. I was fortunate to be able to get into a production partnership with my good friend Wyck Godfrey.

    How did you get your break with ‘Twilight‘?
    We had worked with ‘Twilight‘ director Catherine Hardwicke earlier on ‘The Nativity Story‘. We had also worked with the head of production at Summit Entertainment Erik Feig. They wanted to make the movie and so we came on-board.

    As a producer what is the main challenge you face?
    You have to make sure that you complete the thought. You have to ensure that the idea becomes a script which then translates into a movie.

     

    Assembling a project is a challenge. The different pieces have to come together in the way that you want it to. ‘Revenge‘ was one of those times where the studio, the network and the production company were all on the same page. It was a true collaboration.

    How challenging is it to juggle different projects at once?
    It is tough. However I am fortunate in terms of the people that I have working with me. I have people who are capable of picking up the slack.

    Do you keep the family audience in mind before giving the nod to a project?
    For us it is story first and the audience second. We focus on trying to tell a strong story and then look to see which audience the project will appeal to.

  • Sopranos star Gandolfini inks production deal with HBO

    Sopranos star Gandolfini inks production deal with HBO

    MUMBAI: Extending his alliance with HBO beyond next year’s final episodes of The Sopranos, the three-time Emmy winner James Gandolfini has signed a three-year production deal with HBO.

    As per the deal, Gandolfini will develop projects exclusively for HBO and its specialty movie division, Picturehouse.

    The actor has also announced his plans to launch a production company called Attaboy Films with partner Alex Ryanhas.

    The biopic Hemingway will be Gandolfini’s first projects as a producer. Reportedly, Gandolfini and Ryan are also working on a documentary for HBO about US soldiers in Iraq.

    Gandolfini has won three Emmys for playing Tony Soprano. His noted works also include Get Shorty and The Last Castle.

  • James Gandolfini signs exclusive producing deal with HBO

    James Gandolfini signs exclusive producing deal with HBO

    MUMBAI: Actor James Gandolfini, who stars in HBO’s gangster saga The Sopranos, has signed a three-year exclusive producing deal with the US broadcaster.

    The agreement marks the first overall production deal for Gandolfini, who along with his producing partner, former Paramount executive Alex Ryan, is simultaneously launching his production shingle, Attaboy Films. Under this exclusive producing arrangement, Gandolfini will develop and produce original television programming for HBO and will also have a first-look deal for feature projects at Picturehouse, HBO’s specialty film distribution arm.

    HBO chairman and CEO Chris Albrecht says, “The Sopranos is a landmark in TV, and the gifted James Gandolfini is one of the reasons for the show’s remarkable success. I am delighted that he will continue to work with the network after the end of the series.”

    Gandolfini and Ryan have spent the past year developing Hemingway, a biopic written by Barbara Turner, with Gandolfini playing the title role in the film. Philip Kaufman (Quills, The Unbearable Lightness of Being) is attached to direct the drama about the tempestuous romance between Hemingway and war correspondent Martha Gellhorn. Turner, whose screen credits include Pollock and Georgia, will produce along with Gandolfini, Ryan and Peter Kaufman. Gandolfini’s managers, Nancy Sanders and Mark Armstrong, will be executive producers. The project is expected to continue development under Attaboy’s new deal, which also includes a commitment to two pilot scripts.

    Gandolfini and Ryan are also developing a documentary with HBO Documentary Films. The film, whose working title is Occupation Iraq, is about soldiers in Iraq and chronicles their stories, tragedies, triumphs and homecomings.

  • Sopranos star Gandolfini inks production deal with HBO

    Sopranos star Gandolfini inks production deal with HBO

    MUMBAI: Extending his alliance with HBO beyond next year’s final episodes of The Sopranos, the three-time Emmy winner James Gandolfini has signed a three-year production deal with HBO.

    As per the deal, Gandolfini will develop projects exclusively for HBO and its specialty movie division, Picturehouse.

    The actor has also announced his plans to launch a production company called Attaboy Films with partner Alex Ryanhas.

    The biopic Hemingway will be Gandolfini’s first projects as a producer. Reportedly, Gandolfini and Ryan are also working on a documentary for HBO about US soldiers in Iraq.

    Gandolfini has won three Emmys for playing Tony Soprano. His noted works also include Get Shorty and The Last Castle.

  • Sopranos star Gandolfini inks production deal with HBO

    Sopranos star Gandolfini inks production deal with HBO

    MUMBAI: Extending his alliance with HBO beyond next year’s final episodes of The Sopranos, the three-time Emmy winner James Gandolfini has signed a three-year production deal with HBO.

    As per the deal, Gandolfini will develop projects exclusively for HBO and its specialty movie division, Picturehouse.

    The actor has also announced his plans to launch a production company called Attaboy Films with partner Alex Ryanhas.

    The biopic Hemingway will be Gandolfini’s first projects as a producer. Reportedly, Gandolfini and Ryan are also working on a documentary for HBO about US soldiers in Iraq.

    Gandolfini has won three Emmys for playing Tony Soprano. His noted works also include Get Shorty and The Last Castle.

  • Zee Cafe to launch ‘Love Monkey’ & ‘Sopranos V’

    Zee Cafe to launch ‘Love Monkey’ & ‘Sopranos V’

    MUMBAI: Zee Cafe will premiere two new shows Love Monkey and Sopranos fifth season starting 23 July and 19 July respectively.

    Love Monkey, a comedy scheduled for Sunday nights at 10 pm, stars Golden Globe nominee Thomas Cavanagh (Ed), Golden Globe nominee Jason Priestley (Beverly Hills, 90210), Larenz Tate (Ray) and Christopher Wiehl (Playmakers). The story revolves around four men, who struggle with career and relationships while helping one another through the often-comical roadblocks fate decides to throw their way.

    Sopranos, scheduled for 10 pm on Wednesdays, features Emmy Award winners James Gandolfini and Edi Falco. This series redefines family with its realistic, compelling and darkly humorous looks at the suburban New Jersey Soprano clan. Managing a deadly criminal enterprise has taken its toll on anxiety-ridden Mafia boss Tony Soprano (Gandolfini). Trying to elude the FBI and avoid mob power struggles while coping with a shaky marriage to long-suffering wife Carmela (Falco) and fatherhood to his sullen teenage son and rebellious daughter is enough to send anyone to the analyst’s couch. So, when the pressures reach dangerous levels, Tony reluctantly seeks the help of psychiatrist Dr. Jennifer Melfi (Lorraine Bracco) to reconcile the consequences of his life choices.