Thursday, March 8, 2012

Metallica and Nimrd Antal to Collaborate At Last

"'Metallica has always been a huge part of my life, and it's an incredible opportunity when we get to work with our heroes,' said Antal. 'We are going to harness the powerful and almighty energy of Metallica's live shows, inject a narrative into it, and shoot it in 3-D to elevate the entire experience.'" Of course they are. Whatever, it can't be any worse than Lulu. [Press release]

J:COM to take full stake in Asmik Ace

Tokyo -- Japan's No. 1 cabler Jupiter Telecommunications (J:COM) plans to acquire all shares of indie distrib and pic producer Asmik Ace Entertainment and make it a wholly owned subsid. J:COM aims to add original content from Asmik to its program line-up. Initially, J:COM will buy the 96.6% of Asmik Ace shares owned by the Sumitomo trading house, with the transfer to occur within 30 days, according to Japanese press reports. No price has yet been announced. It will then acquire the remaining shares. Asmik Ace had a complicated birth, taking its current form in a merger of pic producer Ace Pictures and distrib Asmik in 1998. In 2004, when then co-owner Kadokawa Holdings acquired exclusive rights to distribute DreamWorks pics in Japan, Asmik Ace took charge of publicity and distribution. In 2010, Sumitomo bought Kadokawa's 20% stake in Asmik Ace, boosting its share to the current 96.6%. Among Asmik Ace's recent releases are "Spy Kids 4D," "Scream 4" and "50/50," as well as the domestic mellers "Bread of Happiness" and "A Yell From Heaven." J:COM intends to offer the 270 pics to which Asmik Ace owns the rights on its movie channels. Asmik Ace will also produce five to 10 original dramas annually for J:COM strands, while its pics will be released simultaneously in theaters and on J:COM's VOD services. Asmik Ace content will be available to mobile device users via J:COM partner KDDI's Lismo streaming service. As of January, J:COM had 3.63million cable subscribers, up 6.7% on the same month the previous year. It has 7.14 million subs for its combined cable, Internet and telephony services, up 9.5% on 2011. Contact the Variety newsroom at news@variety.com

Your Mother Will Like These Approaching Film Comedies

Your Mother Will Like These Approaching Film Comedies By Pete Keeley March 7, 2012 Photo by Getty Images Annette Bening So far as moms go, mine includes a pretty great spontaneity andapart from a frustrating disinclination to love any film that doesn't finish happilygood style of movies overall. But there's one class of movies, that we describe as "parent comedies," where our tastes diverge. They are movies that parents everywhere find stomach-bustingly funny while possibly coaxing a small chuckle or two using their children. "Father from the Bride" with Steve Martin, "Home for that Holidays" with Carol Hunter, "Satisfy the Parents" you receive the image. They are about families, all of the primary figures are over 30, and they're largely lacking of jokes about sex (erectile disorder excepted) or drugs (The blue pill excepted).So whereas my mother hates "Napoleon Dynamite," "Austin Forces," and every Will Ferrell movie ever, I do not think I have seen her laugh harder than throughout the scene in "Mrs. Doubtfire" when Robin Williams throws an apple at Pierce Brosnan's mind and characteristics it to some "run-by fruiting." Had you been bending over and done with laughter throughout that scene? If that's the case, you most likely have kids who are able to election.Well, now moms everywhere have been in luck, just because a textbook parent comedy is incorporated in the pipeline. "The feel of Love" stars Annette Bening like a lady who falls for any guy who bears an uplifting resemblance to her dead husband. Fellow cast people include Robin Williams and Erectile dysfunction Harris. One factor does produce pause: Diane Keatonwho has starred in additional mother-beloved comedies than anybody in historywas initially mounted on take part in the lead. Why did she back out? Her participation might have skyrocketed this film in to the parent-comedy stratosphere. With Keaton and Williams, this factor will be a warmer ticket compared to Eagles carrying out on Leno. Bening may be too edgy. We'll see. Monika Mikkelsen and Heidi Levitt are casting in front of an April begin in La.An additional comedy set to start shooting the following month, "Identity Crook," sounds hilariouswhich means my mother will most likely hate it. It stars Jason Bateman, he of "Arrested Development" fame (Mother verbatim, circa 2005: "How can this be funny for you?Inch), like a guy that has his identity stolen with a lady and should cope with the down sides that result. The titular crook is performed by Melissa McCarthy, who had been lately conned of the Oscar on her performance in "Bridesmaids" (a movie I do not even need to know my mother's opinion on). Despite the plot specifics being scarce, it's not hard to picture this being great.Maybe I'm able to convince my mother to determine it beside me basically let her know Diane Keaton constitutes a cameo. Your Mother Will Like These Approaching Film Comedies By Pete Keeley March 7, 2012 Annette Bening PHOTO CREDIT Getty Images So far as moms go, mine includes a pretty great spontaneity andapart from a frustrating disinclination to love any film that doesn't finish happilygood style of movies overall. But there's one class of movies, that we describe as "parent comedies," where our tastes diverge. They are movies that parents everywhere find stomach-bustingly funny while possibly coaxing a small chuckle or two using their children. "Father from the Bride" with Steve Martin, "Home for that Holidays" with Carol Hunter, "Satisfy the Parents" you receive the image. They are about families, all of the primary figures are gone 30, and they're largely lacking of jokes about sex (erection dysfunction excepted) or drugs (The blue pill excepted).So whereas my mother hates "Napoleon Dynamite," "Austin Forces," and each Will Ferrell movie ever, I do not think I have seen her laugh harder than throughout the scene in "Mrs. Doubtfire" when Robin Williams throws an apple at Pierce Brosnan's mind and characteristics it to some "run-by fruiting." Had you been bending over and done with laughter throughout that scene? If that's the case, you most likely have kids who are able to election.Well, now moms everywhere have been in luck, just because a textbook parent comedy is incorporated in the pipeline. "The feel of Love" stars Annette Bening like a lady who falls for any guy who bears an uplifting resemblance to her dead husband. Fellow cast people include Robin Williams and Erectile dysfunction Harris. One factor does produce pause: Diane Keatonwho has starred in additional mother-beloved comedies than anybody in historywas initially mounted on take part in the lead. Why did she out? Her participation might have skyrocketed this film in to the parent-comedy stratosphere. With Keaton and Williams, this factor will be a warmer ticket compared to Eagles carrying out on Leno. Bening may be too edgy. We'll see. Monika Mikkelsen and Heidi Levitt are casting in front of an April begin in La.An additional comedy set to start shooting the following month, "Identity Crook," sounds hilariouswhich means my mother will most likely hate it. It stars Jason Bateman, he of "Arrested Development" fame (Mother verbatim, circa 2005: "How can this be funny for you?Inch), like a guy that has his identity stolen with a lady and should cope with the down sides that result. The titular crook is performed by Melissa McCarthy, who had been lately conned of the Oscar on her performance in "Bridesmaids" (a film I do not even need to know my mother's opinion on). Despite the plot specifics being scarce, it's not hard to picture this being great.Maybe I'm able to convince my mother to determine it beside me basically let her know Diane Keaton constitutes a cameo.

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Elizabeth Olsen: 'Silent House' Can Be A 'Choreographed Ballet'

The unbroken shot that comprises "Quiet House" can be a unique visual gimmick, but theres another large factor at hands: the close camerawork that rarely leaves Elizabeth Olsens side, giving us an intensely personal perspective with the film. As harrowing as that camerawork is always to experience becoming an audience member, it doesn't rival the actual way it mustve felt to film it firsthand. Talking with MTV News, Olsen tried to describe how a filming process eliminate, and the way comfortable she was while using closeness with the finish of shooting. Asked for how close the digital camera was, Olsen stuck her hands out of a ft from her face. "The DP [director of photography] who shot it, Igor Martinovic, he's doing lots of documentaries so hes efficient at to not get a shadow or reflection anywhere," she mentioned. "We felt like i had been dancing together the whole time. It felt similar to this choreographed ballet." Martinovic has formerly drenched experience since the DP on "The Tillman Story" and "Guy on Wire," documentaries acclaimed for camerawork and feel. Due to the singularity of "Quiet House"s style, which have offered well on set too for his collaboration with Olsen. "I so truly loved coping with him," she mentioned. "We'd this excellent dialogue where we literally might be filming a take and hell tell me simply to walk faster or walk reduced because we cant use editing either, therefore we must determine the pace while were working." "Hed finish up like, Mind there, and therefore Id put my [light] there," she added. "It absolutely was interesting to accomplish this in addition to because we loved coping with each other. It almost was cooler to don't have the crew around. It absolutely was almost something you tips from, truly playing pretend by yourself.In . Consider everything when you're watching "Quiet House," and the way awkward you might feel requiring to emote getting a camera a ft out of your face. For this reason is Olsen and Martinovic both professionals rather than some college amateurs fumbling around. Still, kudos for movie miracle. Reveal what you consider inside the comments section and also on Twitter!