All Screen articles in 9 October 2007 – Page 5

  • Features

    United states - Short wars

    2007-10-05T00:00:00Z

    When it comes to short films, most festivals have traditionally relaxed their insistence on world or national premieres, happy to offer maximum exposure to new film-makers and not lay claim to them as they often do with feature directors.That open-door policy is fast changing. Perhaps responding to the deluge of ...

  • Features

    United Kingdom - Leading the pack

    2007-10-05T00:00:00Z

    Oliver Milburn has acted for 15 years in film, theatre and TV projects. His credits include Driving Lessons, The Descent and the UK TV series Holby Blue. Yet he seems most proud of his first credit as a feature film producer, on Gary Love's recently released urban drama Sugarhouse.Milburn, with ...

  • Features

    International - Not the whole picture

    2007-10-05T00:00:00Z

    As the autumn festival scene draws to close, it is worth considering what exactly is the point of an event showcasing international cinema' Although the origins of most festivals lie in politics or tourism, most of the leading international events have evolved into conclaves with a desire to represent the ...

  • Features

    Hungary - Only human

    2007-10-05T00:00:00Z

    Benedek Fliegauf's Milky Way (Tejut) presents viewers with a puzzle. In each of the film's 10 segments, the stationary camera observes unnamed individuals interacting - mating, playing, helping one another - without additional context. As such, the scenes could pass for raw footage for an alien documentary about human life ...

  • News

    Gavin Hood: New world order

    2007-10-05T00:00:00Z

    From the outset, Gavin Hood stresses that Rendition, his follow-up to 2006's best foreign-language Oscar winner Tsotsi, is not 'politically preachy'. While that may be so, the subject matter is inevitably political and makes for a harrowing two hours that raises fundamental ethical dilemmas about the times we live in.Rendition ...

  • Features

    Financing - Italy

    2007-10-05T00:00:00Z

    With the rise in popularity of TV drama - which accounted for 800 hours of programming in the 2006-07 season, up from 130 hours 10 years ago - it could be assumed features are feeling the squeeze in Italian TV schedules.But the country's two main broadcasters, state-run Rai and the ...

  • Features

    Financing - France

    2007-10-05T00:00:00Z

    There is significant overlap between the French broadcast and film worlds. Each major broadcaster - TF1, France 2, France 3, Canal Plus and M6 - is required to invest in local films via pre-buys and each also has a separate film production arm.Terrestrial channels TF1, France 2, France 3 and ...

  • Features

    Financing - Germany

    2007-10-05T00:00:00Z

    The involvement of broadcasters in feature film production has a long tradition in Germany and hardly any film is made these days without some TV participation. Indeed, many film-makers who are now international household names, such as Wim Wenders and Volker Schlondorff, have been supported by commissioning editors when the ...

  • News

    UK film finance - In sickness or in health'

    2007-10-05T00:00:00Z

    'No news is good news' might be the motto of the UK film industry this year. The UK has been condemned to live in interesting times of late, with its entire financing system ripped up and replaced over the last few years.But since the beginning of the year, the territory ...

  • Features

    Editorial - Screen says - Cracking the crunch

    2007-10-05T00:00:00Z

    There's something appealing about business terminology that reduces complex economic movements to physical actions. The prime example at the moment is the 'credit crunch' - which hopefully will not end up in a global crash. It gives the sense of a natural order which has reached a finite point of ...

  • Features

    Brazil - Rocha polishes family jewels

    2007-10-05T00:00:00Z

    As the daughter of Glauber Rocha, the leader of Brazil's Cinema Novo movement and one of the most influential Brazilian directors of all time, Paloma Rocha did not experience a conventional upbringing."When I was five-years-old, my father enrolled me in an American school and told me to learn the language ...

  • News

    Big squeeze on the small screen

    2007-10-05T00:00:00Z

    Are the UK's leading broadcasters falling out of love with film' In the multichannel digital era, scheduling a popular movie in primetime can no longer guarantee a sizeable audience and there is an increasing sense that viewers do not want to consume movies on terrestrial TV.A case in point is ...

  • Features

    Finland - Global ambitions of Solar system

    2007-10-05T00:00:00Z

    Earlier this year Finnish producer Markus Selin sold a significant stake of his Solar Films production outfit to Danish major Nordisk Film. Selin describes the move as "the key to our future expansion - it will open doors worldwide"."So far we have not aimed at the international markets, but it's ...

  • News

    Italy, Brazil sign co-production treaty in Rio

    2007-10-04T23:16:00Z

    Brazil and Italy have signed an agreement in principle on film co-production. Announced yesterday at the Rio International Film Festival, the deal between Istituto Luce and Cinecitta Holding from Italy and Ancine, the Brazilian National Cinema Agency, is designed to facilitate co-production of both features and documentaries. The final document ...

  • News

    Beatty to receive 2008 AFI Life Achievement Award

    2007-10-04T23:12:00Z

    Warren Beatty will receive the 36th AFI Life Achievement Award at a gala tribute in Los Angeles on Jun 12, 2008.Beatty won the best director Oscar for Reds in 1982 and earned four acting nominations for Bonnie And Clyde, Reds, Heaven Can Wait, and Bugsy.'Warren Beatty has charmed movie-goers as ...

  • News

    Bayona's The Orphanage opens Sitges Film Festival

    2007-10-04T16:09:00Z

    Celebrating its 40th anniversary, the International Film Festival of Catalonia will open in Sitges with a screening of Juan Antonio Bayona's The Orphanage.Competing in the Official Fantastic programme are Tom Shankland's WAZ starring Stellan Skarsgard, Inside from France, Mitchell Lichtenstein's vagina dentate story Teeth, Park Chan-wook's latest I'm A Cyborg, ...

  • News

    Haggis' Elah to close inuagural Abu Dhabi festival

    2007-10-04T15:52:00Z

    Abu Dhabi's inaugural Middle East International Film Festival (Oct 14-19) has announced its line-up of Arab films, plus its closing night gala - Paul Haggis's In the Valley of Elah. The Venice critics' favourite adds to an international line-up of Iraq-themed, festival hits; other 'special presentations' (gala screenings) include Todd ...

  • News

    Icon takes on sales of library titles from NZ Film Commission

    2007-10-04T13:27:00Z

    Icon Entertainment International has struck a deal with the New Zealand Film Commission to represent 24 library titles for world sales outside of the Asia Pacific region. The Commission expects that Icon will represent many other library titles after agreements have been struck with relevant producers. Titles covered under the ...

  • News

    Warner Bros in Spain to develop and co-produce El Deseo films

    2007-10-04T13:17:00Z

    Pedro and Agustin Almodovar's El Deseo has further strengthened its partnership with Warner Bros International in Spain by agreeing to develop and co-produce film projects with the studio, including El Patio De Mi Carcel, currently shooting in Madrid.Warner Bros already distribute El Deseo's films in Spain.'Since we are particularly close ...

  • News

    Kormakur follows Jar City with Ivanov film and theatre project

    2007-10-04T13:12:00Z

    Icelandic director Baltasar Kormakur plans to follow up his recent thriller Jar City, the country's Oscar submission and a local box-office hit, with an innovative cinema/theatre project based on Chekhov's classic Ivanov. Last summer, Kormakur shot a film based on the work (not a filmed play but a feature on ...