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Tag: EFM

  • Horror Franchise Hopeful ‘Rule Of Three’, From ‘Smile’ Outfit, Begins Shoot With Thomasin McKenzie, Chloe East, Jimmi Simpson, Sutton Foster, More

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    EXCLUSIVE: Filming is underway on the first installment of intended horror trilogy Rule of Three from Smile, Twilight and Maze Runner outfit Temple Hill and Apocalypse Z: The Beginning of the End firm Nostromo.

    Joining previously announced Thomasin McKenzie (JoJo Rabbit) is new cast including Chloe East (Heretic), Jimmi Simpson (Westworld), Sutton Foster (Younger), Tom Everett Scott (That Thing You Do!) and Bilal Hasna (Layla).

    Based on the novel of the same name by Sam Ripley, and with James Roday Rodriguez (Gravy) directing from a screenplay he co-wrote with Todd Harthan (High Potential), the story follows a girl trying to escape a deadly curse on her family.

    The synopsis reads: “Are Amy (East) and her family plagued by a deadly curse? Every three years, death strikes under mysterious circumstances, horrifically killing family members. It’s almost three years to the day since Amy’s parents’ death, and Amy realises the curse must strike her next. With the help of her best friend Lizzy (McKenzie), the two friends try to cheat Amy’s death and find a way to reverse the curse.”

    As we revealed last year, Protagonist Pictures is handling sales. The company has inked a string of pre-sales and will continue dealmaking at next week’s EFM in Berlin. Deals we can reveal today include Germany, Austria, Switzerland and France (Wildbunch), Portugal (Cinemundo), Latin America (Sun), Australia and New Zealand (Umbrella), Eastern Europe (M2), Baltics (ACME), Ukraine (Greenlight), India (Pictureworks), Philippines (Pioneer), Middle East (Front Row) and Israel (Lev).

    Temple Hill and Protagonist previously teamed on low-budget horror Clown in a Cornfield, which took a record $7.2M at the U.S. box office for IFC and $3M at the French box office for SND on its way to $14M global. They also teamed up on the horror Monitor, which is set to premiere at SXSW 2026.

    Marty Bowen, Wyck Godfrey and Isaac Klausner produce Rule of Three for Temple Hill, with Hal Sadoff and Ben Levine executive-producing. Adrián Guerra and Núria Valls are producing for Nostromo Pictures. Dave Bishop, James Pugh and George Hamilton serve as executive producers for Protagonist, in collaboration with Rodriguez and Harthan’s Taft Tennis.

    “As we kick off production on our fourth feature together, we’re incredibly fortunate to be joining forces once again with Temple Hill on this daring and bold psychological horror,” said Protagonist’s CCO George Hamilton. “We’re thrilled to have world-class international partners on board to champion the film and introduce the first chapter of what will be a fun, smart but unsettling story for audiences worldwide.”

    “We could not be more excited to invite audiences everywhere to experience James’ incredible filmmaking vision. Rule of Three is a terrifying and heart-wrenching exploration of the baggage we carry from our pasts and the power of friendship to help us try and overcome it. Led by two incredible actresses and a terrific ensemble cast, Rule of Three is a horrifying cinematic thrill ride bound to pack an emotional punch,” the producers shared in a joint statement.

    East is repped by WME, Link Entertainment, Vault Entertainment and Felker Toczek; Simpson is repped by CAA, Cognition, and Hansen, Jacobson, Teller; Foster is repped by CAA; Everett Scott is repped by Gersh and John Carrabino Management; Hasna is repped by Insight Management & Production and Circle Management+Production. Roday Rodriguez is repped by CAA and Principal Entertainment; Harthan is repped by UTA, Circle Management + Production and Yorn, Levine.

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    Andreas Wiseman

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  • Caleb Landry Jones & Christoph Waltz To Lead Luc Besson’s Next Movie, Ambitious Origin Story ‘Dracula – A Love Tale’: EFM Hot Project

    Caleb Landry Jones & Christoph Waltz To Lead Luc Besson’s Next Movie, Ambitious Origin Story ‘Dracula – A Love Tale’: EFM Hot Project

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    EXCLUSIVE: One of the last big European Film Market pre-sales projects to be revealed is one of the most intriguing as SAG winner Caleb Landry Jones (Three Billboards Outside Ebbing Missouri) has been set to star with two-time Oscar winner Christoph Waltz (Inglourious Basterds) in a big-budget reimagining of the Dracula story from Lucy filmmaker and Taken creator Luc Besson.

    Based on Bram Stoker’s iconic novel, sources close to the production confirm to us that the project will be Besson’s next movie and mark his own take on the vampire classic about the dark Prince who is condemned to eternal life.

    We hear this has an origin story element to it exploring in a little more depth the gothic romance between Prince Vladimir and his wife whose loss turns him to forsake God and become a vampire. Buyers familiar with Besson’s script tell us there are some epic and potentially spectacular set pieces.

    Landry Jones will play Dracula. It’s not clear yet which character Waltz will play, but talks are underway with other buzzy cast to join in the other key roles.

    The project is expected to have a big budget for a European movie but is nowhere near Valerian levels. Luc Besson Productions is producing with EuropaCorp co-producing. The aim is to shoot this year.

    The project has been bubbling in the market for a little while but is now firming up with Paris-based seller Kinology handling sales and discussing the project with potential distributors.

    Landry Jones and Waltz are both Cannes Best Actor winners. The former for Justin Kurzel’s Nitram. The latter for Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds. Landry Jones, also known for playing Banshee in X-Men: First Class and ‘Jeremy’ in Get Out, recently collaborated with Besson on 2023 Venice Film Festival movie DogMan, which was another movie about a tortured outcast, and showcased why he is considered one of the most distinctive young actors around.

    DogMan was billed as something of a comeback for visionary filmmaker Besson, a totem of French cinema who made his name with movies such as Big Blue, Leon and The Fifth Element, but whose career in recent years has been dogged by the bruising financial experience of mega-budget Valerian And The City Of A Thousand Planets and sexual misconduct allegations, including by an actress from that production. Besson steadfastly denied any wrongdoing and last year, the filmmaker was cleared of all charges in that case by France’s equivalent of the U.S. Supreme Court.

    Briarcliff will release DogMan domestically this spring after it was picked up widely by buyers in Europe, Asia and Latin America. Kinology also handled sales on that one.

    Besson is also in post-production on intimate drama June And John, an experimental film he shot during Covid lockdown with newcomers Luke Stanton Eddy and Matilda Price.

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    Andreas Wiseman

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  • Berlin: Why Streamers’ Belt Tightening Casts A Shadow Over Indies

    Berlin: Why Streamers’ Belt Tightening Casts A Shadow Over Indies

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    The European Film Market is off to a strong start, buoyed by post-strike optimism and a truly impressive lineup of projects on offer in Berlin this year, including available indie movies with the A-list draws of stars such as Margot Robbie, Dave Bautista, Scarlett Johansson, and Will Smith. Coming off a solid Sundance and improving box office figures, both in the U.S. and Europe, hope appears to be slowly returning to an indie film industry that seemed near the brink just six months ago.

    But many EFM sellers still see a cloud over the horizon with the unresolved issue of the home entertainment market, particularly the all-important pay-one window. Ancillary revenues have always been the true driver of the indie market, but as streaming comes to dominate post-theatrical exploitation and the biggest platforms are pulling back on how much independent fare they buy, many are questioning how indie movies can make the numbers work.

    “We’ve all become more and more beholden to the streamers for ancillary revenue, and those license fees have been dramatically reduced,” says one veteran seller. “If you’re building a finance model for an independent film, these days, your return on that pay-one window is probably going to be a third of what you would have expected just a few years ago. There’s just not enough revenue from at-home markets to cover production costs for most films.”

    Headline-making deals, like Netflix’s $17 million acquisition of Greg Jardin’s horror thriller It’s What’s Inside, or Amazon’s $15 million buy of Megan Park’s comedy My Old Ass, both out of Sundance this year, are not, sellers say, making up for the broader loss of pay-one revenue as streamers overall buy fewer indie movies.

    ‘It’s What’s Inside’

    Courtesy of Sundance Institute

    It’s no surprise that most active independent buyers, the likes of A24 and Bleecker Street, have pay-one output deals in place (with Warner Bros. Discovery and Paramount Global’s Showtime Networks, respectively) that guarantee ancillary monies for their entire slate.

    “The future state of streaming platforms and their acquisition strategies are critical to the survival of independent film,” says J.J Caruth, president of domestic marketing and distribution at Highland Film Group’s U.S. distribution arm The Avenue. “Without having that pay-one window revenue, financing independent films becomes that much more challenging.”

    Caruth also sees a divide between streamer demand for mainstream genre films —she points to The Avenue’s action thriller Land of Bad starring Liam and Luke Hemsworth alongside Russell Crowe, as “exactly the type of content streamers are looking for” —with the more “unique edgy indie fare” —think Celine Song’s Past Lives, Justine Triet’s Anatomy of a Fall or Wim Wenders’ Perfect Days — that are pulling in audiences in theaters “but might not necessarily work as well for the platforms.”

    Genre films like The Avenue’s actioner ‘Land of Bad’ are still popular with streamers but harder to make work at the box office.

    The Avenue

    “Those kinds of generic action movies are great for Netflix and Amazon but they no longer have currency as a theatrical movie,” notes one European-based packager and seller, pointing to Liam Neeson’s Retribution, which earned just $7 million domestically for Roadside Attractions, or Millennium Media’s Expend4bles, which earned less than $17 million at the domestic box office for Lionsgate, the worst performance, by far, of the Expendables franchise.

    But Joe Lewis, CEO of Amplify Pictures, sees new opportunities in the streaming market as platforms shift away from their walled-garden approach of global all-rights deals and begin to “enter into an age of non-exclusively with is super-exciting…You can put your stuff out on multiple VOD platforms now and you see that the numbers aren’t cannibalizing each other, in fact, they can be additive.”

    Instead of a one-size-fits-all deal with a streamer, “essentially a cost plus deal, where you give up all global rights forever,” Lewis says indie producers can get creative with windowing rights, “putting together money from different sources” to allow “the value of a project to be better correlated with its success.”

    Caruth agrees, noting that the recent strategic shift by the streamers, “where they are beginning to license and window content” and be more flexible with rights deals makes her “cautiously optimistic again.”

    But, given the increasingly vital importance of streaming revenue to indie films, and the increasing dominance of a handful of vertically-integrated producer/distributor platforms, a long-term solution for the pay-one window problem is still out of sight.

    “I’m going to say something which will probably ensure that I never get hired by one of these streamers, but without some form of regulation, as they have in Europe to require platforms to buy a certain amount from the independents, it’s going to be very hard for independent producers and independent films to survive,” says Caruth. “But for the streamers, regulation is a four-letter word.”

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    Scott Roxborough

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  • Former Millennium President Jeffrey Greenstein Launches Production & Sales Company A Higher Standard — EFM

    Former Millennium President Jeffrey Greenstein Launches Production & Sales Company A Higher Standard — EFM

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    Having recently left Millennium Media after a 14-year run, Jeffrey Greenstein is launching production and sales company, A Higher Standard.

    Greenstein is at the EFM in Berlin to launch the company, whose first project will be the action-comedy feature, Playdate, which he is co-financing and co-producing with Nickel City’s Mark Fasano.

    The idea is for the company to develop and co-finance a slate of films and TV projects with commercial appeal, including action, comedies and elevated genre.

    Greenstein joined Millennium Media in 2010, handling more than sixty films during his tenure at the company, including The Expendables franchise, Olympus Has Fallen, London Has Fallen, and Angel Has Fallen, The Hitman’s Bodyguard, Mechanic: Resurrection, and Jolt with Kate Beckinsale and Stanley Tucci. In 2016, he became President of Millennium Media, managing all aspects of the independent studio.

    Greenstein said his new outfit “has a simple focus: building winning teams and supporting talented people. Under these guiding principles, the company will create content for audiences across the globe…Empower. Inspire. Create. That is the simple mission of A Higher Standard, and I am excited to make that my daily focus.”

    As we revealed yesterday, Greenstein was succeeded as President at Avi Lerner’s Millennium by Jonathan Yunger.

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    Andreas Wiseman

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  • Berlin: Bill Nighy, ‘Jojo Rabbit’ Standout Roman Griffin Davis to Star in Road Movie ‘500 Miles’

    Berlin: Bill Nighy, ‘Jojo Rabbit’ Standout Roman Griffin Davis to Star in Road Movie ‘500 Miles’

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    Bill Nighy (Living, The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel) and Jojo Rabbit’s Roman Griffin Davis will star in road movie 500 Miles from director Morgan Matthews (X+Y, Williams), which Beta Cinema will start selling at the Berlin Film Festival’s European Film Market.

    The Origin Pictures, Port Pictures and Minnow Films project is described as “a thrilling road movie full of heart, wit and wonder.” 

    “The story follows a broken family forced to come together when 16-year-old Finn (Davis) and his livewire younger brother Charlie run away from trouble at home in England to reach their estranged grandfather (Nighy) on Ireland’s stunning and wild West coast,” according to a plot description.

    Matthews is set to direct from a script by Malcolm Campbell (What Richard Did, Herself, Ackley Bridge), based on the novel Charlie and Me by Mark Lowery.  

    Former head of BBC Film David Thompson (Billy Elliot, Notes on a Scandal, Woman in Gold, Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom) is producing with Alex Gordon and Keren Misgav Ristvedt for Origin Pictures (Hope Gap, Sense of an Ending, A Brilliant Young Mind), Martina Niland (Once, Sing Street) from Dublin-based Port Pictures, and Minnow. The project is being prepped to shoot in Kerry, Ireland, later in 2024. Louise Kiely (Banshees of Inisherin, Normal People, The Green Knight) functions as casting director. 

    “The script takes us on an emotional, often hilariously funny, yet deeply moving journey through some of the most beautiful parts of the U.K. and Ireland,” said Tassilo Hallbauer, head of sales and acquisitions at Beta Cinema. “In Jojo Rabbit, Roman Griffin Davis demonstrated his brilliant talent for portraying deep character roles with a unique sense of humor. With Bill Nighy’s involvement, following his pivotal, Oscar-nominated performance in Living, Origin Pictures are assembling a dream cast; 500 Miles offers top-tier escapism and will resonate with international audiences of all ages.”

    Added Thompson: “We are delighted to be launching this wonderful project with such a brilliant cast and director. 500 Miles is both hilarious and heart-wrenching and ultimately rather life-affirming. It has such an original take on the world and will be a truly unforgettable film.”

    Kimberley French/Twentieth Century Fox

    Roman Griffin Davis and Taika Waititi in JoJo Rabbit.

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    Georg Szalai

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