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Tag: Picture Tree International

  • Lucy Liu’s ‘Rosemead’ Boarded by Picture Tree for International Sales (EXCLUSIVE)

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    Picture Tree Intl. has acquired international sales rights to “Rosemead,” the dramatic thriller headlined by Lucy Liu, alongside breakout newcomer Lawrence Shou.

    The feature marks the directorial debut of cinematographer Eric Lin (“The Exploding Girl,” “The Sound of Silence,” “Hearts Beat Loud”). Vertical will release the film theatrically in the U.S. on Dec. 5 and has launched an awards campaign.

    Following its world premiere at the Tribeca Festival, “Rosemead” quickly gained momentum on the international circuit, winning best narrative feature at the Bentonville Film Festival, and capturing the Prix du Public UBS Audience Award at the Locarno Film Festival, where Liu was also honored with the Career Achievement Award.

    Liu continues to be fêted with numerous awards for her performance in “Rosemead” and her career, including the Critics’ Choice Trailblazer Award, Bentonville’s Rising to the Challenge Award, Philadelphia Film Festival’s Artistic Achievement Award, Miami Film Festival’s Precious Gem Award, Belfast Film Festival’s Réalta (Star) Award, and Denver Film Festival’s John Cassavetes Award.

    The next international festival outings for “Rosemead” include the Mexico premiere at Morelia Film Festival, Brazil premiere at São Paulo Intl. Film Festival, Germany premiere at Hof International Film Festival, U.K. premiere at Belfast Film Festival, and England premiere at Leeds Intl. Film Festival, to be followed by further regional premieres yet to be announced.

    “Rosemead’s” screenwriter Marilyn Fu was also recently nominated for a Taipei Golden Horse Award for best adapted screenplay.

    Critics have embraced the film, saying it “builds to a most unexpected crescendo, giving [Liu] her best role in years” (Deadline), and “forces its audience to hold its breath” and “will leave you speechless” (Loud & Clear). Liu’s performance has been cited as “a revelatory turn” and “career-redefining” (Variety) and “a highlight of her storied career” (Next Best Picture).

    PTI will pick up negotiations at Mipcom this week and launch “Rosemead” at the upcoming AFM in Los Angeles.

    Set against the quiet tensions of a Chinese American household, “Rosemead” tells the story of an ailing mother who uncovers a terrifying secret: her teenage son is consumed by violent impulses. As her health rapidly declines, she is forced into a desperate struggle—how far will she go to stop what she fears he is becoming, and what will she sacrifice to protect him?

    “’Rosemead’ is both an intimate and urgent drama with global relevance. Lucy Liu delivers one of the most powerful performances of her career, anchoring a film that will resonate strongly with audiences worldwide,” said Andreas Rothbauer, managing partner at Picture Tree Intl.

    Written by Marilyn Fu (“The Copenhagen Test,” “The Honor List”) and adapted from Frank Shyong’s award-winning Los Angeles Times article, the film is produced by Mynette Louie (“I Carry You With Me,” “Swallow”), Andrew D. Corkin (“A Vigilante,” “Martha Marcy May Marlene”), and Liu.

    “Rosemead” is a production of The Population and Untapped, in association with MyVideo, Taiwan Mobile, and L.A. Times Studios.

    Executive producers include Theo James, Eric Lin, Peng Zhao, Fanghua Jiang, Julia Xu, Chris Argentieri, Frank Shyong, Jamie Lin, Chiling Lin, Jeff Yang, Daniela Ruiz, and Julia Gouw. Co-producers are Tony Yang and Hao Zhang.

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    Leo Barraclough

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  • In ‘Raptures,’ Director Jon Blahed Looks Beyond ‘Juiciest Stories’ About Real-Life 1930s Cult and Hopes to Let Go of Shame (EXCLUSIVE)

    In ‘Raptures,’ Director Jon Blahed Looks Beyond ‘Juiciest Stories’ About Real-Life 1930s Cult and Hopes to Let Go of Shame (EXCLUSIVE)

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    Jon Blåhed found a timely story in 1930s period drama “Raptures.”

    “Some of these things happen today as well,” he says.

    Inspired by the so-called “Korpela Movement” – a controversial religious sect that first emerged in Northern Sweden and was later known for its apocalyptic beliefs and unorthodox rituals, as well as sexual practices – he wasn’t looking to spread gossip.

    “It wasn’t just about taking the juiciest stories, but staying true to what I thought was important. I grew up in that region. I’m a son of the village preacher and I’ve heard whispers about this movement when I was a kid. It always felt a bit wrong, like something you weren’t supposed to discuss.”

    Later in life, Blåhed found himself questioning religious dogmas.

    “I was forced to go to church as a kid, and I didn’t like it. It was weird, hearing your own dad talk about death and the afterlife,” he admits. But he hasn’t forgotten about the Korpela Movement.

    “I remember talking to a colleague of mine 10 years ago, and this subject came up again. I found myself refuting their claims: ‘It wasn’t like that!’ I realized: ‘Well, maybe I should be the one telling this story.’”

    “Raptures,” produced by Andreas Emanuelsson and Tony Österholm for Iris Film AB and co-produced by Tiina Pesonen for Rabbit Films, is not just about religion. Things get personal not just for Blåhed, but his female protagonist as well.

    Rakel (Jessica Grabowsky, soon to be seen in series “Icebreaker”) is faced with an unusual dilemma: her husband Teodor (Jakob Öhrman) establishes a sect. As things start to take an odd turn, she needs to decide if you really need to stand by your man – even when he’s convinced that he’s the Savior himself.

    “How would you react in that situation? Especially if you are a strict Christian that can’t really question patriarchy? My grandmother was a Laestadian [Christian revival movement]. She was timid and not very outspoken, but ultimately also a strong person. I knew it would be up to Jessica and her face to tell a big part of this story.”

    Rakel isn’t always silent, however, also looking up to heaven for answers.

    “She has these conversations with God, which help us understand how she really feels. She doesn’t necessarily show it, but she’s conflicted about what’s happening. Jessica said that by the end of the shoot, her jaw was hurting. She always had to keep everything in,” says Blåhed.

    He surrounded Grabowsky with other acclaimed Finnish actors, from Elina Knihtilä to Golden Globe nominee Alma Pöysti, seen in “Fallen Leaves.”

    “I love Finnish films, my dad is from Finland and I am so happy everyone wanted to be a part of it, also because we shot in a dying language they don’t actually speak: in Meänkieli,” he reveals.

    It made for a “tough journey” for the entire team, but also a worthwhile one.

    “In Sweden, it’s also political. Meänkieli is considered a ‘minority language’ there: in Finland, it’s a ‘dialect.’ Coming from that region, I knew how much it would mean to local people and I wanted to make them proud. It’s difficult to keep this language alive, but they are doing such a good job. It’s the first feature film ever shot in Meänkieli. It just felt right.”

    So did shooting in the region where the original story took place.

    “Being from the North, it was important to shoot in the North,” he smiles.

    “After the premiere, I want to go back there again. It’s a sensitive subject, this movement. It always has been. I want to talk to people about it, because you can still find relatives of those who were in the cult. In small communities, it’s so easy for shame to linger on. You can’t shake it off. This film might bring it to the surface again, but hopefully it will be a good thing for everyone involved.”

    Blåhed is currently working on the final cut of the film, presented at the 2023 Finnish Film Affair and set to premiere early next year. Sold by Picture Tree International, it debuts the trailer here:

    “It’s not all black and white. It’s not easy to say what’s this cult’s exact goal, or what’s good and what’s bad. People were happy to be a part of these gatherings and some of these leaders actually gave them hope,” he adds.

    “[In ‘Raptures’] Teodor is not a bad guy… And yet he is. I don’t think that today, he could go on for that long before being stopped, although some surely try. I hope it can make us think about spirituality and about what it gives to people. They join these communities for very different reasons, with different agendas and different dreams.”

    Picture Tree International’s Andreas Rothbauer adds: “Beside its historic setting, the subject is timely for today, if not timeless ­– with so many examples throughout history where the thin line between devotion and delusion becomes blurry.”

    “There seems to be this timeless temptation not just to believe, but to claim to know the real truth, which consequently is the source of many conflicts. Today, with even more fragmented societies, this is even truer than it was back then.”

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    Leo Barraclough

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  • Picture Tree Int’l Boards Alireza Golafshan’s ‘Everything’s Fifty Fifty’ & Posts Deals For German B.O. Hit ‘Weekend Rebels’ – AFM

    Picture Tree Int’l Boards Alireza Golafshan’s ‘Everything’s Fifty Fifty’ & Posts Deals For German B.O. Hit ‘Weekend Rebels’ – AFM

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    EXCLUSIVE: Picture Tree International (PTI) has boarded sales on German Iranian director Alireza Golafshan’s comedy Everything’s Fifty Fifty about a divorced couple who embark on a family vacation, ahead of the AFM.

    Laura Tonke (Jupiter) and Moritz Bleitreu (The Experiment, Manta Manta Legacy) play a divorced couple who head to Italy for a family holiday with their young son and the former’s new boyfriend, played by David Kross (The Reader, The King’s Man).

    Planned with the best of intentions, the trip exposes cracks in their parenting, forcing them to reappraise their approach and work out how to function as a family again.

    The movie follows Golafshan’s Ibiza-set hen party caper JGA and reunites him with producers Justyna Muesch, Quirin Berg and Max Wiedemann at Leonine-company Wiedemann & Berg, best known for The Lives Of Others, Never Look Away and Who am I.

    They are lead producing in co-production with Seven Pictures Film and Leonine Licensing. Leonine Studios has set a tentative theatrical release date of on January 18 2024.

    The sales acquisition follows PTI’s successful collaboration with Wiedemann & Berg on Marc Rothemund’s Weekend Rebels, which is nearing 600,000 admissions in Germany following its theatrical release there on September 28.

    The heart-warming tale, based on a true story, stars Florian David Fitz as a father who bonds with his autistic son through soccer.  

    PTI has unveiled a first round of salse on the title to South Korea (Jinjin) (South Korea), Japan (SDP), Taiwan (Swallow Wings), Latin America (Encripta), Israel (Nachshon) Ukraine (Svoekino), Czech Republic and Slovakia (AQS), the Netherlands (VPRO) and airlines (Encore).

     PTI’s AFM slate also features A Whole Life, adapted from Robert Seethaler’s classic novel about a man living in dignity in the Austrian Alps in the face of hardship and loss. The film played at IFF Newport Beach and Whistler, after world premiering in Zurich, ahead of a release in Germany by Tobias Film on November 9.

    Further titles include Chris Kraus’s retribution drama sequel 15 Years starring Hannah Herzsprung (The Reader, Who Am I) and Albrecht Schuch (All Quiet on the Western Front, System Crasher); 2020 Vienna terrorist attack drama Woodland by Elisabeth Scharang, which debuted at Toronto and Zurich, and Venison.

    The latter title is the ninth instalment in Ed Herzog’s Constantin Film-produced Bavarian Rhapsody franchise and was one of the year’s biggest box office hits in Germany with 1.5 million theatrical admissions.

    PTI will also present the first made-for-television titles to come out of its recently announced sales collaboration with Bavaria Media, under which it is handling territories outside of Europe on the historical dramas A Stolen Life – The Destiny Of Martha Liebermann, The Heart Of Cape Town and White Silence.

    As part of the venture, PTI is also entering the sales of serial programs including the crime series Dark Lake and Cold Valleys as well as family series Dr. Dog.

    The collaboration broadens PTI’s portfolio beyond theatrical feature films as its also heads to Ventana Sur and the Asia Television Forum (ATF) in Singapore after the AFM

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