Archive for the ‘hollywood studios’ Category

1308488992 51 Incendies: Universal tragedy with fire in its heart

The French-Canadian film Incendies, an intense family drama set largely in the Middle East, has vaulted its director Denis Villeneuve to global prominence. Incendies (“scorched”) won eight Genie Awards (Canada’s equivalent to the Oscars) this year, and an Oscar nomination for best foreign-language film, a category many American critics felt it should have won.

1308443671 63 There will be other 'Fat Greek Weddings,' but only one 'Y Tu Mama Tambien'

This week New York’s Museum of Modern Art kicks off “In Focus: IFC Films,” a two-week-long retrospective of films distributed by IFC Films. One of the featured titles stands out both as a major work unto itself and one whose release looked to herald big changes in the U.S. market for arthouse films: Y Tu Mamá También.

1308410968 68 British Film Commissioner to Step Down

British Film Commissioner Colin Brown, who has been seen as the key link to the big Hollywood studios, is stepping down from his post after four years on the job.

1308334478 65 Conquering the peoples republic of cinema

Made the cut … Kung Fu Panda 2 rates as one of the few foreign films to be shown in China each year. Next to it is a poster for a local film, Beginning the great Revival. Photo: AP

1308253838 97 ‘Star Wars’ attraction sets bar high for Disney’s 3 D wonders

‘Star Wars” purists can be forgiven if they balk at creator George Lucas’ seemingly endless need to tinker with his creations (see: Greedo shoots first).

But for theme-park enthusiasts this summer, Lucas’ unwillingness to leave well enough alone is a very good thing.

 Smarter Marketing and the Weak Link In Its SuccessThe majority of advertisers understand that keyword research for search campaigns, analysis of web logs, and use of social media monitoring products is a great way to infuse content that will reflect the terminology and articulation of consumer wants and needs – essentially the voice of the customer. when done correctly, the process leads to better ranking on relevant keywords from a search perspective, and more generally, marketing creative that connects directly to consumers on other media – TV, print, display – everything.

1307602567 19 Rob Schneider Comedy Looking Good for CBS Midseason

CBS has ordered a reshoot and additional scripts of the untitled Rob Schneider pilot from its sister studio, making the multicamera comedy likely for midseason.

Based on Schneider’s life, the comedy revolves around a confirmed bachelor (Schneider) who marries into a tightknit Mexican-American family. some recasting will be done on the series and if the pilot is good, production could begin immediately for a midseason bow, sources confirmed to the Hollywood Reporter.

 Michod, Edgerton and Palmer honoured in LA

Teresa Palmer arrives at Australians in Film’s 2011 Breakthrough Awards in Beverly Hills, California. Photo: Getty

Packed to the Rafters star Ryan Corr will be jetting off to Hollywood soon to test the acting waters after winning this year’s Australians in Film Heath Ledger scholarship.

1307511622 78 LONG LIVE THE NEW FLESH

When I was in junior high I wanted to be some kind of multi-discipline auteur. I wanted to write books and I wanted to make movies. honestly, the only career choices I can remember ever clinging to since I was like 6 were Writer and Archaeologist. this was of course because even at 6 I knew that Indiana Jones had a real job and Captain Kirk did not. I loved coming up with ideas. Schemes. Scenarios. Plots. I was a classic “idea man” as a kid and I figured good ideas were like some kind of magic and just by virtue of how good they were people would listen to you and your ideas would come together and start to happen. I remember distinctly crashing against that wall where my ambitions met the reality of How Things are Done. it was a somewhat depressing, if immature, brush with reality where I realized that there were huge hurdles to entry into the fields that fascinated me and that all the big ideas in the world didn’t account for the technology, the resources and the distribution networks you needed to get something done and get it to an audience. it was frustrating to imagine how few people would ever manage to squeeze through the eye of the creative establishment needle and how much might be lost in the process. it struck a chord with my rebellious teenage sense of fair play and put a bit of a damper on some of my early ideas. That didn’t last long though. Along came the personal computer and internet revolutions of the 1990’s. Suddenly publications like Mondo 2000 and Wired were promising us Hollywood studios in our basements, Abbey Road in the attic and a totally free, totally open distribution network that would be begging for content. With new subscriptions to service providers like AOL and Compuserve ringing in at thousands per week the world was buying in to the promise of the internet and it was time for the revolution to begin. Hollywood, the music industry and the New York publishing scene were all about to come down like the Berlin wall. except it didn’t really happen that way. the big ideas of the time, much like the big ideas I and others had, were a bit premature. the technology wasn’t quite there yet; streaming video was more like a slideshow and doing video and audio at once was beyond the capability of the dial up modems of the time. the tools were primitive and had sharp learning curves. the “idea people” got so bogged down in trying to wrap their heads around the tech that would make their ideas happen that the point started to get lost. Very dismally lost. I think to some extent this is where George Lucas got lost, but I digress. There are people who are into technology because of what it permits them to do creatively and there are people into technology as a thing in itself. There is nothing inherently wrong with either camp, but I fell and continue to fall into the former and I always struggled with how fiddly and cryptic the technology often was back then. the revolution had to go back to the drawing board and wait for the world to catch up. this started happening in the early 2000’s. Services that supported user-created content started cropping up and then YouTube hit the scene in a big way and helped drive the widespread adoption of broadband internet. Media production software got less and less expensive and easier to use. On the hardware side, PC prices plunged, high-resolution cameras got planted in everything and sales soared. the means of production were put in the hands of the people and the bright young internet Bolsheviks are coming back and not so much banging at the gates as they are just building another kingdom down the street with no gates and no walls as a design feature. Audiences are following suit and the new media democracy of the internet is growing. here we are at the beginning of this exciting experiment. It’s been suggested for decades that barriers to entry to the big media outlets have blocked out tons of talent and that there should be legions of garage Kubricks out there and web 2.0 is putting that conventional wisdom to the test. one thing we know for sure is there are legions out there. Millions of blogs, YouTube channels, other video hosting sites, indie sites, torrent trading and it is all on, all the time. It’s like drinking from the fire hose. Like any collection of art it needs a curator. a way to help the audience find the best because people don’t have all day to just surf the net looking for cool indie horror shorts. well, except that one guy we all know but really who wants to be that guy, right? So that is what this space is going to be. Long Live the New Flesh is about navigating the Fangoria Faithful through the dark places on the internet where creative people in your neighbourhoods are sowing the seeds of this revolution and making brilliant, provocative and bone-chilling media. we want to be the curators of the Horror section of the new media exhibit, sharing their work and showing you the online hotspots for indie scares. So carry on drinking from that fire hose if you want to or drop by here and try out the precision pressure washer. Both are going to blast your face off, but here you get it with Fangoria style! For our inaugural segment we want to go back a bit and share the work of Joseph Christiana, founder of Christiana Productions. his short film the Nightmare is a taut, clever and potent short which both disturbed and entertained me and has won a lot of acclaim in the indie festival circuit including the Montreal Underground Film Festival as well as becoming a YouTube favourite. Christiana shows us all that the time of the “big idea” people is arriving by producing a top shelf piece of film with great visuals, great sound design and most of all an engrossing and smart story while doing a complete end-run around the creative establishment. Did I mention he does all this without any real dialogue? Oh yeah, he does that too. the Nightmare by Christiana Productions. PS: Since this is a democracy we are going to need your help. Send us your links to your original work online or link to work online that really left an impression on you and you just might see it featured in Long Live the New Flesh. show us what you’ve got!

1307360789 56 iCloud service to include films, TV shows?1

I just hope Apple makes this web-friendly, like Amazon’s Cloud service is, without having extra software installed. My workplace, in their infinite wisdom, has banned all electronic devices. iPods, radios, CD players, tape decks, 8-track players…all in the name of “protecting credit card information.” But for some odd reason, we can stream music over the internet, and Amazon’s Cloud Player gets major usage from me.