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  • 18 Weeks to Shoot 30 Seconds: Behind the Scenes of ‘Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget’

    18 Weeks to Shoot 30 Seconds: Behind the Scenes of ‘Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget’

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    Aardman’s celebrated, box office-smashing, stop-motion animated chickens are finally being allowed back into the wild. 

    Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget, the sequel to 2000’s Chicken Run, is due to hatch on Netflix globally on Dec. 15, having had its world premiere at the London Film Festival back in October. 

    The feature, a six-year labour of love for director Sam Fell which was shot in the same studio built to house the original (Aardman’s first ever feature film), brings back Ginger, Rocky, Babs and the whole flock of feathered friends, but this time for an adventure in which they want to break into Mrs. Tweedy’s latest evil chicken factory, rather than break out. 

    Earlier this year, The Hollywood Reporter spent some time on the Dawn of the Nugget set, picking up some interesting, er, nuggets of information about how the film was made.

    One Set Took Two Years to Build

    The most impressive location in Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget, is arguably Chicken Village, the fowl-friendly island utopia where Ginger and her flock now reside after fleeing Mrs Tweedy in the first film and a land director Sam Fell describes as like a “Chicken Wakanda.” This single set itself took two man-years to build and the 30-second opening shot showing the feathery residents doing their thing among the 22 houses arguably the most complicated in the company’s history — 4-5 weeks of prep time and then 18 weeks on the single shoot itself. 

    Technological Advancements Saved Time… And Fingers

    Among the main problems on the first film, claims Aardman vet and animation supervisor Ian Whitlock, was that due to the use of plasticine, “fingers were constantly dropping off.” Thankfully, digits were spared on sequel thanks to the use of silicon. Elsewhere, the production was able to integrate CGI and stop-frame live during the shoot. Whereas the first would have the chickens on wires for action shots (director Sam Fell says if you look closely you can actually sometimes see it), in Dawn of the Nugget they were able to put them on gizmos and paint it out digitally. 

    Because of COVID – No Licking!

    By the time production on Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget kicked off, the COVID-19 pandemic was in full swing, something that added a few interesting hurdles to the mix. Alongside the standard rules about distance and being masked up on set, because the puppets had been handmade, they were forced into quarantine before they could be used, sometimes for up to 10 days. The animators were also required to not lick the puppets they were working with, apparently a common tactic to touch them up during shoots. In all the pandemic pushed production back by about six months. 

    A Making of Book Saved the Day

    When a fire swept through a warehouse Aardman had been using in 2005 — the very same week its feature animation The Curse of the Were-Rabbit hit the top of the U.S. box office — it tragically destroyed much of the company’s models and sets, including many from the first Chicken Run. Thankfully, the head of animation was, according to Fell, a “hoarder” and several boxes of models were found in his attic, while Nick Park still had a “bible” filled with his original sketches from 1998. But the key resource the Dawn of the Nugget team used as a reference when developing the film was actually a “Making of” book from the first film. “We ended up looking at a lot of the photos in that,” says Fell.

    Bella Ramsey Recorded Her Lines While Shooting The Last of Us

    While most of the chicken characters in Dawn of the Nugget are returnees from the first, the major new addition is Molly, the freedom-loving daughter of Ginger and Rocky. Bella Ramsey was chosen to voice the young chicken, with Fell saying she was “clearly the right choice” for the role. Ramsey was actually cast as Molly before she sprung to far greater recognition thanks to her star turn as Ellie in The Last of Us. As it happens, she recorded Molly while shooting the hit series in Canada. “She brings all the nuance and pathos and humor that she brought to The Last of Us,” says Fell. “But with less swearing.”

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    Alex Ritman

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  • Emerald Fennell on Creating “Just Pure, Visceral Madness” With ‘Saltburn’

    Emerald Fennell on Creating “Just Pure, Visceral Madness” With ‘Saltburn’

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    In Emerald Fennell’s Saltburn, Oscar nominee Barry Keoghan stars as Oliver Quick, a middle-class student at Oxford University who becomes infatuated with his handsome and wealthy classmate Felix Catton (Jacob Elordi). As the school year ends, Felix invites him to spend the summer with him and his idiosyncratic family at their massive country estate — the eponymous Saltburn. 

    Fennell’s follow-up to her Oscar-winning debut, Promising Young Woman, Saltburn is a psychological black comedy inspired by Gothic literature, tracing Oliver’s struggle to fit in with the strange and rich family that hosts him at their home. But twists and turns abound in Fennell’s satire of the British class system, which she describes as “Barry Lyndon meets indie sleaze.” 

    Emerald Fennell

    Mike Marsland/WireImage

    Calling out other films set in similar environs (including Oscar-winning features The Remains of the Day and Atonement), Fennell deliberately plays with preconceived notions of British identity. “What happens when we take the most restrained genre about the most restrained people — to restrain it to the extent that it’s just pure, visceral madness?” Fennell asks.

    The result is a wild and seductive tale of debauchery, eroticism and power, slowly unraveling to reveal that few of its characters are who they appear to be. Creating the world those figures inhabit proved great fun for Fennell, who turned to some of her favorite films, books and art to construct a mood board for Saltburn’s aesthetic. 

    Here, she shares with THR the inspirations for the film’s visual style as well as its expertly plotted screenplay, built on the bones of a particularly British kind of storytelling. 

    John the Baptist by Caravaggio

    Thunderstruck/Alamy Stock Photo

    Caravaggio’s paintings of the biblical figure were numerous — and, as Fennell says, “very sexy.” The contrast of the white skin against red fabric has always caught the director’s eye, and that aesthetic went into the interiors of the Saltburn estate. “We’re framing a huge, sumptuous, almost biblical kind of place — everyone is in velvets and silks, lying on chaises in a formal setting,” she says. She also found inspiration in how Caravaggio depicted the male body: “There’s a lot of tension under the skin.”

    The Go Between

    Courtesy Image

    Fennell calls L.P. Hartley’s 1953 novel, which tells the story of a young man who feels like an outsider within his Victorian-era boarding school, “a British staple.” She adds: “It’s exactly what makes this genre so thrilling. This is the skeleton of the story, a man going through all of his old stuff and realizing his life hasn’t gone the way he wanted it to, and he sets out to resolve things.” The novel also was adapted for film by Losey and Pinter in 1971.

    The Servant

    Courtesy Everett Collection

    This 1963 drama directed by Joseph Losey and written by Harold Pinter stars Dirk Bogarde as the servant to a wealthy Londoner. “Losey and Pinter’s collaborations are so electric, because they have an undeniable erotic power,” says Fennell. “That power relies entirely on the threat of violence — not just literal violence, but a complete chaotic upending of the status quo.”

    Pet Shop Boys

    Courtesy Image

    At a late night karaoke party, Oliver is convinced to sing this Pet Shop Boys track — only to realize it’s intended to make fun of him. “It’s one of the most romantic songs ever written,” says Fennell of the tune, told from the perspective of a kept man. “The chorus is, ‘I love you, you pay my rent.’ There’s some simplicity to that transaction. You could argue it’s cold and cynical. But the underlying truth is something we’re all looking for.”

    Oxford The Last Hurrah

    Courtesy of ACC Art Books

    Dafydd Jones’ photos are both sordid and idyllic, capturing student life at Oxford in the 1980s — a direct reference for Fennell’s 2007-set social satire. “What’s so great about Oxford, Cambridge and the aristocracy is, like … pick your century, right?” she says. “Dafydd catches those moments of genuine exhilaration, wealth and youth.”

    This story first appeared in a November standalone issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. Click here to subscribe.

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    Kimberly Nordyke

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  • Switzerland Country of Honor at 2024 Cannes Film Market

    Switzerland Country of Honor at 2024 Cannes Film Market

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    Switzerland has been named the new country of honor for the upcoming Marché du Film, the 2024 Cannes Film Market, which will run May 14 to 22, 2024.

    The small Alpine nation punches above its weight on the international film scene, in large part due to its positioning as an ideal co-production partner, with a skilled, multi-lingual workforce, top-end post-production facilities and competitive state support and tax incentives.

    Cross-over successes, including Alice Rohrwacher’s La chimera, an Italian/Swiss/French co-production featuring The Crown star Josh O’Connor as a white-suited tomb raider; Anna Novion’s drama Marguerite’s Theorem, about a brilliant mathematics student (Raw actor Ella Rumpf) who decides to quit university; or Claude Barras’ Swiss-French stop-motion film hit My Life as a Zucchini (2016) point to the breadth and variety of the Swiss industry.

    Switzerland is also strongly supportive of its new talent, including first-time director Carmen Jaquier, whose debut feature, Thunder, a period drama set in a small Swiss village in 1900, is the country’s official contender for the 2024 Oscars in the best international feature category.

    “[Naming] Switzerland as our new Country of Honor demonstrates the remarkable evolution and impact of Swiss cinema,” says Guillaume Esmiol, executive director of the Marché du Film. “Their diverse activities planned for 2024 also emphasize their strong commitment to industry growth, and the Marché du Film is honored to be the key moment in Switzerland’s ambitious agenda. They are, most of all, a very
    innovative country in terms of creativity and technology, which aligns perfectly with the positioning of the
    Marché, the leading market at the forefront of innovation and industry trends.”

    In addition to the Cannes spotlight in May, Switzerland will host next year’s European Film Awards in
    December 2024, in the city of Lucerne.

    National promotion body Swiss Films, together with the Swiss Federal Office of Culture and the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG SSR will organize a Swiss delegation as well as special events at next year’s Marché, which will focus on highlighting emerging Swiss talents and projects in development as well as nurturing further international partnerships. Switzerland’s high-tech sector will also have a chance to shine, with representatives of the country’s digital start-ups and technology companies attending to connect with Swiss and international creatives. The U.N. ranks Switzerland as the top country worldwide in its “global leader in innovation” survey, outpacing the U.S..

    “Switzerland stands out for being an attractive hub for co-productions, which are becoming increasingly
    important in Europe,” says Alain Berset, president of the Swiss Confederation. “Our nation is also
    home to innovative companies excelling in A.I. and animation, thus playing a key role in positioning the
    Marché du Film as a premier industry event for innovation and sustainability. This dual strength
    underscores Switzerland’s important role in shaping the future of the global film industry.”

    Swiss representatives will participate in several of the market’s key programs, including those dedicated to fiction and non-fiction feature films, as well as immersive projects and innovation. The Marché will announce more details in early 2024. Switzerland is the third country to receive the country of honor title, following India in 2022 and Spain this year. This initiative aims to spotlight and celebrate the unique
    industry contributions of a different nation each year in Cannes.

    The Marché du Film, the world’s largest film market, attracted 14,000 industry professionals screening more than 4,000 films and projects in development.

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    Scott Roxborough

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  • ‘Hiding Saddam Hussein’ Director Halkawt Mustafa on Keeping His Project Secret for 14 Years

    ‘Hiding Saddam Hussein’ Director Halkawt Mustafa on Keeping His Project Secret for 14 Years

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    It was one of the largest manhunts in history. Having been ousted from power following the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq, Saddam Hussein, the country’s once all-powerful and ruthless leader, went into hiding as an estimated 150,000 troops scoured the land for the individual known as “High-Value Target Number One.”

    Incredibly, Hussein evaded capture for almost eight months, famously emerging disheveled and bearded from a tiny purpose-built hole under a flowerbed near the town of Tikrit. Three years later, he was hanged. 

    But who dug the hole for Hussein? Who helped keep him hidden from the U.S. army despite a $25 million reward? In Halkawt Mustafa’s feature doc Hiding Saddam Hussein, the Kurdish/Norwegian filmmaker lets Alaa Namiq tell his incredible story on camera for the first time, explaining how the toppled dictator turned up at his farm unannounced and then spent an incredible 235 days there before he was found. During that time, this humble Iraqi effectively assumed the role of presidential hairdresser, physician and bodyguard.

    Speaking to The Hollywood Reporter ahead of Hiding Saddam Hussein’s Middle East premiere at the Red Sea Film Festival on Friday, Dec. 1, Mustafa discussed how he managed to keep his project shrouded in secrecy for almost all its 14-year journey, Tinder’s crucial role in its making, the dramatic adaptation he’s now developing with the writer of The King’s Speech, and the difficulties of bringing a human side to a ruthless dictator responsible for his own family’s fleeing from the region. 

    When did you first have the idea of finding the man who had kept Saddam Hussein hidden?

    As soon as they found Saddam Hussein in the hole I was really curious. Firstly, was it true, because a lot of people didn’t believe it. And then, how was it possible? He was the all-powerful president, so how did he end up in this hole? But I didn’t know how to find the man who helped him. I searched for two years, and then the Washington Post named him in 2012. And with his name, I was given the opportunity to track him down. It took me one year to sit down with him, but then he didn’t want to talk. He’d just come out of Abu Ghraib prison. He was in one of the famous photos taken [with U.S. soldier Lynndie England]. The only reason he’s alive today is because the Abu Ghraib scandal came out and they closed it.

    But Alaa Namiq had no connection to Saddam himself? 

    No, from the beginning I just expected he would have been connected or related. But no, he had no connection. He was just a simple farmer and he was by chance the one chosen to hide Saddam from his family, friends and 150,000 soldiers. 

    Did you always know it was just one guy? 

    No, and this has been part of the process of making this movie. The most important thing I learned is how patient you need to be to tell your story. And it’s not only telling his story, but humanizing him and seeing the story from his perspective. We’ve always seen Saddam Hussein as the dictator, the powerful president. But then you see the king losing his power, and then it’s about balance and then Alaa takes over. 

    As a Kurd whose family was forced to flee due to the brutality of Saddam Hussein, how did it feel for you to explore this human side of him? 

    To be honest with you, it was hell difficult to make this movie. From my perspective, my mother came from the area which was bombarded by Saddam’s chemical weapons. But I really wanted to give Alaa the chance to tell the story from the Arabic perspective, because almost everything we have seen about the Iraqi invasion has been told from the Western perspective. This is why I decided, almost from the beginning, to let him tell the story in exactly the way he wanted. 

    After you tracked Alaa down, how did you convince him to speak to you?

    I think the one thing that I did that the Washington Post didn’t was that I was patient. I spent 14 years on this from beginning to end. But the turning point was ISIS, because when ISIS took over, Alaa told me that everything Saddam had told him about what would happen to Iraq happened. And then he realized that he had to tell this story. Everything Saddam predicted about the future of Iraq came true.

    It must have been fascinating from your side, irrespective of the documentary, to hear about how and why this Iraqi farmer agreed to hide the world’s most wanted man. 

    I had so many questions. Why didn’t he sell Saddam to claim $25 million. Why couldn’t he just say, sorry I can’t help you because there are 150,000 U.S. soldiers looking for you? Why are you hiding him, not just from U.S. soldiers but even from his family? No one knew. It was really difficult to understand, from my own Scandinavian perspective, why you can’t just escape with your family and leave him, if you’re so scared. But from his perspective, somehow I began to understand, especially if you have only one TV channel in your country and everything about your president is beautiful and perfect, and then he comes to your house and asks you to help. In Arabic culture, you never ask your guests how long they plan to stay. Because Saddam asked if he could stay for one night. In the end, it was 235. 

    Given the rise of ISIS, was safety a concern when making this? 

    Yeah, ISIS had taken over where we wanted to shoot the movie. In the end, I secretly brought Alaa to Norway, because no place in the Middle East was safe to do the interview. Also, I want to tell you something funny, but all our communication before that had been through Tinder. Not directly but via middlemen, because it was safe. We made Tinder profiles for the men connecting me with Alaa. Also, almost everything about this project has been kept secret only up until the last two months.

    How do you keep a film you’re working on secret for 14 years?

    It was something I had to learn! Even in the post-production process, the people who were working on it didn’t know what the project was about. And in Iraq, when we were shooting, I wrote a script about drinking water disappearing from the area. They thought I was shooting a movie about climate change. 

    I’m assuming this was mostly for Alaa’s safety?

    Yeah. We had lots of meetings about ensuring Alaa was kept safe. But he said that the only thing he wanted to happen before he died was to tell people the story, to tell the truth behind the hole. 

    Obviously, there’s a very serious nature to this story, but it also feels like the relationship between Saddam and Alaa could have several comedic drama elements, particularly over the switch in power as the simple farmer effectively becomes the president’s only protector. 

    Yeah, this is actually a story of friendship. And this is why I’m working on a drama based on the story with David Seidler, who wrote The King’s Speech. We already have a script, and I hope I’m going to direct.

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    Alex Ritman

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  • Transgender Drama ‘20,000 Species of Bees’ Leads Spain’s Goya Awards with 15 Nominations

    Transgender Drama ‘20,000 Species of Bees’ Leads Spain’s Goya Awards with 15 Nominations

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    Spanish director Estibaliz Urresola Solaguren’s debut feature, 20,000 Species of Bees, a touching and tender drama about an 8-year-old transgender child who begins to transition, is the front-runner for the 2024 Goya Awards, the Spanish film academy’s equivalent to the Oscars.

    The film, which won its young star Sofía Otero the Silver Bear for best performance in Berlin in February, picked up 15 nominations for the 2024 Goyas, including for best film and best director. Otero was oddly snubbed in the acting categories, though co-stars Ane Gabarain and Itziar Lazkano were nominated in the best supporting actress category, Martxelo Rubio received a best supporting actor nom, and Patricia López Arnaiz a Goya nomination for best actress.

    In its review of the film, The Hollywood Reporter called 20,000 Species of Bees a “moving chronicle of an 8-year-old’s gradual transitioning, and the effect it has on a family over their summer vacation [which] manages to be both timely and timeless, making its hot-button issue feel like part of a larger, spiritual cycle of life and loss.”

    The biggest movie, in terms of budget, to come out of Spain this year, J.A. Boyana’s Society of the Snow, picked up 13 Goya nominations, including for best picture and best director. The real-life thriller is a retelling of the fateful 1972 crash in the Andes of a charter flight from Uruguay and the harrowing ordeal of its survivors. A Netflix production, it is Spain’s official entry for the 2024 Oscars in the best international feature category.

    Other Goya best film contenders include Close Your Eyes, a moving homage to the power of cinema from master Spanish filmmaker Victor Erice, his first film in more than 30 years. The movie, which premiered in Cannes, received 10 Goya nominations. Un Amor, a psychosexual drama from veteran director Isabel Coixet (My Life Without Me, The Bookshop), picked up 7 nominations, including for best film, while Saben aquell, David Trueba’s biopic of legendary Spanish comedian Eugenio, received 10 noms.

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    Scott Roxborough

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  • Imax, Pathé Cinemas Sign Five-Theater Deal

    Imax, Pathé Cinemas Sign Five-Theater Deal

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    Imax and French movie theater group Pathé Cinemas have unveiled a deal to put five large-format theaters with laser projection systems across the Pathé cinema network in Europe, including four new locations in France.

    Expanding on its stable of Imax theaters, Pathé will install five new large-format systems with laser projection. Imax did not specify the locations for the new installations and will do so at a later date.

    As part of Imax’s latest Gallic invasion, the theater technologies company has also agreed to show three upcoming Pathé movies across its network. That move follows Imax and Pathé striking a partnership to bring a concert film featuring the French pop-rock band Indochine to Imax screens as part of its Filmed for Imax program.

    The film slate deal will see a classical ballet stage performance of Swan Lake, co-produced by Paris Opera and Pathé Live, the cinema group’s live events division, and choreographed by Rudolf Nureyev to be filmed in Paris using Imax proprietary cameras and receive a global theatrical release at the end of 2024.

    “This agreement advances two key strategic priorities for Imax: expanding our network in the thriving French cinema market and further diversifying our content portfolio across new experiences,” Rich Gelfond, CEO of Imax, said in a statement.

    Aurélien Bosc, chairman of Pathé Cinemas, also welcomed expanding his company’s partnership with Imax. “Leveraging on the strong Imax brand and its state-of-the-art technical features, we reinforce our premium strategy by offering moviegoers emotional experiences within our cinemas and the unique opportunity to watch exclusive Live content in Imax theaters,” Bosc said.

    Imax and Pathé first partnered on large-screen cinemas in 2010 and the French movie theater group currently has 26 Imax locations operating across France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland and Morocco.

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    Etan Vlessing

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  • China Box Office: Disney’s ‘Wish’ Goes Unfulfilled, Local Thriller ‘Across the Furious Sea’ Opens to $25M

    China Box Office: Disney’s ‘Wish’ Goes Unfulfilled, Local Thriller ‘Across the Furious Sea’ Opens to $25M

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    Local crime thriller Across the Furious Sea, directed and co-written by Cao Baoping, dominated China’s box office over the weekend with a $24.7 million two-day opening kicking off on Saturday. The film’s strong start continues a recent market trend of Chinese moviegoers favoring well-told local crime stories. 

    But it was another weekend of struggle for Hollywood filmmaking in China. Disney Animation’s Wish opened in fifth place with only $3.5 million in ticket revenue, according to data from Artisan Gateway. Lionsgate’s prequel The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes, meanwhile, plummeted in its second frame, earning a little under $1 million. Disney’s The Marvels likewise continued its decline, slipping off of China’s top ten list for the weekend (the film’s total sits at $16 million and it is unlikely to earn much more — making for an all-time low for an MCU tentpole). 

    Across the Furious Sea marks a long-coming culmination for Cao, who is highly esteemed in China but whose films are somewhat less traveled than other major directors of his generation. He has said he views Across the Furious Sea as the final film in a loose trilogy of crime thrillers. Unfortunately, the middle installment in this saga has been seen by almost no one.

    Cao’s series got off to a strong start in 2015 with The Dead End, a crime drama starring Deng Chao that earned a healthy $47.6 million. His follow-up The Perfect Blue (aka She Kills) wrapped shooting in May 2018 but then ran into serious trouble when its co-star, Fan Bingbing, was detained by Chinese authorities in a major tax evasion scandal. Fan was eventually fined tens of millions of dollars and slapped with a de facto ban from appearing in mainland Chinese films and TV series. The Perfect Blue was a collateral industry casualty — the film never saw release in mainland China despite abundant curiosity and good buzz about its quality.

    Cao finished shooting Across the Furious Sea in 2020, but the film took far longer than usual to find its way to theaters. China’s lengthy lockdowns during the pandemic were one factor, but some Chinese fans also speculated that the movie’s producers were probably hoping to gain permission to release The Perfect Blue prior. 

    Based on a Chinese crime novel of the same name, Across the Furious Sea is a murder mystery that centers on a father (Huang Bo) who vows revenge when his daughter is murdered while studying abroad in Japan. The story is complicated by the victim’s boyfriend and biggest suspect, who has escaped persecution by returning to China with the help of his mother (Zhou Xun). The has garnered strong social scores and Maoyan projects it to earn over $80 million. 

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    Patrick Brzeski

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  • Stephen Graham to Receive Top Honor at British Independent Film Awards

    Stephen Graham to Receive Top Honor at British Independent Film Awards

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    Stephen Graham, one of the most acclaimed actors on U.K. TV and a regular in both major studio titles and smaller indie features, is set to receive the highest honor at this year’s British Independent Film Awards.

    The Richard Harris Award, named after the late star, recognizes an outstanding contribution by an actor to British film and sees Graham join a list of fellow honorees that includes the likes off Judi Dench, Daniel Day-Lewis, Emma Thompson, Vanessa Redgrave and Riz Ahmed.

    The actor, a six-time BAFTA TV nominee, recently landed his first BAFTA film nomination for his lead turn in hit 2022’s one-shot kitchen drama Boiling Point, which was also the first project from Graham’s own banner Matriarch Productions, set up with his wife and fellow actor Hannah Walters with the aim of providing opportunities for underrepresented talent. The film has since been spun off into a BBC mini-series, in which Graham also stars.

    Recognized as one of the most versatile performers working today and someone able to bring emotional depth to even the toughest of characters, Graham first made a name for himself on Guy Ritchie’s 2000 gangster thriller Snatch, playing Jason Statham’s partner in crime, Tommy. He would soon head to Hollywood for Martin Scorsese’s Gangs of New York (2002), working again with the icon on Boardwalk Empire (playing Al Capone) and The Irishman opposite Al Pacino and Robert De Niro. His status on home soil was cemented thanks to his performance as a troubled neo-Nazi in Shane Meadow’s groundbreaking 2007 feature This Is England (for which he received his first BIFA nominations) and its subsequent TV mini-series.

    While other film roles would come, including Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, Michael Mann’s Public Enemies, the Pirates of the Caribbean franchise and Rocketman, it was the small screen where Graham’s leading man credentials were forged, with notables roles in Jack Thorne-penned Help alongside Jodie Comer, Jimmy McGovern’s three-part prison drama Time, ITV drama Little Boy Blue, Meadow’s The Virtues, and Line of Duty.

    Highlighted by the success of Boiling Point, Graham’s presence in the film world has expanded over the last few years. Other recent appearances include Marvel’s Venom: Let There Be Carnage (2021), while he had a scene-stealing role in 2022 smash Roald Dahl’s Matilda the Musical.

    Graham can currently be seen starring in Netflix’s global hit Bodies, an adaptation of Si Spencer’s mind- and time-bending graphic novel. He’s set to lead opposite Daisy Ridley in Disney’s Young Woman and the Sea, chronicling the daring journey of the first woman to swim across the English Channel in 1926 and will also be seen starring with Saoirse Ronan in Steve McQueen’s highly anticipated London-set WWII drama Blitz. His own Matriarch Productions is currently working on A Thousand Blows with Disney+, a 12-part series set in the perilous world of illegal boxing in 1880s Victorian London, in which Stephen will also star.

    He was appointed Order of the British Empire for his services to drama in 2023.

    “To be recognised for this year’s Richard Harris award alongside the immense talent of the previous recipients, is truly humbling and overwhelming. I’d like to give a heartfelt thanks to BIFA and the Harris family for this acknowledgment,” said Graham.

    “Throughout his long and successful film career both at home and abroad, Stephen always brings an edge to his characters, something that our father would have appreciated very much,” said Damian, Jared and Jamie Harris, in whose father’s memory the award is presented. “He is a British independent national treasure and we’re delighted to present him with the Richard Harris Award this year.” 

    The 26th British Independent Film Awards will take place Dec. 3 at London’s Old Billingsgate.

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    Alex Ritman

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  • Capstone Names Haygood Poundstone as Chief Revenue Officer

    Capstone Names Haygood Poundstone as Chief Revenue Officer

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    MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. – Capstone, an innovative learning company merging children’s content with easy-to-use edtech tools for K-5 classrooms, libraries, and homes, has named Haygood Poundstone as Chief Revenue Officer. Poundstone brings over 20 years of experience in the edtech market in business development, revenue growth, sales strategies, and operations management to this newly created role at Capstone. Poundstone will oversee Capstone’s revenue generating sales including direct to schools, library, distribution, trade, and international business units in executing the publisher’s growth strategy.

    Throughout his career, Poundstone has led top-tier sales teams to drive organizational revenue, performance, and profit. Most recently, he served as the Area Vice President of the East at Renaissance Learning where he led a large team of regional vice presidents, sales leaders, and direct sales professionals to reach aggressive goals.

    After six years away, Poundstone rejoins Capstone where he was one of the founding employees of its business unit myON. Prior to his time at Capstone, Poundstone held a variety of leadership positions at Lightspan and PLATO (now Edmentum).

    “We’re thrilled to welcome Haygood back to Capstone. He is a visionary leader with a commitment to leveraging technology and learning resources to enhance the lives of children. His insights and strategic thinking will be invaluable as we continue to expand our reach and impact at Capstone,” said Randi Economou, Capstone CEO. “Beyond his professional accomplishments, Haygood is known for his people focused leadership style. He believes in fostering a collaborative and inclusive work environment, where every team member is valued and empowered. His dedication to nurturing talent and cultivating a culture of excellence will propel Capstone forward.”

    “Inspiring successful and engaging learning experiences is at the heart of Capstone. That resonates strongly with me and reflects both the value Capstone brings to schools and industry partners as well as the motivation and passion of the entire Sales team. I’m looking forward to leading the effort to expand Capstone’s reach as we share the good news about what Capstone can help educators accomplish and learners can achieve,” said Poundstone.

    Poundstone earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration at Auburn University at Montgomery where he was an active member of Omicron Delta Kappa and Lambda Chi Alpha.

    Poundstone began his new position on November 13 and reports directly to the Capstone CEO.

    About Capstone

    Capstone is the nation’s leading educational publisher of K-5 digital solutions, children’s books, and literacy programs for school libraries, classrooms, and at-home reading. Through print books, interactive eBooks, or the curriculum-connected learning tool PebbleGo™, Capstone has a passion for inspiring students to learn and their communities to thrive. As a publisher of content for children, Capstone embraces the responsibility to celebrate and share the diverse voices and perspectives of our readers and communities. Capstone supports great teaching and learning with engaging content that values the work that educators do every day—helping students succeed. CapstonePub.com #LearningIsForEveryone  

    eSchool News Staff
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    ESchool News Staff

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  • European Parliament Celebrates Italian Oscar Contender ‘Io Capitano’

    European Parliament Celebrates Italian Oscar Contender ‘Io Capitano’

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    Matteo Garrone presented his film Io Capitano, Italy’s contender for the 2024 best international feature Oscar, to a packed theater of European parliamentarians and attendees on Nov. 15, for an event titled “Europe Seen by Others.”

    The refugee drama, which follows two Senegalese men who travel across Africa and the Mediterranean in an effort to reach Europe, premiered at the Venice Film Festival, where star Seydou Sarr won the Silver Lion award for best young actor. Garrone and his Io Capitano co-writers Fofana Amara and Mamadou Kouassi — whose real-life trials were the basis for the film’s story — attended the parliamentary screening. The 600 spectators gave the film a long-standing ovation after the screening.

    The members of European Parliament (MEPs) were impressed, with several taking to social media to praise the film and its message. “[Io Capitano is] a tremendously important and powerful work that should be screened in all schools across the continent,” Spanish MEP Domènec Ruiz Devesa posted on X shortly after the event.

    Speaking after the screening, Garrone said his goal with the film was to provide “a reverse shot” of the usual Euro-centric narrative of the migration crisis. “We are used to our perspective [looking] from Europe to Africa; I wanted to narrate the journey from another angle, from [the African] point of view, pointing the camera from Africa towards Europe,” he said. “We tried to offer the audience the chance to relive the experience of this odyssey. This film is a document of contemporary history, and I believe it touches consciences.”

    The issue of illegal migration is one of the most politically explosive topics in Europe today, with fierce debates in the EU parliament over whether member countries should take in more migrants or pay coastal nations in Africa to block people from attempting the treacherous journey across the Mediterranean.

    “Political debate does not interest me,” noted Garrone, pointing to the more basic principle of the protection of human life. “It is always right to save lives at sea [it’s] a fundamental, universal principle.”

    In a statement, Amara and Kouassi made their position clear. “The suffering to reach Europe is immense,” they said. “The only way to avoid it is to have safe entry channels, without giving more money to Libya and Tunisia that trample on human rights.”

    Only a handful of films are granted EU parliamentary screenings, with the majority shown in the context of the Lux Audience Award, a prize given annually by the EU Commission and the European Film Academy, in collaboration with exhibitors group Europa Cinemas, which aims to raise awareness of social, political, and cultural issues in Europe.

    The Io Capitano screening, however, was the direct initiative of European parliamentarians, including Italian MEPs Pietro Bartolo, Massimiliano Smeriglio and Brando Benifei. The screening was sold out, with some 400 guests left outside the packed hall.

    Viewers of Gianfranco Rosi’s Oscar-nominated documentary Fire at Sea (2016) will remember Bartolo as the emergency physician who worked on the Italian island of Lampedusa, giving first care to migrants who landed there after the journey over the sea. After 25 years as a physician, Bartolo was elected to the EU parliament in 2019. At the screening, he called Io Capitano a “masterpiece” that finally shows “the phenomenon of migration from the migrants’ perspective, not ours.”

    Io Capitano is also a contender at next month’s European Film Awards, where it has picked up nominations for best film and best director. The movie has sold worldwide but is still looking for a U.S. distributor. Io Capitano was produced by Archimede with Rai Cinema and Tarantula in collaboration with Pathé and Logical Content Ventures as an Italian-Belgian co-production.

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    Viola Baldi

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  • Italian Box Office Hit ‘There’s Still Tomorrow’ Sells Worldwide (Exclusive)

    Italian Box Office Hit ‘There’s Still Tomorrow’ Sells Worldwide (Exclusive)

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    There’s Still Tomorrow (C’è Ancora Domani), the surprise box office hit that has taken Italian cinemas by storm, has become a global sales hit as well, with international distributors snatching up the historic dramedy from actress-turned-director Paola Cortellesi.

    The black-and-white feature is set in Rome in 1946, a few days before the referendum to determine whether women will get the vote. Cortellesi stars as Delia, a woman suffering from domestic abuse who longs for emancipation — both for herself and her daughter. Valerio Mastandrea, Emanuela Fanelli, Vinicio Marchioni, Giorgio Colangeli and Romana Maggiora Vergano co-star.

    Vision Distribution, which is handling international sales for There’s Still Tomorrow, tells THR Roma they have closed deals for the movie for 18 countries across three continents, including with Limelight for Australia and New Zealand, Providence Filmes — Pandora for Brazil — Swallow Wings Films in Taiwan and Lev Cinema in Israel. The film has nearly sold out in Europe, with Universal Pictures taking it in France, BTeam Pictures in Spain and Art Film for the Netherlands. Buyers in Denmark (Future Film), Sweden (Folkets Bio), Belgium (Arti Film), Greece (Weird Wave), Hungary (Mozinet), Switzerland (Morandini Film Distribution) and Finland and Norway (Future Film ) all jumped on the historic feature, whose combination of comedy and romance against the grim post-WW2 setting has Cortellesi dubbing it “pink neorealism.”

    “We knew we had a strong story on our hands, with an original cinematic style and vision,” says Catia Rossi, head of international sales at Vision Distribution. “[It’s] a universal story that finds resonance with non-Italians as well.”

    Israeli buyer Lev Cinema picked up There’s Still Tomorrow following its screening at the Haifa festival when, Rossi says, “his 90-year-old mother, who was in the audience at the end of the screening, and with people still applauding, called her son and told him he had to buy it at all costs.”

    There’s Still Tomorrow, which opened this year’s Rome Film Festival, is already the most successful Italian title of the year, with a box office of 18.9 million euros ($20.6 million) and counting. Vision produced together with Fremantle-owned Italian company Wildside, in collaboration with Netflix and Sky Italia. Vision is fielding interest from several U.S. distributors for the title.

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    Scott Roxborough

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  • Ridley Scott’s ‘Napoleon’ Secures China Release Date

    Ridley Scott’s ‘Napoleon’ Secures China Release Date

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    Ridley Scott‘s Napoleon has charted a course for China. The big-budget historical epic has locked down a potentially lucrative release date in the country on Dec. 1, according to multiple mainstream Chinese media sources.

    Napoleon is from Apple Original Films and Sony Pictures. The film will be released in North American theaters on Nov. 22 by Sony Pictures and will stream on Apple TV+ at a later date.

    Written by David Scarpa, the lavish period film, which clocks in at a meaty two hours and 38 minutes, stars Oscar winner Joaquin Phoenix as the French military commander and later despot Napoleon Bonaparte, with Vanessa Kirby as his consort, Empress Joséphine. The movie charts Bonaparte’s meteoric rise from lowly artillery commander to Napoleon I, emperor of France, and takes in notable military engagements such as the battles of Austerlitz and Waterloo

    Universal’s Oppenheimer proved earlier this year that lengthy runtimes and weighty historical subjects are by no means a dealbreaker for Chinese moviegoers, with the period drama earning $61 million, the second-best China total of Christopher Nolan’s career behind 2014’s Interstellar ($139 million).

    Napoleon will get a wide release on Imax in China, as did Oppenheimer.

    With much of his classic filmography released long before China was a box-office force, Scott’s career-best showings in the country are The Martian (2015), with $94.9 million, and Alien: Covenant (2017) at $45.4 million.

    Napoleon cost an estimated $200 million to make, before marketing, making a strong international showing a must for the epic.

    The early reaction from critics to Napoleon has been largely positive. It has been most consistently praised for its epic scale — always a bonus in the China market — particularly the set-piece battle scenes that make the movie a worthy theatrical experience. Phoenix and Kirby’s performances have also won early admiration.

    ‘Napoleon’ poster for China.

    Apple Original Films/Sony Pictures Entertainment

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    Patrick Brzeski

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  • Michele Morrone, Urassaya Sperbund Among Stars in Video Game Adaptation ‘Home Sweet Home Rebirth’ (Exclusive)

    Michele Morrone, Urassaya Sperbund Among Stars in Video Game Adaptation ‘Home Sweet Home Rebirth’ (Exclusive)

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    The upcoming live-action adaptation of hit video game franchise Home Sweet Home Rebirth has found its key cast.

    Michele Morrone (365 Days, Subservience), William Moseley (The Chronicles of Narnia saga, The Royals), Thai-Norwegian actress and model Urassaya Sperbund (Brother of the YearFast And Feel Love), and K-Pop/K-Drama star Alexander Lee (Moorin School: Saga of the Brave, My Korean Jagiya) have joined the feature, now in production in Bangkok, Thailand.

    Filmmaking duo Alexander Kiesl and Steffen Hacker are directing the project, with visuals coming from their German visual effects house Unexpected in partnership with YGG, the Thai VFX/animation/gaming company. Producers are Dean Altit, under his Altit Media Group banner, and Pakin Maliwan, under Thailand-based Film Frame Productions. Tanat Juwiwat and Saroot Tubloy of YGG, and Kia Jam are executive producing.

    Home Sweet Home Rebirth follows Jake (Moseley), a cop thrust into an alternate realm called “The Hindrance” during a deadly mall shooting. With the help of a mysterious Novice Monk (Lee), Jake must race the clock to save his wife, Prang (Yaya), and stop an evil occultist, Mek (Morrone), from opening the Gates of Hell. The film is based on the survival thriller video game of the same namewhich has sold over 1 million units worldwide and has become a breakout on YouTube and Twitch with streamers raking in more than 370 million views of gameplay across both platforms.

    “Since we first introduced the original game in 2017, we’ve continued to grow and develop, constantly offering the most exciting and engaging storytelling to our gamers,” said YYG CEO Tanat Juwiwat. “We are thrilled to expand the Home Sweet Home universe and brand, and introduce the game to audiences worldwide, with this feature film.”

    Morrone is represented by CAA, Ascend Artist Representation, and Gang, Tyre, Ramer, Brown & Passman; Moseley by CAM, IAG, Untitled Entertainment, and Ginsburg Daniels Kallis; Sperbund by Luber Roklin Entertainment and Gang, Tyre, Ramer, Brown & Passman, and Lee (UKISS) by Tango Music Korea. 

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    Alex Ritman

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  • Camerimage: ‘Zone of Interest’ Cinematographer Lukasz Zal on “Forgetting Everything I Learned” to Make Harrowing Holocaust Drama

    Camerimage: ‘Zone of Interest’ Cinematographer Lukasz Zal on “Forgetting Everything I Learned” to Make Harrowing Holocaust Drama

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    To work on The Zone of Interest, Jonathan Glazer’s harrowing Holocaust drama about the domestic life of an Auschwitz commandant and his family, Polish cinematographer Lukasz Zal had to “forget everything I was taught” about making “beautiful images.”

    Glazer’s film, loosely adapted from the 2014 novel of the same name by Martin Amis, follows the seemingly mundane activities of Auschwitz commandant Rudolf Höss, and his wife Hedwig, played by Christian Friedl and Sandra Hüller, as they strive to build a dream life for their family in their house and garden next to the camp. The smooth, stunning monochrome aesthetic Zal perfected on his (Oscar-nominated) lensing of Pawel Pawlikowski’s Ida and Cold War would not do for Glazer’s story, which aimed to evoke the banality of evil by refusing to show Höss and Hedwig as anything but what they were: Ordinary, even boring, people who carried out unspeakable evil.

    For Zal, the challenge was to strip away what he calls the “Hollywood approach” of ” fetishizing history” with “beautiful actors in beautiful light [wearing] beautiful uniforms” to find an “ugly, objective” way to show evil “as something ordinary, like mending a coat or cleaning the floor.”

    What made you want to be involved in this project?

    Jon sent me the script and remember reading it and being completely smashed by it. I had never seen this kind of approach to a Holocaust film. This wasn’t the Hollywood approach to this kind of story, which I think often can fetishize this history, even when it comes to how the characters are shown, the way the uniforms are depicted, even the use of color and dark shadows. Here Jonathan wanted everything to be bright and light, everything looking so nice and light and normal. I remember reading this and thinking: I want to do that. I want to shoot this film because I’ve never seen anything like this before and it goes to the core of something I’m personally very interested in, which is why people do evil, how people can treat killing like something ordinary, like mending a coat or cleaning the floor.

    How did you and Jonathan Glazer go about translating that idea — the banality of evil — into a visual language?

    We were talking about this and I realized that for this film I needed to forget everything I was taught in terms of lighting, in terms of manipulating an image, the whole procedure of trying to capture moments, trying to interpret reality with my camera. This would be the complete opposite. It was completely against typical Hollywood cinema, that style of trying to tell the story with nice lighting and close-ups that draw you into the emotions of a scene, of the characters. Our approach was completely different: To create a completely unattractive, unappealing, almost objective imagery.

    The most important aspect was not to fetishize the image, not to judge, not to make any decisions you would usually make as a director of photography. Jon and I said at the beginning the camera in this film should be like a big eye that sees everything. Of course, we did make some aesthetic choices, but I was trying to limit my impact on this film as much as possible, to just forget about my approach to aesthetics, to composition, and just set up the framing in the most simple way possible.

    What did that mean in practice?

    It meant embracing a completely different approach, embracing natural light, even the “ugly” light. When I was taught at school, were were also told to shoot with a nice backlight or in the “golden hour” when the light is most beautiful. Here we were shooting at 12 noon, at 1 pm, 2 pm, at three o’clock, when the light is most harsh. For me, it was extremely exciting, because it was completely against this idea of making beautiful images. Instead what was beautiful to me about our images for the film was how honest and how real they looked.

    I had to forget what I knew about aesthetics, about using the golden ratio for framing, the golden hour for lighting, all those golden tricks you learn and you use again and again: A bit of backlight here, a camera flare there, some shallow depth of field, all the ways you can use the camera to be emotionally manipulative. For this film we wanted a different approach, we wanted to show these characters in a way that would be objective, to try and get out of the way and just show things the way they are.

    I remember one of our first meetings on set we were discussing a scene, which in the end didn’t make it into the final film, where a character is looking through a window, and in the next scene we hear a gunshot and we know that he’s been killed. I was setting up the shot and suggesting doing a nice close-up portrait of this guy, looking out of the window. And Jon said: “Don’t you think that would be really emotional and manipulative? What if we just shoot him from far away, just show this guy standing by the window and not even see his face?”

    That was when something just clicked for me. I understood we were going to make this film in the most objective way possible, using the most objective lenses, the most objective lighting, and the most objective framing.

    That seems most evident in the scenes in the house, which were shot with 10 different mounted cameras, like a reality TV show.

    There was this idea: “Big Brother in a Nazi house” It was a completely different process than what I was used to, because all my work when into the preparation process, deciding where to put the cameras. We’d set things up in the house and would go down in the basement with my camera operator and my team, which was something like 20 people, going through the images with Jon. We’d change lenses, change positions, again and again. It was a similar process every day, with every scene.

    A lot of the tasks I had to do were about preparing the workflow and coordinating the technology. We hooked up all the cameras via fiber cable because we didn’t want to risk disruption in the frequency with a remote connection. So we have these 10 cameras with all these cables coming out of them, going through the house. Every room had a hole in it for the cables, it was like a Swiss cheese. We were all hooked up with this advanced communication system so I could talk to the whole team, coordinating all these cameras and making all these changes. We’d prep maybe five or six hours every day for the next day’s shoot.

    But when shooting started, we just sat back and watched. The actors would do the scene in take after take and you’d have everything in one go: All the shots, close-up wide, mid-shots, while the light is changing, clouds going by, the sun going up or down and we’re just observing with our cameras.

    What equipment did you use?

    We shot on the Sony Venice cameras because they have this Rialto camera extension system where you can link the camera bodies with fiber optic cables to these smaller, 14×10 centimeter detecters which were very easy to attach to a wall in the house or hide in a cupboard. When we prepared the house we went around finding places to hide the cameras because the shoot itself was done with no crew with the actors. We were all in the basement watching on the monitors.

    We shot everything on 6K to give us that extra resolution and on 3200 ISO so we could shoot with amazing sensitivity, with oil lamps, candles. The core approach of the film was always to be as close to reality as possible.

    We wanted the lenses to be as small as possible but we wanted modern lenses. We used Leica lenses which were amazing because they were so sharp. The whole idea was to use contemporary equipment to make it look 21st century, not vintage. We shot on digital and we wanted it to look digital, not like film, like sepia.

    We used very high F-stops to have everything in the frame in focus to not make the decision for the viewer about what to look at but to try and have everything in the frame in focus. It all went back to this idea of being as objective as possible, of trying to do as little manipulation as we could.

    Did making the film this way change how you view other historical films, done more traditionally, particularly about this subject matter?

    I think the approach should depend on the story you want to tell, but yes, it does bother me now when I look at a very Hollywood-type depiction of this kind of story. When I see these beautiful actors looking great in this beautiful light wearing these beautiful uniforms. Because I feel it’s not true and it wasn’t like this. It wasn’t beautiful or dramatic or emotional in that way. This kind of killing, there wasn’t a great philosophy behind it. Killing was like parking the car, like closing a door. That’s the terrible and painful thing and the reason, I think, we need to talk about this right now, at this moment. Because if you look at the world right now you can see we haven’t changed. It doesn’t matter if we are talking about Russians, Ukrainians, Israelis, Palestinians, or Polish. We are all humans, we are all the same. Sometimes we can be amazing and brave. Sometimes we are awful and monstrous. But we need to look at ourselves as we are and not look away.

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    Scott Roxborough

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  • China Box Office: ‘The Marvels’ Bombs as Superhero Fatigue Deepens

    China Box Office: ‘The Marvels’ Bombs as Superhero Fatigue Deepens

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    The Marvels‘ disappointing start at the North American box office over the weekend — $47 million, a record low for a Marvel Studios release — is adding to analysts’ concerns that superhero fatigue is an urgent and growing problem for the major studios. But in China, filmgoers have been snubbing America’s caped crusaders for far longer — and The Marvels only marks a fresh low.

    The Marvels opened to just $11.5 million in China, losing the three-day weekend to holdover local crime thriller Who’s the Suspect, which earned $11.7 million. Including Thursday night previews, The Marvels‘ four-day total creeps up to $11.8 million, according to data from consultancy Artisan Gateway.

    MCU releases have been underperforming in China since the pandemic, but The Marvels‘ face plant is particularly striking. Back in 2019, Brie Larson’s franchise starter Captain Marvel opened to $89.3 million on its way to a strong $154 million China total. According to current projections, The Marvels will be lucky to top $20 million.

    Marvel’s other 2023 releases have also failed to find much traction with mainland Chinese moviegoers. Even James Gunn’s Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 — which was a success in North America with a $359 million haul — earned just $27.8 million in China, compared to $48.5 million for Guardians 2 (2017) and $86 million for Guardians of the Galaxy (2014). Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania brought in $39.4 million in China this February, a 67 percent drop from Ant-Man and the Wasp‘s $121 million total in 2018. MCU releases from 2020 to 2022 were significantly affected by pandemic-related delays and cinema closures in China, but social scores on the country’s top ticketing apps throughout this period also began to decline.

    U.S. studio franchises across the board have been on the wane in China, but other action genres have held up somewhat better than superhero films. Universal’s Fast X holds the crown for Hollywood’s biggest film of 2023 in the country with a $51.1 million opening and $140 million total. And Transformers: Rise of the Beasts opened to $40 million and topped out at $92 million. Early installments in both film series earned vastly more in China, though, indicating broad franchise erosion for the studios.

    As elsewhere, the standouts in the China market this year have been the Barbenheimer originals. Oppenheimer earned $62 million, Christopher Nolan’s second-best China performance to date behind Interstellar ($122 million) — and a phenomenal showing for a lengthy English-language historical drama in the country. Warner Bros.’ Barbie, meanwhile, opened soft with $8.1 million amid a widespread lack of awareness in the market, but word of mouth among cosmopolitan Chinese women lifted it to a healthy $35.2 million total — despite the fact that Barbie dolls have almost no history or nostalgia in the country.

    Who’s The Suspect (aka Last Suspect), China’s weekend winner, opened a week ago with $23.4 million, including previews. The film is directed by Zhang Mo, daughter of Chinese film legend Zhang Yimou. Produced by Beijing Dino Films, the thriller stars actress Zhang Xiaofei as a lawyer who is forced to defend a death-row suspect after her own daughter is kidnapped. Chinese ticketing app Maoyan currently projects the film to finish its run with about $71 million (RMB 515 million).

    The next U.S. film to hit Chinese screens will be Lionsgate’s prequel The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes, which opens day-and-date with North America on Friday.

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    Patrick Brzeski

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  • ‘Barbie’ Collects Color Grading Honor at Camerimage

    ‘Barbie’ Collects Color Grading Honor at Camerimage

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    The candy-colored look of Barbie delivered colorist of Yvan Lucas of Company 3 the Filmlight Color Award for a theatrical feature.

    The third annual awards — organized by FilmLight, the maker of the Baselight color grading system, in collaboration with Camerimage — were presented Sunday at the EnergaCamerimage cinematography film festival in Toruń, Poland. From roughly 400 entries, honorees were selected by a jury chaired by Oscar-nominated cinematographer Lawrence Sher (Joker, Joker: Folie à Deux), who presented the awards.

    Of his award-winning work on Barbie, which was directed by Greta Greig and lensed by cinematographer Rodrigo Prieto, Lucas tells The Hollywood Reporter, “Rodrigo Prieto and I both like to work together on the overall look of a film before production starts. Creating LUTs (Look Up Tables) that define the way color and contrast will be affected helps Rodrigo, the director and the department heads all work towards a common goal.

    “For the majority of Barbie, meaning all scenes set in Barbie Land, we created a LUT that combined an overall film emulation, a three-strip Technicolor look and specific ways of interpreting hues such as red, pink and blue in a way that pushes them into the palette everyone now recognizes from the film,” he explains.

    Additional winners included Dirk Meier at D-Facto Motion for The Pimp: No F***ing Fairytale (Luden) season one (cinematographer Oskar Dahlsbakken), which topped the TV series/episodic category; Tim Masick at Company 3 for Zara Man, SS23’ (cinematographer Philippe Le Sourd), in the commercial category; ­­freelance colorist Marina Starke for Mayyas ‘Horra’ (cinematography by Shadi Chaaban), which topped the music video category; and freelance colorist Cem Ozkilicci for Possession (cinematographer Oskar Dahlsbakken), in the Spotlight category for low-budget features.

    Accepting her award, Starke, who had two additional noms, received applause when she said she hoped to encourage more diversity in her field. Meier urged more colorists to attend Camerimage and “strengthen the collaboration between cinematographers and colorists even more.”

    “Representing our fantastic jury, I’d love to congratulate the winners of this year’s FilmLight Color Awards,” Sher said. “These diversely talented artists – and the inspiring work they helped craft – are a testament to the critical importance of the colorist in the art of filmmaking. It’s great to see these artists come from across the globe – proving that good work isn’t limited to huge budgets or big shops, but available to everyone with a good eye and refined skills.”

    The American Society of Cinematographers and the British Society of Cinematographers are among the organizations that support the Color Awards. “Colorists are great collaborators … Our closest relationship is with our colorist,” said cinematographer Stephen Lighthill, a member of the jury who is also the past president of the ASC. “We are happy at the ASC to continue to contribute to this event.”

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  • Curtain Rises on 31st Camerimage Cinematography Festival

    Curtain Rises on 31st Camerimage Cinematography Festival

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    Just weeks before the 31st edition of Poland’s EnergaCamerimage gets underway, there was a groundbreaking for the planned European Film Center Camerimage, a PLN 600 million (roughly ($144 million) cultural center that will be built in host city Toruń and used in future years as the international cinematography film festival’s main venue. Plans call for the center to include a main screening room with seating for roughly 1,500, as well as three 200-300-seat screening rooms, a soundstage for production and postproduction facilities.

    The new center underscores the growth of the festival, which has become a bellwether for what’s to come in the cinematography Oscar race. In three of the past four years, the winner of Camerimage’s Golden Frog has gone on to earn an Oscar nomination in cinematography, including 2019’s Joker and 2020’s Nomadland and 2022’s Tár.

    According to festival director Marek Żydowicz, more than 1,000 films were viewed during this year’s lineup selection process. “We start working on selections in March because there are so many titles we have to go through,” he said.

    This year’s program includes the main competition lineup: Killers of the Flower Moon, All of Us Strangers, Black Flies, El Condo, Ferrari, Filip, Lee, Maestro, The New Boy, Poor Things, Napoleon, Society of the Snow and The Zone of Interest. Cinematographer Mandy Walker (Elvis) is the main competition’s jury chair.

    Also during this year’s festival, which runs through Nov. 18, honorees include cinematographer Peter Biziou, who will accept the Lifetime Achievement Award; Krzysztof Zanussi, the Lifetime Achievement Award for a director; Adam Driver, the special award for an actor; Jon Kilik, the award for a producer with unique visual sensitivity; the Brothers Quay, the award for directors with unique visual sensitivity; cinematographer Peter Zeitlinger and director Werner Herzog, the cinematographer/director duo award; Jenny Beavan, a special award for achievements in costume design; and Floria Sigismondi, the award for directing achievements in music videos.

    The program also includes a celebration of Walt Disney Animation Studios’ centennial, with screenings of classics such as Beauty and the Beast and The Lion King.

    Sean Penn will personally present the Ukraine war doc Superpower, which he directed with Aaron Kaufman. Producer Billy Smith will also be on hand at Camerimage.

    Meanwhile, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ CEO Bill Kramer will visit Camerimage for the first time this year. He’s expected to speak about new constructions to support culture, from the Academy Museum in Los Angeles to the planned Camerimage Center.

    A dedication of the new Camerimage center is scheduled in conjunction with this year’s festival, with expected guests including three-time Oscar-winning cinematographer Vittorio Storaro, who was among those who have been involved in the event since its 1993 debut.

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  • Cinematographer John Bailey Remembered During Camerimage Opening Ceremony

    Cinematographer John Bailey Remembered During Camerimage Opening Ceremony

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    There was an emotional start to the 31st EnergaCamerimage cinematography film festival as news spread that John Bailey — the cinematographer behind films such as Ordinary People, The Big Chill and As Good As It Gets, and former president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences — died Friday at the age of 81.

    During Saturday’s opening ceremony, festival director Marek Żydowicz gave a heartfelt tribute to the DP as he opened the festival, which is held annually in Toruń, Poland. “It is very difficult for me to talk about it,” he said, introducing a black-and-while clip featuring portions of Bailey’s 2019 speech when he accepted the Camerimage Lifetime Achievement Award. Bailey and his wife, Oscar-nominated editor Carol Littleton, had attended the festival on multiple occasions. Żydowicz also emphasized the bond between Camerimage and the Motion Picture Academy that Bailey helped to strengthen. He said, “John, you will forever be in our hearts.”

    Oscar-nominated cinematographer Lawrence Sher also paid tribute to Bailey when he took the stage, adding, “as we all know, life is precious, hug each other.”

    During the ceremony, Adam Driver accepted the special award for an actor. He called Camerimage a “cool” festival that “really highlights cinematographers.” He recognized some of those that he has worked with that will be in attendance this week, among them Mandy Walker, Rodrigo Prieto, Salvatore Totino, Robbie Ryan, and Erik Messerschimidt — the DP of his latest film, Ferrari, which will unspool this week as part of the main competition.

    British cinematographer Peter Biziou received a standing ovation as he accepted the Lifetime Achievement Award. The DP — who lensed films including Mississippi Burning, for which he was Oscar- and BAFTA-nominated, The Truman Show and In The Name of the Father — remembered learning at an early age that “we can make magic” with film, and he stated that he shares the award with his dedicated crews.

    Jon Kilik — whose string of producing credits includes Babel, for which he earned a best picture Oscar nom, The Hunger Games and Malcolm X — said he was grateful for the collaborations he has shared with cinematographers, as he accepted the award for a producer with unique visual sensitivity. He admitted, “It’s a time now where I think the producer credit has gotten a bit monetized; it’s transactional. … [But] it’s something I really have a lot of pride in.”

    The Brothers Quay received the award for directors with unique visual sensitivity.

    Saturday is Poland’s National Independence Day, which was recognized during the ceremony. Toruń Mayor Michał Zaleski also expressed his hopes for peace amid world events.

    Following the ceremony, the festival screened Poor Things as its opening night film, which is also in this week’s main competition. With the SAG-AFTRA strike over, Willem Defoe was on hand to join cinematographer Robbie Ryan for a Q&A following the screening.

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    Carolyn Giardina

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  • Indie Film World Pays Tribute to Hengameh Panahi: ‘She Brought A Lot of Cinema Into The World”

    Indie Film World Pays Tribute to Hengameh Panahi: ‘She Brought A Lot of Cinema Into The World”

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    News of the death of Celluloid Dreams CEO Hengameh Panahi has sparked an outpouring of admiration and tributes from the independent film community.

    Panahi, a pivotal figure in the global arthouse scene, died on November 5, aged 67. In her decades in the business, as a producer, co-financier and sales agent, Panahi introduced the world to international auteurs from Iran (Jafar Panahi, Marjane Satrapi), Europe (Jacques Audiard, François Ozon, Gaspar Noé, Marco Bellocchio, Aleksandr Sokurov, the Dardenne brothers) and across Asia (Takeshi Kitano, Naomi Kawase, Jia Zanghke, Hirokazu Kore-eda).

    “She took films that were challenging, that were difficult to make, to sell, to promote, and she fought for them,” says Oscar-winning producer Jeremy Thomas (The Last Emperor) who knew and worked with Panahi for more than 30 years. “She was a unique part of the film ecosystem. She was really inspirational, with the films that she enabled to be made, and seen.”

    Celluloid Dreams, which Panahi founded in 1985, was a pioneer in scouting and promoting international filmmakers, particularly from regions (Asia, the Middle East) that long been ignored by distributors in the West.

    Jacques Audiard’s French prison drama A Prophet, Takeshi Kitano’s samurai action comedy The Blind Swordsman: Zatoichi, Marjane Satrapi’s animated autobiography Persepolis, S. Craig Zahler’s violent Western Bone Tomahawk, Todd Haynes’ experimental Bob Dylan biopic I’m Not There: There was little that united the Celluloid Dreams line-up, aside from Panahi’s esquisite taste.

    “Panahi was ‘the’ sales agent par excellence and has, since the 1980s, pioneered a new way of understanding the exchange and promotion of arthouse films internationally,” says Giona Nazzaro, artistic director at the Locarno Film Festival. “But beyond even that, she is famed for her unparalleled eye in seeking out and supporting nascent projects as a producer. It is to this discerning vision that we owe the discovery and consecration of some of the greatest contemporary auteurs: from Jafar Panahi to Kitano Takeshi, from Jacques Audiard to Jia Zhangke…A new generation of professionals was formed under her close supervision and guidance. We now also count them among the brightest lights in our industry.”

    Posting on X shortly after the news of her death, the Locarno festival called Panahi “fierce and an inexhaustible source of inspiration.”

    The European Producers Club, posting on Thursday, called Panahi “a very important woman who enlightened our industry for decades with her passion and vision. We owe Hengameh Panahi masterpieces and many successes.”

    Many highlighted Panahi’s role as a partner and mentor. Famously, after meeting two young, talented but broke animators on a trip to L.A. in the early 1980s, Panahi helped organise a trip for them to attend Brussels’ Anima animation festival. The duo? John Lasseter and Tim Burton.

    Though Celluloid Dreams Panahi actively sought out partnerships with other independent producers and distributors to find new ways to finance and release hard-to-market movies.

    “When I started MUBI 16 years ago, Hengameh was the first person in the film industry who believed in me,” says Efe Çakarel, who launched his arthouse streaming platform with Panahi’s help. “Her instincts were sharp as a knife. She invested in MUBI (then called “The Auteurs”), joined our board, licensed us her entire library, and mentored me. Her influence and ideas in those early days shaped what MUBI became today. I will miss her greatly.”

    Martin Scorsese, Ete Cakarel and Hengameh Panahi at the 62nd Annual Cannes Film Festival on May 15, 2009

    “Hengameh’s taste was unparalleled and she was an exceptional sales agent,” wrote indie production and sales group XYZ Films in an email to The Hollywood Reporter following Panahi’s death. In 2012, XYZ formed a foreign sales partnership with Celluloid Dreams in 2012, called Celluloid Nightmares, to produce and distribute arthouse horror movies. “She taught us a lot during the years of our Celluloid Nightmares partnership,” said XYZ. “Hengameh’s passing is a loss for filmmakers and cinema around the world and she will be missed.”

    Jeremy Thomas notes that Panahi’s passing comes as the kind of cinema she celebrated and championed has become an endangered species.

    “She was a driver of world cinema and for a time that was a very strong business, popular in the movie houses and on DVD but a lot has changed,” he says. “You go to the big festivals, like Toronto, and the screenings are full up, with audiences queuing to see these movies [but] fewer and fewer of them are getting theatrical releases. The marketplace has been greatly reduced [to] the couple of streamers who have taste.”

    But, he adds, Panahi would be the last one to give up the fight for independent cinema.

    “She was a lifetime fighter and did whatever was needed to stay in the game,” he says. “Above all it was her infectious enthusiasm, and optimism. Most people in the film business are glass half-empty types. Hengameh was always half-full or overflowing.”

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    Scott Roxborough

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  • Oscar Contenders ‘Zone of Interest,’ ‘Io Capitano,’ ‘Fallen Leaves’ Among 2023 European Film Award Nominees

    Oscar Contenders ‘Zone of Interest,’ ‘Io Capitano,’ ‘Fallen Leaves’ Among 2023 European Film Award Nominees

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    Jonathan Glazer’s harrowing Holocaust drama The Zone of Interest leads the nominations for this year’s European Film Awards (EFAs), picking up five nominations, including for best film and best director, in nominations announced via video on Tuesday.

    Zone of Interest, the U.K. official entry for the 2024 Oscars in the best international feature category, also scored EFA nominations for best screenwriter, for Glazer, and best actress and best actor noms for leads Sandra Hüller and Christian Friedel.

    Hüller will be competing against herself in the best actress category, having picked up a second EFA nom for her starring role in Justine Triet’s courtroom drama Anatomy of a Fall. The Palme d’Or winner recieved four EFA noms, including for best European Film, best director for Triet and best screenplay for Triet and co-writer Arthur Harari.

    Other best European film nominees include Matteo Garrone’s refugee drama Io Capitano from Italy, and Aki Kaurismäki’s Finnish romantic drama Fallen Leaves, official Oscar submissions from their respective countries, alongside Agnieszka Holland’s Green Border, a black-and-white feature on the plight of migrants caught on the border between Poland and Belarus. Green Border came under fire from Poland’s previous far-right government — Poland’s justice minister Zbigniew Ziobro compared the movie to ‘Nazi propaganda’ — and was not picked for the Oscar race.

    Holland, Kaurismäki and Garrone all recieved best director nominations, alongside Glazer and Triet.

    Competing against Hüller in the best actress race will be Fallen Leaves star Alma Pöysti, Leonie Benesch, who plays an educator under pressure in İlker Çatak’s The Teachers’ Lounge, Germany’s 2024 Oscar hopeful, Mia McKenna-Bruce for Molly Manning Walker’s How To Have Sex, and Eka Chavleishvili for her starring role in Elene Naveriani’s Georgian drama Blackbird Blackbird Blackberry.

    Alongside Zone lead Christian Friedel, best actor contenders include Fallen Leaves‘ Jussi Vatanen, Mads Mikkelsen for Nikolaj Arcel’s The Promised Land, Josh O’Connor for Alice Rohrwacher’s La Chimera, and Thomas Schubert for Christian Petzold’s Afire.

    Molly Manning Walker’s How to Have Sex, Estibaliz Urresola Solaguren’s transgender drama 20,000 Species of Bees, The Quiet Migration from Malene Choi, Juraj Lerotić’s Croatian drama Safe Place, Philip Sotnychenko’s La Palisiada, and Stéphan Castang’s mircoagression thriller Vincent Must Die were all nominated for the European Discovery – Prix FIPRESCI for best debut feature.

    The 4,600 members of the European Film Academy voted on this year’s nominations, based on “the excellent quality of each film” and reflecting the diversity and inclusion standards of the European Film Academy. The winners of the 2023 European Film Awards will be announced in Berlin on December 9.

    Full list of nominees for the 2023 European Film Award

    European Film

    Anatomy of a Fall, dir. Justine Triet

    Fallen Leaves, dir. Aki Kaurismäki

    Green Border, dir. Agnieszka Holland

    Io Capitano, dir. Matteo Garrone

    The Zone of Interest, dir. Jonathan Glazer

    European Documentary

    Apolonia, Apolonia, dir. Lea Glob

    Four Daughters, dir. Kaouther Ben Hania

    Motherland, dir. Hanna Badziaka, Alexander Mihalkovich

    On the Adamant, dir. Nicolas Philibert

    Smoke Sauna Sisterhood, dir. Anna Hints

    European Director

    Justine Triet for Anatomy of a Fall

    Aki Kaurismäki for Fallen Leaves

    Agnieszka Holland for Green Border

    Matteo Garrone for Io Capitano

    Jonathan Glazer for The Zone of Interest

    European Actress

    Sandra Hüller in Anatomy of a Fall

    Eka Chavleishvili in Blackbird Blackbird Blackberry

    Alma Pöysti in Fallen Leaves

    Mia McKenna-Bruce in How To Have Sex

    Leonie Benesch in The Teachers’ Lounge

    Sandra Hüller in The Zone of Interest

    European Actor

    Thomas Schubert in Afire

    Jussi Vatanen in Fallen Leaves

    Josh O’Connor in La Chimera

    Mads Mikkelsen in The Promised Land

    Christian Friedel in The Zone of Interest

    European Screenwriter

    Justine Triet and Arthur Harari for Anatomy of a Fall

    Aki Kaurismäki for Fallen Leaves

    Maciej Pisuk, Gabriela Łazarkiewicz-Sieczko and Agnieszka Holland for Green Border

    İlker Çatak and Johannes Duncker for The Teachers’ Lounge

    Jonathan Glazer for The Zone of Interest

    European Discovery – Prix FIPRESCI

    20,000 Species of Bees, dir, Estibaliz Urresola Solaguren

    How To Have Sex, dir. Molly Manning Walker

    La Palisiada, dir. Philip Sotnychenko

    Safe Place, dir. Juraj Lerotić

    The Quiet Migration, dir. Malene Choi

    Vincent Must Die, dir. Stéphan Castang

    European Animated Feature Film

    A Greyhound of a Girl, dir. Enzo d’Alò

    Chicken For Linda!, dir. Chiara Malta, Sébastien Laudenbach

    Robot Dreams, dir. Pablo Berger

    The Amazing Maurice, dir. Toby Genkel

    White Plastic Sky, dir. Tibor Bánóczki, Sarolta Szabó

    European Short Film

    27, dir. Flóra Anna Buda
    Aqueronte, dir. Manuel Muñoz Rivas

    Daydreaming So Vividly About Our Spanish Holidays, dir. Christian Avilés

    Flores Del Otro Patio, dir. Jorge Cadena

    Hardly Working, dir. Susanna Flock, Robin Klengel, Leonhard Müllner, Michael Stumpf

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