Categories
News

Edward Norton responds to bad Hulk buzz

For weeks now there has been a lot of negative buzz surrounding the new film version of The Incredible Hulk, which stars Edward Norton as Bruce Banner.

A few days ago the New York Times reported that:

Mr. Norton and Marvel, which has the right of final approval on the film, have sparred in recent weeks over trims, among other issues, said studio executives involved, who asked to remain anonymous as they were not authorized to speak publicly.

Mr. Norton — who was hired to rewrite the script along with playing the lead — has made it clear he won’t cooperate with publicity plans if he’s not happy with the final product, these people said.

A spokeswoman for Mr. Norton said he had no comment. Mr. Maisel brushed off the friction as par for the course.

But now Norton has responded with a statement to Entertainment Weekly:

“Like so many people I’ve loved the story of The Hulk since I was a kid, so it was thrilling when Marvel asked me to write and help produce an altogether new screen incarnation, as well as play Bruce Banner.

I grew up reading Marvel Comics and always loved the mythic dimension and contemporary themes in the stories, and I’m proud of the script I wrote.

In every phase of production, including the editing, working with Louis Leterrier has been wonderful…I’ve never had a better partner, and the collaboration with all the rest of the creative team has been terrific.

Every good movie gets forged through collaboration, and different ideas among people who are all committed and respect the validity of each other’s opinions is the heart of filmmaking.

Regrettably, our healthy process, which is and should be a private matter, was misrepresented publicly as a ‘dispute,’ seized on by people looking for a good story, and has been distorted to such a degree that it risks distracting from the film itself, which Marvel, Universal and I refuse to let happen.

It has always been my firm conviction that films should speak for themselves and that knowing too much about how they are made diminishes the magic of watching them.

All of us believe The Incredible Hulk will excite old fans and create new ones and be a huge hit…our focus has always been to deliver the Hulk that people have been waiting for and keep the worldwide love affair with the big green guy going strong.”

All this chatter about the film doesn’t bode well but it goes without saying that no-one should judge it until actually seeing the finished cut.

But the reality is that we now live in an age where summer blockbusters depend on long lead buzz (e.g. Superbowl spots, early footage) and making and releasing a high profile film like this can’t really be done quietly.

The other problem is that The Hulk is possibly the hardest Marvel character to get right. If you are being faithful to the comics you have to make him a large creature, but that doesn’t always translate well to the screen.

The 2003 version never really grappled with this problem. Although it had some good ideas (e.g. the split screen comic effects and the darker tone) it didn’t make Bruce Banner and the Hulk seem part of the same being.

Watching the trailer for this new film, it is a little worrying that they appear to have created a slightly darker version of the last Hulk. Plus, it also seems like Abomination (his nemesis in the film) is a bit too similar.

Maybe Universal should have waited a few more years (like Warner Bros did with the Batman franchise) before someone had a genuinely original way of rebooting the character.

But we shall see.

> Trailer for The Incredible Hulk
> Find out more about the Hulk character at WIkipedia

Categories
Interesting News

Philip French tribute at The Observer

Philip French has been the chief film critic at The Observer for over 30 years and has recently been awarded a BAFTA fellowship.

The UK newspaper has compiled a nice set of features to honour one of their finest writers:

It is a fitting tribute and a model of how online content can supplement the print edition.

But it also highlights the reasons French remains the best UK film critic, which is his ability to write about films in engaging, fair and learned manner.

His fairness means that he takes mainstream films seriously (both the good and the bad) and doesn’t feel the need to come up with a contrarian angle in order to attract attention.

Whether he likes a film or not, I get the sense he gives anything he sees a fair crack of the whip. Unlike some of his contemporaries, he reviews all the weekly releases and doesn’t farm out lesser known films to a deputy.

His learning means that his can place films in a valuable context, be it historical, political or artistic, but he manages to do so in a way that avoids the snooty academic tone that can plague highbrow criticism.

He also reminds you that there is a world outside of films, which is useful in keeping things in perspective.

If you are a critic for a media outlet, you get invited to pre-release screenings and in the case of the national press, screenings usually take place every Monday or Tuesday.

Sometimes, a mood of jaded cynicism can pervade the air (particularly if the film is a stinker) but Philip is always a notable presence because he invariably stays until the credits have finished.

For me, it is symbolic of both his professionalism and genuine love of cinema. In the UK, too many people assigned to write about about films are arts journalists plucked from the social networks that pervade the British media.

Sometimes they appear to have little love or knowledge of the medium and favour witty putdowns over genuine thought.

In recent weeks a raft of US film critics have lost their jobs and the role has been called in to question. In a post I wrote on that very subject I said that the best critics must inform, enlighten and entertain.

French does all three and remains a shining example of what a good arts journalist should be.

> Read Philip’s latest reviews at The Observer
> Check out past articles at Guardian Unimited

(Photo: Richard Saker / The Observer)

Categories
News

Harry Potter and the Lexicon Lawsuit

J.K. Rowling and Warner Bros are suing the publishers of an ‘unauthorised’ Harry Potter dictionary called The Harry Potter Lexicon.

RDR Books of Michigan said the author of the Lexicon, Steve Vander Ark, based it on his fan website, which has been very popular with Potter fans.

According to Reuters, Rowling herself had called it “a great site”.

However, the author wants to write her own definitive Harry Potter encyclopedia and donate the proceeds to charity.

She says:

I cannot …approve of ‘companion books’ or ‘encyclopedias’ that seek to pre-empt my definitive Potter reference book for their authors’ own personal gain.

The losers in such a situation would be the charities that I hope, eventually, to benefit.

Nikke Finke of Deadline Hollywood Daily reports:

The company, which normally publishes books about travel and Judaica, will defend The Harry Potter Lexicon which began online and is about to become what it says is a “reference guide” which Rowling can’t lay claim to.

But issues of copyright infringement and fair use are in dispute over online material that’s been subsequently published.

…Rowling will be the first witness for the plaintiffs. “It’s very important to her,” an insider told me Friday night. “She doesn’t feel that somebody else should be effectively ripping off her work and infringing on her intellectual property.”

This case is set for bench trial (which means no jury) in the New York Federal District Court of Judge Robert Patterson on Monday.

RDR Books defence team includes people from the Fair Use Project at Stanford University Law School.

They argue:

In support of her position Ms. Rowling appears to claim a monopoly on the right to publish literary reference guides, and other non-academic research, relating to her own fiction.

This is a right no court has ever recognized. It has little to recommend it.

If accepted, it would dramatically extend the reach of copyright protection, and eliminate an entire genre of literary supplements: third party reference guides to fiction, which for centuries have helped readers better access, understand and enjoy literary works.

You can read their legal brief here, whilst Team Potter’s brief is here, along with a further reply here.

This is a tricky one – although Rowling and Warner Bros may indeed have a case, this could easily backfire.

Even if they win and protect the ‘Potter brand’, the danger is that they’ll look like they are punishing the fan culture that has helped make the books and films so popular.

Or are the Potter books too successful and ingrained in pop culture to be damaged by any fall out from this?

Leave your thoughts below.

> Reuters report on the case from last October
> Nikki Finke at DHD reports on the case
> The Fair Use Project at Stanford University Law School
> The Harry Potter Lexicon

Categories
News Technology

Video on Flickr

The photo sharing behemoth Flickr has introduced video to their site.

On their blog they announce the arrival of moving images, with the 90 second limit being the eye opener:

Video! Video! Video! The rumours are true and “soon” is now. We’re thrilled to introduce video on Flickr.

If you’re a pro member, you can now share videos up to 90 glorious seconds in your photostream.

90 seconds? While this might seem like an arbitrary limit, we thought long and hard about how video would complement the flickrverse.

If you’ve memorized the Community Guidelines, you know that Flickr is all about sharing photos that you yourself have taken.

Video will be no different and so what quickly bubbled up was the idea of “long photos,” of capturing slices of life to share.

This is an example of a video:

> Check out the Flickr blog for more announcements
> TechCrunch announcing the arrival of Flickr video

Categories
News

Charlton Heston has died aged 83

Charlton HestonCharlton Heston has died aged 83.

BBC News report:

Heston died on Saturday at his home in Beverly Hills. His wife Lydia, whom he married in 1944, was at his side.

Heston also portrayed Michelangelo, El Cid and other heroic figures in movie epics of the 1950s and 1960s.

He stepped down as president of US gun lobby, the National Rifle Association (NRA), in 2003, citing ill-health.

The previous year, he had revealed he had symptoms consistent with Alzheimer’s disease.

In a long career he became best known for his roles as Moses in The Ten Commandments, Colonel George Taylor in Planet of the Apes and Judah Ben-Hur in Ben-Hur.

He also played a part in getting Orson Welles to direct the classic 1958 film noir Touch of Evil, in which he also starred.

Reuters have compiled a factbox about him:

  • He was born John Charlton Carter but took his stepfather’s last name for his stage name.
  • In “The Ten Commandments” Heston not only played Moses, he supplied the voice of God. His son, Fraser, 3 months old at the time, played the baby Moses floating down the Nile in a basket.
  • Heston was active in the civil rights movement in the 1960s and before becoming a conservative Republican he campaigned on behalf of Democrats Adlai Stevenson and John F. Kennedy.
  • Heston served as president of the National Rifle Association from 1998 to 2003. He once summed up his belief in the second amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which includes the right to bear arms, by calling it “America’s first freedom, the one that protects the others.”
  • He often appeared at conventions holding an antique flintlock rifle above his head and telling gun-control advocates they would not get his gun unless they could pry it “from my cold, dead hands.”

Here is the famous ending to Planet of the Apes:

> BBC News report on Charlton Heston’s death
> Charlton Heston at the IMDb
> Find out more about Charlton Heston at Wikipedia

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Images In Production News

First photos of Green Zone

The first photos of Green Zone have surfaced over at The Bad and Ugly.

Matt Damon was pictured on set in Central London.

Matt Damon in Green Zone

Directed by Paul Greengrass, it is based on the 2006 book Imperial Life in the Emerald City by journalist Rajiv Chandrasekaran.

Matt Damon in Green Zone 3

Here is a breakdown of the cast, courtesy of Wikipedia:

Matt Damon in Green Zone 2

Apparently Paul Greengrass was at the Emirates Stadium last night to see Arsenal draw 1-1 with Liverpool in the Champions League.

He’s a Crystal Palace fan so I wonder who he wanted to win?

UPDATE 04/03/08: Some more photos have surfaced on Flickr. It looks like they are filming at Freemasons’ Hall in London. I guess it is doubling for a building inside the Green Zone?

Green Zone at the Freemasons Hall 1

Green Zone at the Freemasons Hall 2

(Photos via Matt Dell)

Someone has also posted a video on YouTube:

> Green Zone at the IMDb
> Original post at The Bad and Ugly
> Guardian interview with Paul Greengrass last year

Categories
News Technology

Martin Scorcese on MySpace

Martin Scorcese now has a MySpace page:

Categories
News

Richard Widmark has died aged 93

Richard WidmarkActor Richard Widmark has passed away at the age of 93.

BBC News report:

Hollywood star Richard Widmark has died at the age of 93 after a long illness, his wife has announced.

The prolific actor, who often portrayed killers and gunslingers, made a memorable big-screen debut in 1947 as a giggling psychopath in Kiss of Death.

He went on to star in such 50s classics as Night and the City, Pickup on South Street and the western Broken Lance.

The craggy-faced actor died at his home in Connecticut on Monday, according to his wife Susan Blanchard.

His last film role came in the 1991 thriller True Colors, although he made occasional appearances afterwards in TV documentaries.

Although not a huge star, he was memorable in Kiss of Death, Panic in the Streets and Night and the City.

In the 1960s perhaps his most notable role was in Judgment at Nuremberg, whilst in the 1970s he was effective as the villian in Coma.

> Richard Widmark at the IMDb
> BBC News obituary

Categories
In Production News

Ian McKellen to return for The Hobbit

Ian McKellen as Gandalf in The Two TowersIt looks like Ian McKellen will return as Gandalf in the upcoming film version of The Hobbit.

In the E-Post section of his official website, he indicates that he’ll be back as the wizard:

THE HOBBIT

Q: So has it come to pass, good Sir McKellen?

Shall the dreaming masses with their musty books and  their blackened pipes at long last hear those immortal words issue from under that famous nose?

“Yes, yes, my dear sir-and I know your name, Mr. Bilbo Baggins. And you do know my name, though  you don’t remember that I belong to it. I am Gandalf, and Gandalf means me! To think I should  have lived to be good-morninged by Belladonna Took’s son, as if I was selling buttons at the door!”

Looking about, I find I share the same hopes as  millions of others, so I ask, a single query in a  chorus… Will you again be our Gandalf in “The Hobbit” now that the deal is settled?

A: Yes I will, if Peter Jackson and I have anything to do with it, he being the producer and me being, on the whole, a very lucky actor.  I’ve just read your quote out loud – fabulous speech.

The Hobbit is scheduled for release in 2011 and will be produced by Peter Jackson and directed by Guillermo del Toro.

> Ian McKellen’s official site
> The Hobbit at the IMDb
> The announcement in December about The Hobbit (finally) getting greenlit
> Find out more about Gandalf at Wikipedia

[Link via First Showing]

Categories
In Production News

The A-Team movie finally in the works

The A-Team logoThe movie version of 80s TV show The A-Team is finally in the works.

Variety are reporting that John Singleton will direct:

Twentieth Century Fox has skedded John Singleton‘s film version of 1980s TV series “The A-Team” for release on June 12, 2009.

Singleton will direct the action-adventure from a script by writing partners Michael Brandt and Derek Haas (“Wanted,” “3:10 to Yuma”).

Film will bring to the bigscreen the exploits of Hannibal Smith and his team of former special forces soldiers, who have been set up for a crime they didn’t commit.

No cast members have been announced yet but the June release date would seem to indicate to me that some decent names are likely.

For those who don’t remember the show here is the old TV opening sequence:

> Report at Variety
> The A-Team movie at the IMDb
> Find out more about the show at Wikipedia

Categories
News

Paul Scofield has died aged 86

Paul Schofield in A Man For All SeasonsActor Paul Scofield has died aged 86.

In a sad week that has seen actor Anthony Minghella and writer Arthur C Clarke die, news comes through that the Oscar winning actor – famous for his role on screen as Thomas More and on stage as King Lear – has passed away.

The Guardian report:

The British actor Paul Scofield, who won an Oscar for his portrayal of Thomas More in A Man for All Seasons, has died, aged 86.

His agent said he died peacefully yesterday in hospital near his Sussex home after being diagnosed with leukaemia.

Scofield was voted to have produced the finest ever performance as Shakespeare’s King Lear by his contemporaries and was widely thought of as one of the best actors of his generation.

He made his name on the London stage as a classical actor and also won several Baftas.

Noted for his powerful voice and a presence described as “monumental but reassuring”, he achieved fame for his role as the tormented composer Salieri in Peter Shaffer’s play Amadeus, and as Thomas More in Robert Bolt’s A Man For All Seasons, for which he won an Oscar in 1966.

If you have never seen A Man For All Seasons, which dramatises the dilemmas of Thomas More in the reign of Henry VIII, then it should be an immediate DVD purchase.

Scofield’s towering central performance is just one of the many highlights in one of the finest historical films ever made. It deservedly won Oscars in 1966 for Scofield, director Fred Zinneman, writer Robert Bolt (who had written the original play), cinematography, costume design and Best Picture.

Scofield also reprised his role as King Lear in Peter Brook’s 1971 film version of the play and in recent times had memorable supporting roles in Quiz Show (1994) and The Crucible (1996).

> Guardian obituary
> A Man For All Seasons at the IMDb
> Trailer for A Man For All Seasons at YouTube

Categories
In Production News

Quantum of Solace – New release date and synopsis

Quantum of SolaceThe new Bond film Quantum of Solace will now get released in the UK on Friday 31st October.

Here is the official press release with a synopsis of the film:

LONDON,  Wednesday 19 March 2008 – Sony Pictures Releasing (UK) are pleased to  confirm that the UK release date for the eagerly anticipated 22nd James Bond adventure QUANTUM OF SOLACE will be Friday, 31st October 2008, opening at the Odeon Leicester Square and all over the country.

QUANTUM  OF  SOLACE  continues  the  high  octane  adventures of James Bond (DANIEL CRAIG) in CASINO ROYALE.

Betrayed  by  Vesper,  the  woman he loved, 007 fights the urge to make his latest mission personal. 

Pursuing his determination to uncover the truth, Bond  and  M  (JUDI  DENCH)  interrogate Mr White (JESPER CHRISTENSEN) who reveals  the  organisation which blackmailed Vesper is far more complex and dangerous than anyone had imagined.

Forensic intelligence links an Mi6 traitor to a bank account in Haiti where a  case  of  mistaken identity introduces Bond to the beautiful but feisty Camille (OLGA KURYLENKO), a woman who has her own vendetta. 

Camille leads Bond  straight to Dominic Greene (MATHIEU AMALRIC), a ruthless business man and major force within the mysterious organisation.

On  a  mission  that  leads  him  to Austria, Italy and South America, Bond discovers  that  Greene,  conspiring  to  take  total control of one of the world’s most important natural resources, is forging a deal with the exiled General Medrano (JOAQUIN COSIO). 

Using his associates in the organisation, and  manipulating  his  powerful  contacts  within  the CIA and the British government, Greene  promises  to  overthrow the existing regime in a Latin American country, giving the General control of the country in exchange for a seemingly barren piece of land.

In  a  minefield  of  treachery,  murder  and  deceit, Bond allies with old friends in a battle to uncover the truth. 

As he gets closer to finding the man responsible for the betrayal of Vesper, 007 must keep one step ahead of the CIA,  the terrorists and even M, to unravel Greene’s sinister plan and stop his organisation.

It will be the 22nd Bond film.

> Official site for Quantum of Solace
> Check out the photos from the launch press conference
> Get all the latest info about the film at Wikipedia

Categories
News

Arthur C Clarke has died

Sir Arthur C ClarkeScience fiction writer Sir Arthur C Clarke has died in Sri Lanka at the age of 90.

Ravi Nessman of the AP reports:

Arthur C. Clarke, a visionary science fiction writer who won worldwide acclaim with more than 100 books on space, science and the future, died Wednesday in his adopted home of Sri Lanka, an aide said. He was 90.

Clarke, who had battled debilitating post-polio syndrome since the 1960s and sometimes used a wheelchair, died at 1:30 a.m. after suffering breathing problems, aide Rohan De Silva said.

Although he had a considerable body of literary work, film fans will best remember him for writing The Sentinel – the short story that was made into 2001: A Space Odyssey by director Stanley Kubrick in 1968.

His visions of technology and space travel captured the popular imagination and had an enormous influence on subsequent writers and filmmakers.

He also published a paper during World War 2, in which he predicted that communications satellites would sit in geo-stationary orbit above the Earth’s surface – thus allowing electronic signals to be bounced around the globe.

The geostationary orbit is now sometimes known as the Clarke Orbit or the Clarke Ring in his honour.

Satellite technology had a profound effect on communications and the broadcasting industry, which meant media barons like Rupert Murdoch and Ted Turner could be counted amongst his friends.

On his 90th birthday last December he recorded a video message with reflections on his life:

> AP article in full
> Find out more about Arthur C Clarke at Wikipedia

Categories
News

Anthony Minghella has died aged 54

Anthony MinghellaDirector Anthony Minghella has died aged 54.

BBC News report:

He had an operation for a growth in his neck last week and the operation seemed to have gone well.

But he had a fatal haemorrhage at 0500 GMT on Tuesday.

It is very sad loss for the British film industry, as Minghella had achieved critical and commerical success in Hollywood, but also helped get other films off the ground as a producer.

Early in his career he won awards for his radio plays and was a script editor on Grange Hill in the mid 80s.

But it was with Truly, Madly Deeply in 1990 that his film career really began, even though it was initially a TV movie that went on to get a theatrical release.

After the relative disappointment of his next film Mr Wonderful – a 1993 romantic comedy with Matt Dillon and Annabella Sciorra, he took on the challenge of adapting Michael Ondaatje‘s novel The English Patient.

Despite numerous financial difficulties in getting the film made, it ended up at Miramax and the end result was a critical and commercial triumph as it won 9 Oscars.

His next film was The Talented Mr Ripley, another literary adaptation (based on Patricia Highsmith’s novel) and although it was not quite as successful, it may perhaps thought of as his finest work.

In retrospect, the cast reads like a roll call of actors who would go on to greater success in the ensuing decade: Matt Damon, Jude Law, Gwyneth Paltrow, Philip Seymour Hoffman and Cate Blanchett.

His next two films were ambitious: 2003 saw him direct Cold Mountain – an accomplished adaptation of Chalres Frazier’s civil war set novel with Jude Law and Nicole Kidman in the lead roles, whilst his most recent work was 2006’s Breaking and Entering, a drama set in contemporary London with Jude Law, Robin Wright Penn, Juliette Binoche and Ray Winstone.

Along with Sydney Pollack, he set up Mirage Pictures and helped produce a diverse slate of films such as Heaven, The Quiet American, The Interpreter, Catch a Fire and Michael Clayton.

His most recent work was a 90 minute pilot for The No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency, which was scheduled to air on BBC1 this Sunday. Based on the novel by Alexander McCall Smith, it is about a Botswanan woman starts up the country’s first female-owned detective agency.

He was also chairman of the British Film Institute between 2003 and 2007.

Despite his undoubted filmmaking skills, a lot of people in the industry had an enormous amount of time and respect for Anthony as person. One actor I spoke to today – not a huge star by any means – told me that he received a hand written letter after enquiring about a possible supporting role in Cold Mountain. He didn’t get the part but it was a measure of the man that he took the time out to reply personally.

Although I never met him, people who worked with him always had good things to say about him – both on and off the record – and in the film industry that isn’t always the case.

This is a short video of Anthony talking about his life and career to producer Duncan Kenworthy:

This video is Anthony and Micahel Ondaatjie talking to Charlie Rose about The English Patient in 1996:

UPDATE 20/03/08: Friends of Anthony have set up a blog where people who knew or worked with him can leave a message or memory.

Mail can be sent to Old Chapel Studios, 19 Fleet Road, London NW3 2QR.

> BBC News report his death
> Anthony Minghella at the IMDb

Categories
In Production News

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows to be split into two films

Harry Potter and the Deathly HallowsIt has been announced that Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (the final Harry Potter book) is going to be split in two, with both films being shot back-to-back.

Variety report:

Warner Bros. will split the last “Harry Potter” tome into a two-part film, with the installments unspooling six months apart.

David Yates will direct and Steve Kloves will write both parts, which will be filmed concurrently.

Part one of “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows” will bow in November 2010, with the second to debut the following May.

The unusual “Kill Bill” strategy solves a thorny problem for the studio, which had been wrestling with a way to adapt J.K. Rowling‘s hefty tome and successfully conclude its lucrative franchise, which has generated $4.5 billion at the worldwide B.O. It’s not yet clear exactly how studio will split the 784-page book, however.

Given the sheer size of the book, it will be interesting to see how they trim it down.

Why not shoot it as one and then release it as three films?

> Original story at Variety
> The Leaky Cauldron – Harry Potter fan site
> Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows at Wikipedia and the IMDb

Categories
News

Tang Wei blackisted in China

Checking through my site stats today, I was wondering why a post I did back in October on Lust, Caution screening at the London Film Festival was getting an unusual amount of traffic via Google Images.

Tang Wei and Ang Lee at the LFF Gala screening of Lust, Caution

It turns out that Chinese authorities have become very upset with Ang Lee’s film and lead actress Tang Wei, even going as far ordering a media blackout because of what her character does in the film.

Jane Macartney of The Times reports from Beijing (note that if you haven’t seen the film, there is a key spoiler in the article below) :

China’s newest film star, who shot to fame in the director Ang Lee’s sexually explicit spy thriller Lust, Caution, has been blacklisted by Beijing authorities.

Television stations in Beijing and Shanghai were told to stop reporting on the actress Tang Wei, 28, and to pull any advertisements featuring her. The move followed an internal purge of officials associated with the film.

The ban on Tang, which has not been announced officially, was ordered in part because of the sex scenes but in the main because the movie has been deemed to glorify unpatriotic behaviour, Chinese sources said.

Tang plays a student activist who seduces a Chinese intelligence official collaborating with the occupying Japanese forces during the Second World War in Shanghai. Instead of setting up her lover for assassination, Tang’s character gives away the plot, allowing him to escape.

The State Administration of Radio Film and Television (SARFT) sent a memo to all television stations and print media last Thursday ordering a halt to broadcasts of a new advertisement in which Tang promotes Pond’s brand skincare products.

Her deal was reported to be worth six million yuan (ÂŁ450,000) for the doe-eyed young actress plucked from obscurity by Lee to star in the film.

Given the large number of pirated DVDs in China, don’t they realise that this will only increase interest in the film?

Or is their idea to punish the filmmakers financially by tacitly encouraging bootleggers of the film?

> The Times article in full
> Find out more about Tang Wei at Wikipedia
> Lust, Caution at the IMDb and reviews of the film at Metacritic

Categories
Interesting News Technology

VooZoo – Paramount comes to Facebook

VooZoo is a new Facebook application that could turn out to be an interesting experiment in marketing movies, even if it has a silly Web 2.0 name.

VooZoo app for Facebook

Paramount have teamed up with a new company named FanRocket in order to provide clips for it.

The AP report:

Paramount Pictures will become the first major studio to make clips from thousands of its movies available for use on the Internet.

The unit of Viacom Inc. is teaming with Los Angeles-based developer FanRocket to launch the VooZoo application Monday on Facebook.

The service gives Facebook users access to footage from thousands of movies, ranging from “The Ten Commandments” to “Forrest Gump,” to send to others on the popular social networking site.

“The short clips for a movie that you’ve already seen before helps you relive the moment,” Paramount senior vice president of entertainment Derek Broes said.

The clips last from a few seconds to several minutes and cover the gamut from Eddie Murphy’s guffaw in “Beverly Hills Cop” to Audrey Hepburn’s pleas over her “no-name slob” cat in “Breakfast at Tiffany’s.”

The studio will market DVDs of the movies through a button that appears after each clip is played. It eventually wants to use the application to virally market upcoming releases.

FanRocket founder Danny Kastner said he is aiming to get a few hundred thousand users within two months and added that the company is in talks with other Hollywood studios to package their titles on VooZoo.

That could take time, however, since Paramount staffers needed more than a year to select clips from the archive and tag them with search terms.

If you are on Facebook, you add it as an application and you can select a film clip from the Paramount back catalogue.

And then? Well, that’s where an interesting idea gets a little murky.

My VooZoo 1 - So far, so good?

It looks like you buy “VooHoo” points (not VooZoo – which is already confusing) via PayPal and then you can send a limited amount of clips to your Facebook friends.

Now, part of this is a good idea. As one of the big studios, Paramount have an amazing library of film and TV titles (including The Godfather, The Ten Commandments, Saturday Night Fever, Airplane!, Raiders of the Lost Ark and the Star Trek franchise) and making snippets available on a huge social network is undoubtedly a positive move.

But are people really going to pay just to send clips to one another? Aren’t they already emailing or posting YouTube videos anyway? Maybe it will make Paramount some money, but why don’t they let users download clips and get creative with them?

When you look at some of the best trailer mash ups and fake posters on the web there is a lot of creativity and passion out there. If say, a bunch of Beverly Hills Cop fans made mash ups from the film, they are more likely to spread the word about the film and buy the DVD.

So why all the confusing stuff about VooHoo points and PayPal? Surely the money is in the content (i.e. the movies) that people want to buy? I’ll say the jury is out on this one.

But one thing Paramount did do recently that piqued my interest was send out invites to a free Iron Man preview next month via Facebook. I saw that a couple of friends had RSVPd so I joined up too.

Iron Man Facebook screening invite

Although it is screening a couple of days before it opens in early May, it should be a great word of mouth tool. It will inform all the users, who will see it in countless news feeds and on their friends’ profiles over the next few weeks.

So at least in one respect, Paramount are headed in the right direction.

> The AP story on VooZoo
> Facebook’s Mark Zukerberg is interviewed at SXSW – an event which got a lot of people Twittering
> Brush up on the history of Paramount at Wikipedia
> Mashable report on the deal Paramount signed with Joost back in September

Categories
Interesting News Technology

WSJ on Barack Obama and Trent Reznor

Obama and Reznor in WSJI never thought I’d see the day when the Wall Street Journal would feature an article about Barack Obama and Trent Reznor, but they have just written a piece on their clever internet strategies.

On Reznor:

Proving again that he’s willing to experiment with new ways of marketing his music – last summer Reznor hid USB drives with an unreleased song in the bathrooms at his concerts – he personally loaded some of his new songs onto an underground filing-trading service.

On Obama:

The Obama campaign has made available its database of supporters to anyone who wants access to the information. While some bad seeds have misused the information, it’s also empowered local volunteers to make calls on their own, greatly expanding the number of people working for the campaign.

Surely media and film companies can learn something from these guys?

> Barack Obama’s official site
> CNN on Obama’s use of the web
> Download Trent Reznor’s new album for free

Categories
News TV

Simon Pegg upset about the Spaced US remake

Spaced on DVDThe classic TV series Spaced is going to be remade by Fox with McG as one of the producers.

Star and co-writer Simon Pegg has released an official statement in which he is understandably upset:

My main problem with the notion of a Spaced remake is the sheer lack of respect that Granada/ Wonderland/Warner Bros have displayed in respectively selling out and appropriating our ideas without even letting us know.

A decision I can only presume was made as a way of avoiding having to give us any money, whilst at the same time using mine and Edgar’s name in their press release, in order to trade on the success of Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz, even professing, as Peter Johnson did, to being a big fan of the show and it’s creators.

A device made all the more heinous by the fact that the press release neglected to mention the show’s co-creator and female voice, Jessica Hynes (nee Stevenson). The fact is, when we signed our contracts ten years ago, we had neither the experience or the kudos to demand any clauses securing any control over future reversioning.

We signed away our rights to any input in the show’s international future, because we just wanted to get the show made and these dark days of legal piracy seemed a far away concern. As a result, we have no rights. The show does not belong to us and, those that do own it have no obligation to include us in any future plans.

You would perhaps hope though, out of basic professional respect and courtesy, we might have been consulted. It is this flagrant snub and effective vote of no confidence in the very people that created the show, that has caused such affront at our end.

If they don’t care about the integrity of the original, why call it Spaced? Why attempt to find some validation by including mine and Edgar’s names in the press release as if we were involved? Why not just lift the premise?

Two strangers, pretend to be a couple in order to secure residence of a flat/apartment. It’s hardly Ibsen. Jess and I specifically jumped off from a very mainstream sitcom premise in order to unravel it so completely.

Take it, have it, call it Perfect Strangers and hope Balkie doesn’t sue. Just don’t call it Spaced.

Whilst I don’t like to prejudge anything, the thought of McG producing a US version of the show sounds like a recipe for disaster.

For those who have never come across the show, get the original on DVD.

> Spaced Out – Fansite of the show
> Find out more about Spaced at Wikipedia

Categories
News

Jack Nicholson ad for Hilary Clinton

Jack Nicholson has put together an ad supporting Hilary Clinton which features clips from his films.

According to the AP it was put together with help from director Rob Reiner.

Categories
News

Warner Bros absorbs New Line

WB absorbs New LineAfter weeks of speculation details have emerged that New Line Cinema will be absorbed into Warner Bros.

Although it was already part of the Time Warner empire, the studio will cease to function as a separate entity and now effectively become a label of Warner Bros.

Founder and chairman Bob Shaye and co-chairman Michael Lynne are stepping down.

Variety report under the snappy headline ‘New Line in Warners’ Corner’:

The colorful 40-year run of New Line is coming to an abrupt end, costing the jobs of most of the company’s 600 staffers.

The company — home to “The Lord of the Rings,” “Austin Powers,” “Friday the 13th,” “A Nightmare on Elm Street,” “Rush Hour,” “The Mask” and “Boogie Nights” — will be folded into Warner Bros. as a small genre arm.

But toppers Bob Shaye, who founded the company in his New York apartment, and Michael Lynne will not be part of the package.

No exact numbers have been divulged for how many of New Line’s staffers will stay but the surviving entity will be a shell of its former self, refocusing on the horror, comedy and urban genre pics that helped put it on the map decades ago. Employees will attend meetings today in Los Angeles and New York to discuss future plans.

Time Warner said New Line would continue to have development, marketing, business affairs and some distribution operations but those will be cut severely. And New Line films will go out through Warner Bros. pipes after this weekend’s “Semi-Pro.”

Warner will likely make ample use of completed New Line pics since the usually prolific studio has dated only three pics for 2009.

This all comes just over four years since the huge success of the Lord of the Rings trilogy.

So, what went wrong?

Well, they haven’t really had a sizeable hit since then (with Wedding Crashers and Hairspray being notable exceptions) and even sequels like Rush Hour 3 got bogged down in unnecessary costs.

Whilst the Rings trilogy was a huge gamble that paid incredible riches, it also possibly created unrealistic expectations. Added to that, the legal row between Peter Jackson and the studio kept The Hobbit in limbo, which is their most valuable asset.

Futhermore, their practice of selling off the foriegn rights to their films backfired when the expensive post-Rings tentpole The Golden Compass flopped in the US (grosssing just $70 million dollars) but went on to become a hit internationally (grossing $260 million in foreign markets).

It is noticeable that Time Warner’s President and Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bewkes has said that they now want to keep hold of foreign rights in the official press release announcing the move:

Given the trend toward fewer movie releases, New Line and Warner Bros. will now have more complementary release slates, with New Line focusing on genres that have been its strength.

With the growing importance of international revenues, it makes sense for New Line to retain its international film rights and to exploit them through Warner Bros.’ global distribution infrastructure.

We can also take better advantage of digital distribution platforms by combining our studios.

These changes will enhance our revenue opportunities and drive dramatic cost efficiencies and higher margins at New Line.

There is no doubt that the studio had a remarkable journey from a New York indie in the 1960s distributing Reefer Madness to college campuses, the films of John Waters, the Nightmare on Elm Street series, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (the success that really propelled them into the major league), to the studio that has hits like the Austin Powers franchise and the Lord of the Rings trilogy.

But despite their commercial legacy and their preference for genre films, they should also be remembered as the champion of some daring and brilliant films such as The Player,  Glengarry Glen Ross, Se7en, Boogie Nights, Magnolia, About Schmidt, A History of Violence, The New World and Little Children.

Check out this video of Bob Shaye and Michael Lynne talking to Charlie Rose last year about the studio:

[googlevideo]http://video.google.ca/videoplay?docid=-1469795405827875263[/googlevideo]

> Check out the Variety report in full
> Official press release announcing the move from Time Warner
> Find out more about New Line at Wikipedia

Categories
News Posters

Poster: Where in the World is Osama Bin Laden?

Cinematical have posted a new poster for Morgan Spurlock‘s latest documentary Where in the World is Osama Bin Laden?

Where in the World is Osama Bin Laden?

The title of the film is pretty self explanatory but if you can also check out the trailer here:

It is out at US cinemas on April 18th and in the UK on May 9th.

> Where in the World is Osama Bin Laden at the IMDb
> Official site for the film
> James Rocchi of Cinematical interviews Morgan Spurlock at the Sundance Film Festival

Categories
Awards Season News

The Oscar Winners

Here are this years Oscar winners in full:

Oscar Winners Mosaic

MAJOR CATEGORIES

Best Picture: No Country For Old Men

Best Director: Joel and Ethan Coen, No Country For Old Men

Best Actor: Daniel Day-Lewis, There Will Be Blood

Best Actress: Marion Cotillard, La Vie en Rose

Best Supporting Actor: Javier Bardem, No Country For Old Men

Best Supporting Actress: Tilda Swinton, Michael Clayton

Best Adapted Screenplay: Joel and Ethan Coen, No Country For Old Men

Best Original Screenplay: Diablo Cody, Juno

Best Art Direction: Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet

Best Cinematography: Robert Elswit, There Will Be Blood

Best Costume Design: Elizabeth: The Golden Age

Best Film Editing: Le Mozart des Pickpockets

Best Makeup: La Vie en Rose

Best Music – Original Score: Dario Marinelli, Atonement

Best Music – Original Song: Falling Slowly – Once (performed by Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova)

Best Sound Editing: The Bourne Ultimatum

Best Sound Mixing: The Bourne Ultimatum

Best Visual Effects: The Golden Compass

Best Animated Feature Film: Ratatouille

Best Documentary Feature: Taxi to the Darkside

Best Documentary – Short Subject: Freeheld

Best Short Film – Animated: Peter and the Wolf

Best Short Film – Live Action: Le Mozart des Pickpockets

> Official winners site for the Oscars (complete with the text of their acceptance speeches)
> YouTube channel for the Oscars

Categories
Awards Season News

The Oscars – Live

The Oscar ceremony is about to begin, and this will be a running commentary of the event.

Opening Monologue: Jon Stewart has an opening monologue with some amusing – and pointed – lines about the Writers’ Strike.

Jon Stewart - Oscar Opening Monologue

He asks if the Vanity Fair Oscar party was cancelled out of respect to the writers, then why don’t they invite them one year? I bet his team of writers enjoyed getting that one out of their system.

Best Costume Design: Alexandra Byrne wins for Elizabeth: The Golden Age. My predictions get off to a bad start as I was going for Atonement. 

Best Animated Feature: It goes to Ratatouille and Brad Bird goes up to collect his second Oscar after The Incredibles in 2004. My predictions are back on track. 

Best Makeup: The surreal sight of Norbit winning is averted as Didier Lavergne and Jan Archibald win for La Vie en Rose.

Best Visual Effects: I thought Transformers would get it but the Oscar goes to Michael Fink, Bill Westenhofer, Ben Morris and Trevor Wood for The Golden Compass. Some consolation for New Line after all the money they spent on the film.

Best Art Direction: Dante Ferretti, Francesca Lo Schiavo win for Sweeney Todd. I think There Will Be Blood was robbed here.

Best Supporting Actor: And… Javier Bardem wins for No Country for Old Men. That was a slam dunk as he was red hot favourite.

Javier Bardem wins for No Country for Old Men

He even thanked his mother in Spanish, which was nice. 

Best Short Film – Live Action: Owen Wilson presents the Oscar to Le Mozart des Pickpockets (The Mozart of Pickpockets)

Best Short Film- Animated: For some reason Jerry Seinfeld is presenting this as his animated bee character. Anyway it goes to Peter and the Wolf. Possibly the low key victory of the night as Suzie Templeton and Hugh Welchman pick up the award with a puppet in tow.

Best Supporting Actress: This is the real tough one to call in the major categories. I fancy Cate Blanchett but Ruby Dee, Amy Ryan or Tilda Swinton have a good shot. Alan Arkin comes out to present the award and it goes to… Tilda Swinton for Michael Clayton.

Tilda Swinton wins for Michael Clayton

She not only thanks her agent but says she is going to give the award to him(!).

Best Screenplay – Adapted: I fancied The Diving Bell and the Butterfly but The Coen Brothers win for No Country for Old Men. Their script was a great achievement in avery strong field.

Best Sound Editing: Seth Rogan and Jonah Hill come out to present the award to Karen Baker Landers and Per Hallberg for The Bourne Ultimatum. A deserved win although ironically the TV sound feed screws up during the acceptance speech.

Best Sound Mixing: In quick succession Bourne wins again in the sound category. Scott Millan, David Parker and Kirk Francis get the award for The Bourne Ultimatum.

Best Actress: Will Marion Cotillard, Julie Christie or (maybe) Ellen Page win? I’m going for Christie but it’s a tough one to call. Forest Whitaker is announcing the nominees now. And the award goes to … Marion Cotillard for La Vie En Rose.

Marion Cotillard wins Best Actress for La Vie En Rose

All her campaigning and the showy nature of her (admittedly highly accomplished) performance paid off.

Back after break, Jon Stewart is playing Wii tennis on the huge academy screen. After his use of an iPhone earlier for a gag, I’m sure Nintendo and Apple are happy.

Jack Nicholson comes out to present a montage of all the movies that have won Best Picture from Wings in 1928 to The Departed last year.

Best Editing: Renee Zellwegger comes out to present this award. Christopher Rouse wins for The Bourne Ultimatum. A great trio of technical Oscars for the superb sound and editing work for the best blockbuster in modern years.

Honoury Award for Robert F Boyle: This legendary production designer (who worked with Hitchcock on North By Northwest and The Birds) came on to accept his award at the age of 98. He thanked ‘Hitch’ for introducing him to his wife whilst Norman Jewison and Don Siegel also got shouts.

Robert F Boyle gets honoury award

Best Foreign Film: Penelope Cruz comes out to present and I think The Counterfeiters is a strong candidate here. But why on earth did France not select La Vie En Rose or The Diving Bell and the Butterfly for this category? They entered Persepolis which – whilst brilliant – never stood a change. In fact the rules about countries nominating one film must chance. Anyway the winner is The Counterfeiters and director Stefan Ruzowitzky goes up to collect. (We spoke to him back in October about the film – check out the interview here).

Best Song: John Travolta comes out to present this award. I’m hoping for a win for Falling Slowly from Once. But Enchanted has three songs up for the award. And the winner is… Falling Slowly by Glenn Hansard and Marketa Irglova. Great news and it will be a big boost for the film. Whilst we are plugging past interviews, listen to director John Carney speak about Once here.

Marketa Irglova and Glenn Hansard

They go to a break and Jon Stewart gets Marketa Irglova to come back on and finish her acceptance speech. Very nice! I don’t think I’ve ever seen that before.

Best Cinematography: Possibly the strongest category with a four truly outstanding candidates. However, I feel Roger Deakins may suffer by having two brilliant films up for consideration. Cameron Diaz presents the award – and struggles to say ‘cine-ma-tog-raphy’ – which goes to Robert Elswit for There Will Be Blood.

Robert Elswit wins Best Cinematography for There Will Be Blood

A marvellous film with some truly incredible images so no complaints there but Roger Deakins will get it one day!

The In Memoriam segment now plays. Hard to think Ingmar Bergman, Michelangelo Antonioni and Heath Ledger are amongst those no longer alive.

Best Score: I secretly wanted James Newton Howard to win for his excellent work on Michael Clayton but the award goes to Dario Marinelli for his work on Atonement.

Best Documentary – Short Subject: Tom Hanks comes out to present but hands over to a bunch of US soldiers in Iraq who have pretaped the nominees and winners. Weird. But it goes to Freehold.

Best Documentary – Short Subject: Hanks stays on stage to present the feature award. Four of the nominees (especially Taxi to the Darkside and No End in Sight) are damning indicments of US foreign policy. Will one of them get it? Yes, but its the disturbing Taxi to the Darkside, directed by Alex Gibney . Five years on from Michael Moore getting booed – amidst the cheers – for denouncing Bush and the war, the Academy is now honouring a film that shows the truly squalid side of Bush’s war on terror. And thankfully no-one booed this time.

Best Screenplay – Original: I fancied Tony Gilroy (for Michael Clayton) could spring an upset but the hotly favoured Diablo Cody wins for Juno.

Image(569)

It was a good script and I’m sure the narrative of her life helped her out. Plus, all the Juno backbaiting of late has has got a little tedious. It is a really good film deserving of recognition. Go Diablo.  

Best Actor: Helen Mirren comes out to present the award. It will be a huge upset if Daniel Day Lewis doesn’t win.

The award goes to … Daniel Day Lewis for his great performance in There Will Be Blood.

Daniel Day Lewis wins Best Actor for There Will Be Blood

The big awards coming quick now.

Best Director: I’m tipping the Coens. Martin Scorcese (who finally gets to present after winning last year) opens the envelope and The Coen Brothers win for No Country for Old Men.

The Ceon Brothers win Best Director(s)

Although Paul Thomas Anderson may have been in with a shout I guess it was seen as the Coens’ time – that and the fact that it is a great film.

Best Picture: Denzel Washington comes out and the winner is No Country for Old Men. Producer Scott Rudin and The Coen Brothers (who were still in the wings after winning Best Director) come on to accept the big award.

No Country for Old Men wins Best Picture

Congratulations to the Coens and producer Scott Rudin – as he also produced There Will Be Blood (two modern classics in one year!).

But also props must go to Paramount Vantage and Miramax for backing these two dark yet brilliant films.

That’s it for this year.

I’m off to bed.

Categories
Awards Season News

Indie Spirit Awards Winners

Indie Spirit AwardsHere are the winners at this year’s Indie Spirit Awards:

Best Feature: Juno

Best Director: Julian Schnabel, The Diving Bell and the Butterfly

Best Male Lead: Philip Seymour Hoffman, The Savages

Best Female Lead: Ellen Page, Juno

Best Supporting Male: Chiwetel Ejiofor, Talk To Me

Best Supporting Female: Cate Blanchett, I’m Not There

Best Screenplay: Tamara Jenkins, The Savages

Best Foreign Film: Once

Best Documentary: Crazy Love

Best Cinematography: Janusz Kaminski, The Diving Bell and the Butterfly

Bests First Screenplay: Diablo Cody, Juno

Best First Feature: The Lookout

Robert Altman Award: Todd Haynes, Laura Rosenthal and the cast of I’m Not There

John Cassavetes Award: August Evening

Truer Than Fiction Award: The Unforeseen, Laura Dunn

Producers Award: Neil Kopp, Paranoid Park, Old Joy

Someone to Watch Award: Ramin Bahrani, Chop Shop

> Official site for the Indie Spirit Awards
> Find out more about the awards at Wikipedia
> Some photos on Flickr of filmmakers and actors arriving at the event in Santa Monica
> Check out the minisite for the awards at the IFC

Categories
News

Rambo not showing at Odeon cinemas in the UK

OdeonFor some reason Rambo won’t be showing at Odeon cinemas in the UK due to a dispute between the distributor (Sony Pictures UK) and the chain.

Variety report:

Odeon, the U.K.’s biggest exhib chain, will not show Sony’s new release “Rambo” at its theaters this weekend, citing undisclosed “commercial reasons.”

News has sent shockwaves around the local industry as “Rambo” is the frame’s most significant new release in the U.K. News has also enraged online Sylvester Stallone fans, especially those who live in rural areas where their only local cinema is an Odeon.

Decision by Odeon not to play the testosterone-fuelled pic will likely see its opening U.K. B.O. haul dented considerably even though Sony has spent much of this week scrambling to get other chains, including other market leaders Vue and Cineworld, to pump up their “Rambo” showings.

Odeon have released a statement on why they won’t show it:

“Owing to commercial reasons, Odeon has made the decision not to screen the film Rambo across its cinemas in the UK.

As the UK’s largest cinema chain, Odeon offers its guests a wide range of film genres to appeal to many different audiences.

As such the decision not to screen Rambo will free up screens to show alternative popular new films such as Jumper, Be Kind Rewind and Juno. We are unable to comment further on this issue.”

The Times have quoted Phil Clapp, the chief executive of the Cinema Exhibitors’ Association, as saying:

“Odeon haven’t pulled the film, they have refused to show it. It’s very rare for this to happen with a film of this profile. I understand that Odeon were not happy with the terms the distributors were asking.”

Variety speculate that the reason was financial and quote a rival cinema chain on the affair:

An exhib source told Variety that Odeon’s decision to pull “Rambo” must be “over a disagreement over the terms. But to us, the film rentals rate seems reasonable enough for a release such as ‘Rambo.’ ”

“There has to be a time when neither player steps down. Both companies have their budgets and both are playing the game,” commented Andrew Turner, Cineworld director of film booking, adding that “I can’t remember the last time this happened in the multiplex era.”

It all seems a bit strange and I can’t recall a similar situation in recent memory.

That said Rambo is still likely to claim the Number 1 or 2 spot at the UK box office this weekend.

> Variety on the story
> Check out which cinemas are showing Rambo at Google Movies

Categories
DVD & Blu-ray News Technology

Toshiba to quit HD-DVD

DVD format war overThe hi-def DVD format war looks like it is officially over.

The writing was on the wall when Warner Bros went exclusively with Blu-Ray and key retailers like Netflix, Best Buy and Wal-Mart followed suit.

But now Reuters are reporting that Toshiba – the originator of HD-DVD – are ready to surrender:

Toshiba Corp is planning to give up on its HD-DVD format for high-definition video, conceding defeat to the competing Blu-Ray technology backed by Sony Corp, a company source said on Saturday.

Japanese public broadcaster NHK had earlier reported that Toshiba would suffer losses in the tens of billions of yen (hundreds of millions of dollars) as it scrapped production of HD DVD players and recorders and took other steps to exit the business.

The company source told Reuters that Toshiba was in the final stages of planning to exit the HD DVD business and that an official decision would be made soon.

Now that this fight seems over, will we now see a wider battle between downloads and optical discs?

Or will consumers keep resisting hi-def and stick with regular DVDs for the foreseeable future?

UPDATE 19/02/08: Toshiba themselves have now officially confirmed the inevitable.

They will phase out production of HD DVD players and recorders and will shut the business by the end of March.

BBC News quote Toshiba president Atsutoshi Nishida as saying:

“It was an agonising decision for me, but I thought if we kept running this business it would have grave ramifications for the management of our company. We made a quick decision, judging that there is no way of winning the competition.”

They also have an article on why Blu-ray won which can be boiled down to three salient points:

  1. Blu-ray drives in PS3 consoles: This meant that there were about 10.5 million players in homes worldwide before you count in stand alone players. Compared this to sales of 1 million HD DVD stand alone players – plus the need for an external drive for Xbox consoles – and you can see why Sony had the edge.
  2. Sony had crucial Hollywood leverage: Sony own one of the major film studios and used that to their advantage by recruiting Disney and Fox early on. When Warner Bros switched sides from the HD-DVD camp, the writing was on the wall. Toshiba were willing to offer studios short term cash incentives, but in the long run getting the winning format was always going to be the key factor for the studios.
  3. The painful lesson of Betamax: Sony had already lost a format war in the 80s with Betamax being defeated by the inferior but cheaper VHS, so it was determined this time around not to repeat the same mistakes.

> Deadline Hollywood Daily with more details on the end of the format war
> Comparison of HD-VD and Blu-ray formats
> The Downfall of HD-DVD – the funny viral video which used scenes from the WW2 film Downfall to comment on Warners leaving HD-DVD
> Variety report on the end of the format war
> Official press release from Toshiba
> Yuri Kageyama of the AP in Tokyo on the news
> BBC News on why Blu-ray won

Categories
News

The Writers’ strike is over

Writers’ strikeThe WGA strike is now officially over.

Variety say:

“The strike is over,” Patric Verrone said, dispassionately but with the hint of a smile. “Our membership has voted. Writers can go back to work.”

The WGA West prexy announced the news, something the town had taken as a fait accompli, shortly before 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Writers Guild Theater in Beverly Hills. Some 92.5% of the 3,775 ballots cast were in favor of ending the 100-day strike, with 3,492 members voting yes and 283 die-hards ready to tilt at the windmill of continuing the work stoppage that began Nov. 5.

The vote on lifting the strike concluded a mere three days after the WGA cinched its contract agreement with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers in the wee hours of a Saturday morning. The strike vote was held over a 48-hour frame, with members able to vote in person at the WGA Theater and at Gotham’s Crowne Plaza Hotel, or via fax.

The WGA have announced it on their website:

On Tuesday, members of the Writers Guilds East and West voted by a 92.5% margin to lift the restraining order that was invoked on November 5th. The strike is over.

Writing can resume immediately. If you were employed when the strike began, you should plan to report to work on Wednesday. If you’re not employed at an office or other work site, call or e-mail your employer that you are resuming work.

If you have been told not to report to work or resume your services, we recommend that you still notify your employer in writing of your availability to do so. Questions concerning return-to-work issues should be directed to the WGAW legal department or the WGAE’s assistant executive director.

The decision to begin this strike was not taken lightly and was only made after no other reasonable alternative was possible. We are profoundly aware of the economic loss these fourteen weeks have created not only for our members but so many other colleagues who work in the television and motion picture industries.

Nonetheless, with the establishment of the WGA jurisdiction over new media and residual formulas based on distributor’s gross revenue (among other gains) we are confident that the results are a significant achievement not only for ourselves but the entire creative community, now and in the future.

We hope to build upon the extraordinary energy, ingenuity, and solidarity that were generated by your hard work during the strike.

Over the next weeks and months, we will be in touch with you to discuss and develop ways we can use our unprecedented unity to make our two guilds stronger and more effective than ever.

Now that the strike has ended, there remains the vote to ratify the new contract. Ballots and information on the new deal, both pro and con, will be mailed to you shortly. You will be able to return those ballots via mail or at a membership meeting to be held Monday, February 25th, 2008, at times and locations to be determined.

Thank you for making it possible. As ever, we are all in this together.

Best,

Patric M. Verrone
President, WGAW

Michael Winship
President, WGAE

The media titans – who include Peter Chernin (Fox), Bob Iger (Disney), Brad Grey (Paramount), Jeff Zucker (Universal), Barry M. Meyer (Warner Bros), Leslie Moonves (CBS), Harry Sloan (MGM), Michael Lynton (Sony) – in a collective statement, say:

This is a day of relief and optimism for everyone in the entertainment industry. We can now all get back to work, with the assurance that we have concluded two groundbreaking labor agreements – with our directors and our writers — that establish a partnership through which our business can grow and prosper in the new digital age.

The strike has been extraordinarily difficult for all of us, but the hardest hit of all have been the many thousands of businesses, workers and families that are economically dependent on our industry.

We hope now to focus our collective efforts on what this industry does best – writers, directors, actors, production crews, and entertainment companies working together to deliver great content to our worldwide audiences.

BBC News crunch out some numbers:

  • The strike, which lasted 14 weeks, was the most damaging period of industrial action to hit Hollywood in 20 years.
  • Some 10,500 writers stopped work on 5 November, a few days after their old contract with studios ended.
  • If writers return to work on Wednesday, the thousands of production staff who were put of out of work as scripts dried up will take weeks to mobilise while new material is prepared.
  • The strike is said to have cost Los Angeles’ film and TV industry around $733m (ÂŁ374m), with the wider economy losing around $1.3bn (ÂŁ663m).
  • Studio executives say it will take about two months for new TV programmes to emerge.
  • Studios will have to decide which of the 65 affected series will come back, with hits House, CSI, Grey’s Anatomy and Desperate Housewives likely to get priority.

So, although the strike is now over, important questions still remain:

1) Who came out as the winner?
2) In future, wouldn’t it be healthier for both sides to communicate with more frequency and depth?
3) Is a more bitter and longer repeat of this strike, three years from now, inevitable?

> Variety report on the end of the strike
> Nikki Finke with more on the strike at Deadline Hollywood Daily
> More on the strike at Wikipedia

Categories
News

Roy Scheider RIP

Roy ScheiderRoy Scheider died yesterday at the age of 75.

The New York Times reports:

Roy Scheider, a stage actor with a background in the classics who became one of the leading figures in the American film renaissance of the 1970s, died on Sunday afternoon in Little Rock, Ark. He was 75 and lived in Sag Harbor, N.Y.

Mr. Scheider had suffered from multiple myeloma for several years, and died of complications from a staph infection, his wife, Brenda Siemer, said.

Mr. Scheider’s rangy figure, gaunt face and emotional openness made him particularly appealing in everyman roles, most famously as the agonized police chief of “Jaws,” Steven Spielberg’s 1975 breakthrough hit, about a New England resort town haunted by the knowledge that a killer shark is preying on the local beaches.

Mr. Scheider conveyed an accelerated metabolism in movies like “Klute” (1971), his first major film role, in which he played a threatening pimp to Jane Fonda’s New York call girl; and in William Friedkin’s “French Connection” (also 1971), as Buddy Russo, the slightly more restrained partner to Gene Hackman’s marauding police detective, Popeye Doyle. That role earned Mr. Scheider the first of two Oscar nominations.

For a generation of people he will be best remembered for his role in Jaws, but he was also memorable in films like The French Connection and All That Jazz.

His most famous line? That would be the one about the size of the boat:

> Roy Scheider at the IMDb
> Dave Kehr’s report in the New York Times
> The London Times with an obituary

Categories
Awards Season News

BAFTA Winners

And the BAFTA goes to
Here are tonight’s major BAFTA winners:

BEST PICTURE
Atonement

BEST ACTOR
Daniel Day Lewis (There Will Be Blood)

BEST ACTRESS
Marion Cotillard (La Vie en Rose)

BEST DIRECTOR
Joel and Ethan Coen (No Country for Old Men)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Javier Bardem (No Country for Old Men)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Tilda Swinton (Michael Clayton)

BEST BRITISH FILM
This is England

Other notable winners were:

Best Film Not in the English Language was won by The Lives of Others.

Best Original Screenplay was won by Diablo Cody for Juno.

Best Adapted Screenplay award went to Ronald Harwood for The Diving Bell and the Butterfly.

Best Animated Film was won by Ratatouille.

Special Visual Effects was presented to The Golden Compass.

Writer Matt Greenhalgh won The Carl Foreman Award for Special Achievement by a British Director, Writer or Producer for their First Feature Film for Control.

The Pearce Sisters won the Short Animation award.

Best Short Film award was presented to Dog Altogether.

Property Master Barry Wilkinson was presented with the award for Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema. Barry’s credits include Indiana Jones, Titanic, Four Weddings and a Funeral, The Fifth Element, and the Harry Potter films.

The Orange Rising Star Award was presented to Shia LaBeouf.

The winner of 60 Seconds of Fame, BAFTA and Orange’s short film initiative, was announced earlier this afternoon in front of a big screen in Covent Garden Piazza. The winning film, United (Polar Showtime Dancers) was created by Cheryl Marshall from the East Midlands.

Categories
News

BAFTA Predictions

BAFTA TrophyHere are my predictions for the major categories at the BAFTAs tonight:

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR: Although its a strong field – Tom Wilkinson could have an outside shot – I can’t see anything other than a win for Javier Bardem (No Country for Old Men).

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS: A tough one to call. Cate Blanchett (I’m Not There) is the Oscar front runner but I think all candidates have a reasonable shot here. I’ll play safe and go for Cate Blanchett.

BEST ACTOR: The red hot favourite here is Daniel Day-Lewis (There Will Be Blood) and I see no reason to disagree.

BEST ACTRESS: A large chuck of the British media would love a win for glamorous Kiera Knightley (Atonement) but I think Julie Christie (Away from Her) will deservedly get it.

BEST DIRECTOR: Another tough one to call. If Atonement starts picking up awards Joe Wright definitely has a chance and Paul Thomas Anderson (There Will Be Blood) is also a strong contender. But I think The Coen Brothers (No Country for Old Men) will get it.

BEST FILM: With this being a British event, logic would appear to dictate a win for Atonement but I think (and hope) the sheer quality of No Country Old Men will prevail.

BEST BRITISH FILM: Atonement has to win here if it doesn’t pick up Best Film although watch out for This is England. (This has always struck me as a dodgy category – wouldn’t it just look silly if Atonement won both?)

I’ll post the winners as soon as they come through.

> Check out the full list of BAFTA nominations

Categories
News

Summary of the Tentative WGA Agreement

Writers’ strikeIt looks like the writers’ strike will soon be over.

If the WGA members approve the agreement below, then they could be back at work this week. It will also mean that the Oscars ceremony will go ahead on Sunday 24th February.

Below is a summary of the tentative basic agreement the WGA has worked out:

SUMMARY OF THE TENTATIVE 2008 WGA THEATRICAL AND TELEVISION BASIC AGREEMENT

This is not a complete summary. The Memorandum of Agreement shall prevail in the case of any inconsistency.

Term of Agreement: From resumption of work through May 1, 2011.

Minimums

Minimum rates generally increase 3.5% each year. The exceptions are: network prime time rates and daytime serial script fees increase 3.0% each period; program fees and the upset price increase once by 3% in the second year; and clip fees increase once by 5% in the third year.

Writing for Made-for New Media

Coverage: The WGA is recognized as the exclusive bargaining representative for writing fornew media (such as Internet or cellular technology). Writing for new media is covered by the MBA if:
(1) it is written by a “professional writer” (anyone with a single TV or screen credit, 13 weeks of employment in TV, film or radio, a professionally produced stage play credit or a published novel) or
(2) the program is derivative of an MBA-covered program or
(3) if the budget is above any of three thresholds: $15,000 per minute; $300,000 per program; or $500,000 per series order. If initially not covered due to the projected budget but later costs exceed a threshold, the program/series is covered retroactively.

Compensation: If a new media program is derivative of an MBA-covered program, minimums for initial compensation apply. The minimum for derivative dramatic programs is $618 for programs up to two minutes, plus $309 for each additional minute. The minimum for derivative comedy-variety and daytime serials is $360 for programs up to two minutes, plus $180 for each additional minute. The minimum for all other types of derivative programs is $309 for programs up to two minutes, plus $155 for each additional minute. Regardless of the length of the program initial  compensation can be no less than the two minute rate. For original programs initial compensation is negotiable.

Pension and Health Insurance: MBA pension and health provisions apply to all covered writing for new media programs.

Credits: The Guild shall determine credits on all covered new media programs. Credits must appear on-screen (or on a link to the program) if anyone else receives such credit.

Television Reuse: If a covered new media program is reused in traditional media, the usual residuals for a television program apply with minor modifications.

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Writing for Made-for New Media (cont’d)

Separated Rights: Creators of original new media material are protected as follows:
(1) If you create an Internet program that becomes a TV series or feature film which you write, traditional separated rights apply.
(2) If you write original material for an Internet program and the Company wants to use it for a TV series or feature film to be written by someone else, the Company must purchase rights from you. The Company may acquire the rights at any time, but separate compensation must be paid. If you want to sell those rights to another studio, the Company has a right of first refusal.
(3) If you create an Internet program that is the equivalent of a traditional TV series (over $25,000 per minute and 20 minutes in length) you are entitled to the same rights as in (2) above, plus sequel payments for each Internet episode based on your program.

Internet Residuals: Initial compensation covers writing services and 13 weeks of availability in new media when the viewer does not pay, and 26 weeks of availability in new media when the viewer pays. After those periods, certain residuals are payable: (i) if a new media program derived from an MBA-covered program or an original new media program with a budget higher than $25,000 per minute is reused in new media, the new media reuse provisions described below apply, except that electronic sell-through is paid at 1.2% of distributor’s gross receipts; and (ii) for original new media programs, the residual for ad-supported streaming is negotiable, while reuse where the viewer pays is compensated at 1.2% of distributor’s gross receipts.

Other Guild Provisions: A number of standard guild provisions apply to all covered new media programs: Guild shop (writers must join the WGA), no-strike/no-lockout, grievance and arbitration, and timely payment.

Reuse in New Media

Distributor’s Gross Receipts: All revenue-based residuals in new media employ a definition of “distributor’s gross” which eliminates the accounting uncertainty inherent in the concept of “producer’s gross” as found in the home video/DVD formula.

Download Rentals: If the viewer pays for limited new media access to a program, residuals are paid at the rate of 1.2% of distributor’s gross receipts.

Download Sales (Electronic Sell-Through): If the viewer pays for permanent use of the program, residuals are paid at 0.36% of distributor’s gross receipts for the first 100,000 downloads of a television program and the first 50,000 downloads of a feature. After that, residuals are paid at 0.7% of distributor’s gross receipts for television programs and 0.65% for feature films.

Theatrical Ad-Supported Streaming: Ad-supported streaming of feature films produced after July 1, 1971 is payable at 1.2% of distributor’s gross receipts.

Television Ad-Supported Streaming (Library): Ad-supported streaming of television programs produced after 1977 (and a small number produced prior to 1977) are payable at 2% of distributor’s gross receipts.

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Reuse in New Media (cont’d)

Television Ad-Supported Streaming (New Programs): Ad-supported streaming of television programs is payable at 2% of distributor’s gross receipts one year from the end of an initial streaming window.

Initial Streaming Window: There is an initial window of 17 days (24 days for episodes of the first season of a series, one-off television programs, and MOWs) with no residual. This window must include or occur contiguous to the initial television exhibition.

Residual Payment (Network Prime Time): In the first and second years of this contract, after the initial window, for network prime time television programs, a fixed residual of 3% of the residual base (“applicable minimum”) is paid for each of up to two 26-week periods. For an hour program, this fee is $654 per period in the first year of the contract; $677 per period in the second year. For a half-hour the figures are $360 and $373. In the third year of this contract, the 2% of distributor’s gross formula is applied immediately after the initial streaming window. The contract sets an imputed value for up to 26 weeks of such distributor’s gross at $40,000 for an hour program and $20,000 for a half hour program. So, for the third year the formula pays a residual of $800 for an hour program and $400 for a half hour program for each potential 26-week period in the year after the initial streaming window. If the Network’s exclusivity expires prior to one year after the end of the initial window, the 2% of distributor’s gross receipts begins without the imputed value. In the case of a 26-week period being truncated by the end of the year after the end of the initial streaming window, the payment is prorated.

Residual Payment (All Other Programs): After the initial streaming window, a fixed residual of 3% of the residual base (the “applicable minimum”) is paid for each of up to two 26-week periods in the first two years of this contract. In the third year of this contract, the payment rate rises to 3.5% of the residual base.

Fair Market Value: New media residuals based on transactions between related parties are subject to a test of reasonableness when compared to transactions between unrelated parties. Access to Information: The companies agree to provide the Guild with access to new media deals and distribution statements, without redaction, and usage data during the term of the contract.

Clips: Clips are defined as excerpts of less than five minutes for episodic TV or ten minutes for features or long-form TV. A company can use a clip for a promotional purpose without payment. Where a clip is not promotional and the viewer does not pay, the fee for the clip in new media is paid at the rate of the lesser of $50 or the residual payable under the Reuse
Sideletter for a clip under two minutes; the lesser of $150 or the residual payable the Reuse Sideletter for a clip between two and four minutes; and for a clip longer than four minutes, the residual payable under the Reuse Sideletter. Where the viewer pays, the fee for use of a clip is 1.2% of distributor’s gross receipts.

Promotion: A clip can be used without payment to promote theatrical, television or new media exhibition if the clip contains “tune-in”, rental or purchase information. No payment is due for non-commercial “viral” release of clips from a theatrical or television motion picture. Promotion does not include the use of clips if the primary purpose of the exhibition is to permit viewing of archived or aggregated clips on a new media site (e.g., dailyshow.com).

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Pension and Health Fund Provisions

Health Fund: The contribution rate shall continue to be 8œ% from the start of the contract through September 30, 2008. The contribution rate shall be 8% for the period of October 1, 2008 through March 31, 2009. Thereafter the rate shall return to 8œ%. A sideletter resolves a pending dispute about the Health Fund contribution rate.

Pension Fund: The contribution rate remains at 6% for this contract.

Contribution Caps: For theatrical motion pictures and long-form television motion pictures, the ceiling on which Pension Plan contributions are based is increased to $225,000 ($450,000 for team of 3). For long-form television motion pictures, the ceiling on which Health Fund contributions are based is increased to $250,000 ($500,000 for a team of 3). A cap of
$350,000 ($700,000 for a team of 3) is established as the ceiling on which Pension Plan and Health Fund contributions are based for daytime serial writers.

Other: The Guild and the Companies will jointly fund a study of new IRS regulations. We agreed how contributions will be paid when a writer is employed on a development deal under Article 14.E.2. and, under the same contract, is employed to perform Article 14.K. services on a series for which the writer receives additional money which is not creditable.

Other Provisions

Made-for Pay TV Residuals: The annual residual payments increase from $3,000 to $3,500 for a half-hour program and from $5,000 to $6,000 for an hour program.

Product Integration: The company will consult with the showrunner when a commercial product is to be integrated into the storyline of an episode of a dramatic series.

Showrunner Training Program: The AMPTP and Networks will increase funding for this program to: $225,000 for year 1 of the MBA; $150,000 for year 2; and $150,000 for year 3.

Television Recap Clips: The total length of clips that can be used to recap the story in a 60-minute or longer program is extended from 90 seconds to 3 minutes before requiring payment.

Tri-Guild Audit Fund: The companies renew the funding of the Tri-Guild Audit Fund. Residuals Reporting/Electronic Data Transfer: Each company shall meet with the Guild to establish a method of transfer for electronic reporting of residuals information.

Lists of Arbitrators: Arbitrators were added to the lists by both the Guild and the companies.

Foreign Remakes: Alternative terms were agreed for foreign remakes of MBA-covered scripts.

Limited Syndication of Half-Hour Programs: A little-used sideletter specifying a discounted residual for half hour series in limited syndication was renewed.

Television Separated Rights for a Derivative Theatrical Film: The company has an opportunity to match an offer to purchase feature film rights from the separated rights holder.

Committee on Alternative Digital Broadcast Channels: The Guild agreed to participate in a committee to explore the use of alternative digital broadcast channels.

Categories
Awards Season News

WGA Winners

WGA Awards logoThe three film winners for this year’s Writer’s Guild Awards have been announced:

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Juno – Written by Diablo Cody (Fox Searchlight)

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
No Country For Old Men – Screenplay by Ethan Coen & Joel Coen, Based on the Novel by Cormac McCarthy (Miramax)

DOCUMENTARY SCREENPLAY
Taxi To The Dark Side – Written by Alex Gibney (THINKFilm)

For the complete list of all the TV winners check out this list at Variety.

Because of the strike there was no official ceremony in LA, although there was a ‘scaled back’ event in New York. Perhaps more importantly, it looks like the strike could be over very soon.

Last night WGA members met with their guild leaders at the Shrine Auditorium in LA and heard details of a tentative agreement to end the three-month strike that has crippled production in Hollywood.

> Variety report on the winners
> Official site for the WGA Awards with the full list of nominees

Categories
Awards Season News

Ron Fedkiw to be awarded an Oscar for his SFX work

Ron FedkiwYou may not have heard of Ron Fedkiw, but on February 9th he and two collaborators at special effects powerhouse Industrial Light and Magic will be awarded an Oscar for their pioneeering SFX work.

Fedikew is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of Computer Science at Stanford University and has consulted at ILM since 2000.

The seas in the Pirates of the Caribbean sequels and the dragon’s flaming breath in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire have all come about – in part – to his work on computer-generated fluids.

As he puts it:

My research is focused on the design of new computational algorithms for a variety of applications including computational fluid dynamics and solid mechanics, computer graphics, computer vision and computational biomechanics.

To see that in action check out this simulation of waves against a lighthouse:

and this glass of water:

They eventually help create the ground work for the climax to a big film like Pirates 3:

[Link via Digg]

> Ron’s department page at Stanford
> Finds out more about ILM at Wikipedia

Categories
In Production News

New Nightmare on Elm Street film in the works

Freddy KrugerFreddy Krueger is back as New Line has decided to revive their favourite horror franchise.

The Hollywood Reporter say:

New Line is in talks with horror production company Platinum Dunes to re-launch the “A Nightmare on Elm Street” movie series, the franchise that helped establish the studio.

Partners Michael Bay, Brad Fuller and Andrew Form will produce the redo.

The first “Nightmare” movie was made by Wes Craven and released in 1984. The runaway success of the film spawned a slew of films and created one of the most popular villains in screen history, Freddy Krueger, played by Robert Englund.

The films’ premise centered on Krueger, a serial child killer murdered by angry parents, who returns with a burnt face and a razor glove to terrorize teens in their dreams.

Given the terrible remakes of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, The Amityville Horror and The Hitcher (not to mention the farce that was Freddy vs Jason) is this such a good idea?

> Variety report on the news
> Find out more about Nightmare on Elm St at Wikipedia

Categories
Awards Season News

SAG Awards Winners

SAG Awards

Here are the winners at Screen Actors Guild awards:

Best Actor
Daniel Day-Lewis – “There Will Be Blood” (Paramount Vantage)

Best Actress
Julie Christie – “Away From Her” (Lionsgate)

Best Supporting Actor
Javier Bardem – “No Country For Old Men” (Miramax Films)

Best Supporting Actress
Ruby Dee – “American Gangster” (Universal Pictures)

Best Ensemble
No Country for Old Men (Miramax Films)
Javier Bardem / Anton Chigurh
Josh Brolin / Llewelyn Moss
Garret Dillahunt / Wendell
Tess Harper / Loretta Bell
Woody Harrelson / Carson Wells
Tommy Lee Jones / Ed Tom Bell
Kelly Macdonald / Carla Jean Moss

Best Stunt Ensemble
The Bourne Ultimatum

TELEVISION

Best Actor (Drama)
James Gandolfini, The Sopranos

Best Actress (Drama)
Edie Falco, The Sopranos

Best Actor (Comedy)
Alec Baldwin,30 Rock

Best Actress (Comedy)
Tina Fey, 30 Rock

Best Ensemble (Drama)
The Sopranos

Best Ensemble (Comedy)
The Office

Best Actor (Television Movie or Miniseries)
Kevin Kline, As You Like It

Best Actress (Television Movie or Miniseries)
Queen Latifah, Life Support

Best Stunt Ensemble
24
> Official site for the SAG Awards
> Variety article on the winners

Categories
Awards Season News

Robert Elswit wins the ASC Award for There Will Be Blood

Robert Elswit has won the American Society of Cinematographers Award for his work on There Will Be Blood.

Trade Ad for Robert Elswit for THere Will Be Blood

Variety report:

Robert Elswit staved off a tough field Saturday night at the American Society of Cinematographers awards ceremony when he topped the feature competition for his work on Paul Thomas Anderson’s “There Will Be Blood.” Elswit, who has shot all of Anderson’s movies dating back to the filmmaker’s 1996 feature debut “Hard Eight,” is also vying for an Oscar.

In fact, the Academy’s nominees are in perfect alignment with those of the ASC for only the second time in the ASC’s 22 years of bestowing awards, with Roger Deakins (“No Country for Old Men,” “The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford”) having claimed two slots in both competitions. The last time the two organizations matched noms, John Seale won both contests for “The English Patient,” a film with which this year’s “Atonement” — shot by ASC and Oscar nominee Seamus McGarvey — has been often compared.

Whether Deakins’ two noms created a split vote among the ASC’s 298 members can only be left to conjecture. And if one were to view Elswit’s ASC win as an Oscar bellwether, one must consider that the ASC’s membership represents only a fraction of the Acad’s 6,500-plus members who are eligible to vote for Oscar’s winning cinematographer.

Elswit’s mastery, like that of Deakins’, is evident in more than one film released this year; he also shot “Michael Clayton,” whose star, George Clooney, worked with Elswit on “Good Night and Good Luck,” for which the d.p. also gained ASC and Academy nominations.

It has been a truly exceptional year for cinematography and you have to feel for Roger Deakins, whose brilliance behind the camera on two films probably did split the vote.

However, credit must go to Elswit who has done some incredible work with Paul Thomas Anderson on this and previous films.

I’m also starting to get the feeling that There Will Be Blood is gaining momentum in the build up to the Oscars.

> Robert Elswit at the IMDb
> Extensive article in American Cinematographer magazine on Elswit’s work in There Will Be Blood
> An interview with Robert Elswit and production designer Jack Fisk about There Will Be Blood
> An interview with Robert Elswit from January 2006
> Article on Elswit’s work on Magnolia

Categories
News

Batman tribute to Heath Ledger

The viral site for The Dark Knight (“Why So Serious“) has posted a black celluloid ribbon as a trubute to the late Heath Ledger.

WSS Black Ribbon

He will be seen as The Joker in the Batman sequel which is out this summer and the official site for the film also has a tribute page.

UPDATE: Director Christopher Nolan has written a tribute to Ledger at Newsweek about working with him on The Dark Knight.

> Find out more about The Dark Night at Wikipedia
> Film School Rejects on the Why So Serious viral campaign

Categories
In Production News

New Bond film is called Quantum of Solace

Quantum of SolaceThe new Bond film is called Quantum of Solace.

BBC News report:

The next James Bond film is to be called Quantum of Solace, producers have confirmed. The title is taken from one of a collection of short stories published by 007 creator Ian Fleming in 1960.

Producer Michael Wilson said the film would have “twice as much action” as 2006’s Casino Royale, which saw Daniel Craig debut as the iconic secret agent. The next outing, previously known as Bond 22, is partly being shot at Pinewood Studios in Buckinghamshire.

At a press conference at the facility, reporters were shown a minute of footage from the new film, including Bond swinging on a rope after an explosion at an art gallery in Siena, Italy. Another scene showed him meeting M – played by Dame Judi Dench – outside in the snow. Filming on the movie has been taking place at Pinewood since November.

Daniel Craig said the cryptic title referenced how Bond’s heart had been broken at the end of Casino Royale: “Ian Fleming had written about relationships,” he explained. “When they go wrong, when there’s nothing left, when the spark has gone, when the fire’s gone out, there’s no quantum of solace.And at the end of the last movie, Bond has the love of his life taken away from him and he never got that quantum of solace.”

Craig said the new film would follow 007 as he goes out “to find the guy who’s responsible. So he’s looking for revenge, you know, to make himself happy with the world again. But the title also alludes to something else in the film.”

Wikipedia says the the premise involves:

Michael G. Wilson has confirmed that the film will pick up “literally an hour after” Casino Royale’s conclusion, when a wounded Mr. White is shot and captured by Bond. The official synopsis shows that White reveals to Bond and M that his organization has agents in Her Majesty’s Government and the Central Intelligence Agency.

Forensic evidence of an MI6 traitor leads Bond to Haiti, where he meets Camille, who then helps him find Dominic Greene. A ruthless businessman and a member of the organisation, Greene intends to use his government contacts to help overthrow the current regime in a Latin American country, and place the exiled General Medrano as the head of state.

Medrano will in exchange give the organization a barren piece of land, which actually will give them total control of “one of the world’s most important natural resources”. Bond travels to Austria, Italy and South America to unravel Greene’s plan, staying one step ahead of the CIA, terrorists and M whilst trying to keep his desire for retribution over Vesper Lynd‘s death in check.

It is scheduled for release on November 7th.

UPDATE: Here are some photos from the press conference.

Daniel Craig( James Bond), Judi Dench (M) and Marc Forster (director)

Craig, Dench and Forster

Olga Kurylenko (Camille) and Gemma Arterton (Agent Fields)
Arterton and Kurylenko

Mathieu Almaric (Greene), Olga Kurylenko, Daniel Craig and and Gemma Arterton
Almaric, Craig, Arterton and Kurylenko

> Official site for James Bond
> IMDb entry for Quatum of Solace

(All photos © 2008 Danjaq LLC, United Artists and Columbia Pictures)

Categories
News

Heath Ledger has died

Heath Ledger Heath Ledger has died in New York, aged 28.

The Associated Press have said:

Heath Ledger was found dead Tuesday at a downtown Manhattan residence, and police said drugs may have been a factor. He was 28.

NYPD spokesman Paul Browne said Ledger had an appointment for a massage at the Manhattan apartment believed to be his home. The housekeeper who went to let him know the masseuse had arrived found him dead at 3:26 p.m.

The Australian-born actor was nominated for an Oscar for “Brokeback Mountain,” where he met his wife, actress Michelle Williams, in 2005. Ledger and Williams had lived in Brooklyn and had a daughter, Matilda, until they split up last year.

Ledger was to appear as the Joker this year in “The Dark Night,” a sequel to 2005’s “Batman Begins.” He’s had starring roles in “A Knight’s Tale” and “The Patriot,” and played the suicidal son of Billy Bob Thornton in “Monster’s Ball.”

It is always very sad to hear about any death, but when a high profile actor dies there is a particular sting about the waste of life and the career that lied ahead.

He will be seen this summer in The Dark Knight as The Joker (the film is currently in post-production) and was only recently in London filming Terry Gilliam’s new movie The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus.

Obviously he’ll be remembered for his outstanding, Oscar nominated, performance in Brokeback Mountain, and most recently for his part in the Dylan biopic I’m Not There.

I saw some of The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus being filmed on Blackfriars Bridge back in mid-December and posted some photos here.

The film, which was due for release in 2009, also stars Christopher Plummer and has been described as a “fantastical morality tale set in the present day”.

It is the tale of a Dr Parnassus and his ‘Imaginarium’, a travelling show where members of the audience get an opportunity to choose between light and joy or darkness and gloom.

The screenplay was written by Gilliam and Charles McKeown who also collaborated with him on Brazil and The Adventures of Baron Munchausen.

Here are some pictures from the set that were taken recently in London and posted on Just Jared:

Photobucket

Photobucket

In what appears to be a sad and ironic twist, some of the photos are of Ledger’s character with a noose around his neck. At the moment, reports are suggesting that Ledger’s real life death was caused by some kind of overdose, although exact details are still sketchy.

Aside from the awful personal tragedy, this is also a devastating blow for the production and director Terry Gilliam, who was only recently sounding so upbeat about the project.

> BBC News report on Ledger’s death
> Updates at TMZ
> NY Times with more on the story
> Various photos from The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus at Flickr