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The two week 'Invade the Alamo Basement' event will offer up Mondo posters to support the theater chain.

Alamo Drafthouse Cinema is inviting audiences to Invade the Alamo Basement, and participate in a two-week online sale of Alamo Drafthouse and Mondo collectibles from Drafthouse founder Tim League’s personal stash, with all proceeds going towards keeping the Drafthouse afloat during the ongoing COVID-19 crisis that has seen the theatrical business struggle worldwide.

The sale, created in partnership with eMoviePoster.com, runs from Nov. 29 through Dec. 13, with bidding for each item — certified original and in mint or near-mint condition — starting at just $1.

Mondo, Alamo Drafthouse’s collectible art boutique, has been creating limited edition collectibles based on popular and cult TV and movie properties alike for more than a decade, with artists contributing including Becky Cloonan, Francesco Francavilla, Tula Lotay, Drew Struzan and Olly Moss; League’s own collection includes almost 2,000 limited edition prints.

In a statement, League said, "100% of proceeds from the sale will go towards paying staff of the Alamo Drafthouse and paying debt and expenses accrued during the COVID closures. These next four to six months are critical and the proceeds from this auction will help immensely. If you are a Mondo collector, if you have a movie fan in your life who would like something unique under the Christmas tree this year, or if you have never purchased a poster before, we invite everyone to explore the incredible history of nearly 15 years of beautiful poster design in this auction.”

Shaun of the Dead director Edgar Wright added, “"I love Mondo posters. I own quite a few of them and the interpretations of my films by the Mondo crew are a source of great pride to me. It is clear they are in the middle of a very cool Venn diagram composed of huge artistic talent and a genuine love of movies."

Those wishing to take part in the bidding need to sign up for a free account at eMoviePoster.com, with the auction beginning on that site 3 p.m. PT on Nov. 29.

 

Article by: Grame McMillan for the Hollywood Reporter.

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The Oscar winning director will launch his first novel, 'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood,' in summer 2021, in addition to personal writings on 1970s-era film.

Hollywood director Quentin Tarantino has signed a two-book deal with Harper, to include his first novel and personal writings on 1970s-era film.

Harper, a division of HarperCollins Publishers, will release Tarantino’s first work of fiction, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, in summer 2021. The novel is based on Tarantino's Oscar-winning film of the same name, which starred Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt and Margot Robbie and was up for 10 Academy Awards.

The novel promises to chart the lives of Tarantino’s main film protagonists, TV actor Rick Dalton and his stunt double Cliff Booth, forward and backward in time. Once Upon a Time follows Dalton (DiCaprio) and his stuntman Booth (Pitt) nearing the end of their careers and struggling to find meaningful work in a fast-changing 1969 Hollywood.

Tarantino’s second book with Harper will be nonfiction, Cinema Speculation, a mix of essays, reviews and personal writing, as the director looks back on 1970s film.

“In the seventies movie novelizations were the first adult books I grew up reading. And to this day I have a tremendous amount of affection for the genre. So as a movie-novelization aficionado, I’m proud to announce Once Upon a time in Hollywood as my contribution to this often marginalized, yet beloved sub-genre in literature," Tarantino said of his novel treatment of the earlier movie in a statement.

 

Article by: Etan Vlessing for the Hollywood Reporter.

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The untitled meta-comedy will follow a group of actors and actresses stuck inside a pandemic bubble.

Judd Apatow will be making his streaming directorial debut with an upcoming Netflix feature.

The untitled meta-comedy will be about a group of actors and actresses stuck inside a pandemic bubble at a hotel attempting to complete a film.

Apatow will direct the untitled feature from a script he will co-write with Pam Brady.

The filmmaker will produce via his Apatow Productions banner, with longtime collaborator Barry Mendel, who most recently worked Apatow on The King of Staten Island, set to executive produce.

Apatow last directed the Pete Davidson-starring Universal comedy, which went straight to PVOD after the elongated COVID-19 theatrical shutdown. He previously worked with Netflix on dramedy series Love, which he co-created, and the streamer released stand-up special The Return and the Apatow-produced Pee-wee's Big Holiday

He is represented by UTA, Mosaic, and Ziffren Brittenham.  Brady is represented by UTA, Mosaic and Sloane, Offer, Weber & Dern.

 

 

Article by: Mia Galuppo for the Hollywood Reporter.

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On Monday, Universal Pictures gave theater owners another shove toward the future of moviegoing. The Hollywood studio struck a second deal with a major theater chain, this time Cinemark, to shorten the theatrical window and bring movies more quickly to the home.

 

Under the terms of the agreement, Universal can put new movies on premium video-on-demand platforms in as little as 17 days. Films that generate at least $50 million in opening weekend ticket sales, however, will have to play exclusively in theaters for 31 days, or five full weekends. Traditionally, new releases remain on the big screen for 75 to 90 days before they move to digital platforms for a $19.99 rental fee.

 

Universal made a similar agreement months ago with the world’s biggest cinema chain, AMC Theatres — a decision that initially drew criticism. Yet now having Cinemark on board means two of the biggest movie theater chains in the country have resigned to the fact that the film industry will look very different when the world emerges from the coronavirus pandemic.

Is this the final nail in the coffin for theaters? How soon can audiences watch the next “Fast & Furious” sequel at home? Here’s everything you need to know about Universal’s historic deals with Cinemark and AMC.

 

How do these arrangements work?

These pacts give Universal the option (key word: option) to put new releases on home entertainment platforms earlier than ever. That doesn’t mean every movie will definitely make the jump to digital after three (or five) weekends. Think of it as a safety net. Once upon a time, studios had to wait three months before they could make movies available to rent at home (most still do). That system works well for blockbusters like “Jurassic World,” “Wonder Woman” and anything Marvel — the kinds of movies that regularly gross well over $100 million in theaters. So it’s unlikely that similar tentpoles, or unexpected hits — which Universal has seen with Jordan Peele’s “Get Out” and “Us,” the recent “Halloween” reboot starring Jamie Lee Curtis and Blumhouse’s “The Invisible Man” — will leave theaters prematurely. But the gap between hits and misses at the box office has become unmistakable. Chalk it up to the surge in streaming services, but some movies no longer seem destined for the big screen. Expect embarrassing financial duds like Tom Hooper’s “Cats” adaptation and Robert Downey Jr.’s “Dolittle” to take full advantage of the early access to iTunes or Amazon.

 

How did they land on 17 (or 31) days?

For the most part, studios and theater owners can tell pretty quickly if a film is popular or not. There are always exceptions (“The Greatest Showman,” we’re looking at you), but movies generate most of their ticket sales within the first weeks of release. By the time a movie has been in theaters for two-plus months, audiences have largely moved on to something else.

 

If a movie makes $49 million in its opening weekend, does that mean it’ll move on-demand in three weeks?

Maybe, but it’s highly unlikely. Universal doesn’t have to put any movie to digital early, these deals simply provide flexibility in how movies are distributed. If a film generates anywhere close to $50 million in one weekend, it gives a good indication that people want to see it in theaters. It’s hard to believe that Universal will disrupt plans for a movie that’s generating substantial box office revenues.

 

Can a movie even make $50 million in a weekend during coronavirus?

Good question. Considering only 50% of U.S. theaters are currently open, and they’re operating at reduced capacity, and a lot of the public is scared of getting coronavirus, it’s hard to imagine a film cracking the $50 million mark — or even the $20 million mark — while the pandemic is still raging. If any movie had a shot at hitting that benchmark, it would have been Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet.” But the sci-fi thriller only generated about $9 million in its first three days in theaters. However, the deal should outlast the pandemic, assuming movie theaters make it through to the other end of the global health crisis.

 

Does this apply to other major studios?

Not at the moment. However, that doesn’t mean rivals won’t eventually follow suit. Paramount has released two movies — post-apocalyptic adventure “Love and Monsters” and supernatural thriller “Spell” — simultaneously in theaters and on digital during the pandemic. Yet they only secured a few hundred screens and a few hundred thousand dollars in ticket sales because major chains, including AMC, refused to play them. Which leads us to our next question…

 

Why do studios wait so long to put movies on home entertainment in the first place?

Technically, studios don’t have to wait the standard three month-window. But that wouldn’t happen without major blowback.

 

Take “Trolls: World Tour.” When the pandemic initially forced movie theaters to close in March, Universal had to make a swift decision about the animated “Trolls” sequel: Postpone it until cinemas reopened, or nix theaters and offer it on-demand for a premium price. The studio decided the latter, because they already spent millions upon millions of marketing dollars, and delaying it any longer would cause the budget to balloon even more. Universal offered what they thought was a loophole in putting it on digital rental services on the same day as the films’ global theatrical release. The catch was that nearly every U.S. theater, sans a few drive-in venues, were closed so the only option was to watch it at home. The results — though still ambiguous to the public — were substantial, and Universal’s CEO Jeff Shell later touted that even when the pandemic abates, the company would go forth with simultaneous releases. In response, Adam Aron, the CEO of the world’s biggest theater chain, AMC, vowed to boycott Universal’s movies. (Cut to April, and their relationship looks very different.) But that’s a lot of screens for studios to miss out on, should other chains refuse to showcase their movies.

 

Why are theaters agreeing to this now?

Theaters have long resisted changes to the theatrical window, fearing that it would cut into their bottom line. But the pandemic has crippled the exhibition industry, limiting their bargaining power in the process. At this point, theater owners are desperate for anything new to offer to patrons. Plus, theater owners could use some fresh revenue streams. While some theaters have closed down again because of low ticket sales, AMC pointed directly to its deal with Universal as the reason its locations can stay open.

 

Is Regal next?

No, but they’ll presumably get there eventually. Regal, the second-largest chain, closed all U.S. locations because of the lack of new movies, so it’s safe to assume they aren’t making sweeping decisions anytime soon. Mooky Greidinger, the CEO of Regal’s parent company Cineworld, has been among the most openly critical of AMC’s decision. He recently told Variety that he wouldn’t entirely rule out a shortened theatrical window, but was adamant that 17 days is “too aggressive and too short.” Look for a mid-sized chain like Alamo Drafthouse or Marcus Theatres to get in on the action next.

 

At what point does this arrangement stop making sense?

That’s the million-dollar (or, potentially multi-million-dollar) question. Universal can’t realistically share revenues with every theater operator in the country. There’s an advantage to being an early adopter. Neither the studio, nor theater chains, have disclosed any financials. Yet it’s safe to assume that the holdouts are going to get less of the profits.

 

Will this hurt attendance?

That’s the fear, at least among theater owners. And sure, some guests will probably just wait a few extra days until they can watch it from the comfort of their couch. But those likely aren’t the same people who made mountains move to be among the first to see “Avengers: Endgame.” The reality is that audiences who like watching movies in theaters will continue to do so. In any case, Universal isn’t allowed to announce when a movie is going to VOD until the three-week mark, so guests won’t know right away how long they’ll have to wait.

 

Can “Jurassic World: Dominion” and “No Time to Die” come out already?

We’re with you. But … no; at least not yet. Even with their shiny new deals with AMC and Cinemark, releasing a potentially billion-dollar movie still doesn’t make sense in the middle of a pandemic. Theaters in major moviegoing markets like New York City and Los Angeles remain closed, and parts of Europe have been forced to shut down again as coronavirus cases continue to surge. That’s why we’ve seen smaller movies like the body-swap thriller “Freaky” and Western drama “Let Him Go” open in theaters, while the sequel to “Jurassic World” moved to 2022. Isla Nublar beckons…

 

Article by: Rebecca Rubin for Variety.

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Previously entitled Breakthrough Brits, this year marks the first time the initiative has included future stars from the U.S., with creatives from 'I May Destroy You,' 'Blue Story' and 'The Last of Us Part II' on the list.

The British Academy has announced this year's crop of Breakthrough participants, 34 future stars — in front of and behind the camera — from the film, TV and video game industries, who have been invited to take part in its annual talent scheme.

The rising names, which includes creatives from titles such as I May Destroy You and Blue Story, will now receive one-to-one mentoring and career guidance, full voting membership of BAFTA, access to BAFTA events and networking opportunities, both in the U.K. and internationally.

Previously entitled Breakthrough Brits, which ran from 2013 and helped champion the likes of Letitia Wright, Florence Pugh, Josh O'Connor, Destiny Ekaragha and Malachi Kirby, the initiative expanded into China in 2019, with Netflix joining as official supporting partner to help push it globally. This year marks the first time it's recognizing talent globally across the UK, US, India and China.

The full 2020 list of Breakthrough participants includes

U.K.

Abigail Dankwa, multi camera director (Love Song)

Aleem Khan, director / writer (After Love)

Ali Tocher, game audio designer (Surgeon Simulator 2)

Amir El-Masry, performer (Limbo)

Ben Sharrock, Irune Gurtubai, director/writer & producer (Limbo)

Bethany Swan, hair and makeup up designer (I May Destroy You)

Bim Ajadi, director (Here Not Here)

Bukky Bakray, performer (Rocks)

Catherine Unger, artist/co-writer (Tangle Tower)

Chella Ramanan, narrative designer/Writer (Before I Forget)

Claire Bromley, external game producer (Sackboy: A Big Adventure)

Jordan Hogg, director (Ackley Bridge)

Joy Gharoro-Akpojotor, producer (Blue Story)

Lea Schönfelder, lead game designer (Assemble With Care)

Linn Waite, Kate Byers, producers (Bait)

Rina Yang, cinematographer (Sitting in Limbo)

Rubika Shah, director/writer (White Riot)

Ruka Johnson, costume designer (Blue Story)

Tamara Lawrance, performer (The Long Song)

Tim Renkow, writer/performer (Jerk)

Youssef Kerkour, performer (Home)

 

U.S.

Aadip Desai, writer (The Goldbergs)

Arnaldo Licea, game designer (The Last of Us Part II)

Edson Oda, director/writer (Nine Days)

Ekwa Msangi, director/writer (Farewell Amor)

Fernando Reyes Medina, multiplayer designer (Halo Infinite)

Gene Back, composer (Cowboys)

Jim LeBrecht, co-director (Crip Camp)

Lauren Ridloff, performer (Eternals, The Walking Dead)

Mary Kenney, game writer (Spider-Man: Miles Morales)

Nicole Newnham, co-director (Crip Camp)

Shannon DeVido, performer (Insatiable, Difficult People)

 

Article by: Alex Ritman for the Hollywood Reporter

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Kirsten Johnson won best director, with 'My Octopus Teacher' taking the best cinematography and best science/nature documentary prizes.

The winners of the 2020 Critics Choice Documentary Awards were unveiled Monday morning, with Dick Johnson is Dead taking the top prize of best documentary feature as well as best director for Kirsten Johnson.

 

The other film winning two awards is My Octopus Teacher, which won best cinematography and best science/nature documentary.

 

Mr. SOUL!, which scored five nominations, won best first documentary feature. Crip Camp, from Barack and Michelle Obama's Higher Ground production company, also scored five nominations but didn't win any awards.

 

Dick Johnson is Dead, which premiered at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival, features the younger Johnson filming her aging father in a cross between a premature obituary and humorous love letter to her dad, who goes along with the joke.

 

“We couldn’t be more excited about being able to celebrate such a diverse group of films and filmmakers and subjects this year of all years, on the fifth occasion of the CCDAs, and with 2020 being what it is,” said Christopher Campbell, president of the Critics Choice Association documentary branch. “The world needs this variety of storytelling now more than ever, and all of these documentaries moved us in unique ways. We are proud that we could still support these films and share the best of the best with nonfiction fans. Our only regret is that we couldn’t do so while also honoring the talented artists and their incredible work in person.”

 

Due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, this year's winners weren't able to celebrate with an in-person ceremony, but they recorded acceptance videos, which are available here.

 

The nominees, announced in October, were determined by the Critics Choice Association's documentary nominating committee. Winners were determined by all qualified CCA members. The awards recognize achievements in documentaries released in theaters, on TV and on major digital platforms.

 

A full list of winners follows.

 

BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE

Dick Johnson is Dead (Netflix) (WINNER)

Athlete A (Netflix)

Belushi (Showtime)

Crip Camp (Netflix)

Feels Good Man (Wavelength Productions/PBS Independent Lens)

The Fight (Magnolia/Topic Studios)

The Go-Go’s (Showtime)

Gunda (Neon)

Mr. SOUL! (Shoes in the Bed Productions)

My Octopus Teacher (Netflix)

The Painter and the Thief (Neon)

A Secret Love (Netflix)

The Social Dilemma (Netflix)

Time (Amazon)

 

BEST DIRECTOR

Kirsten Johnson, Dick Johnson is Dead (Netflix) (WINNER)

Garrett Bradley, Time (Amazon)

Bonni Cohen and Jon Shenk, Athlete A (Netflix)

Victor Kossakovsky, Gunda (Neon)

James Lebrecht and Nicole Newnham, Crip Camp (Netflix)

Dawn Porter, John Lewis: Good Trouble (Magnolia/Participant)

Benjamin Ree, The Painter and the Thief (Neon)

 

BEST FIRST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE

Melissa Haizlip, Mr. SOUL! (Shoes in the Bed Productions) (WINNER)

Robert S. Bader, Ali & Cavett: The Tale of the Tapes (HBO)

Chris Bolan, A Secret Love (Netflix)

Arthur Jones, Feels Good Man (Wavelength Productions/PBS Independent Lens)

Elizabeth Leiter and Kim Woodard, Jane Goodall: The Hope (National Geographic)

Elizabeth Lo, Stray (Magnolia)

Sasha Joseph Neulinger, Rewind (Grizzly Creek Films/PBS Independent Lens)

 

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

Roger Horrocks, My Octopus Teacher (Netflix) (WINNER)

Michael Dweck and Gregory Kershaw, The Truffle Hunters (Sony Classics)

Kirsten Johnson, Dick Johnson is Dead (Netflix)

Victor Kossakovsky and Egil Håskjold Larsen, Gunda (Neon)

Scott Ressler, Neil Gelinas and Stefan Wiesen, The Last Ice (National Geographic)

Gianfranco Rosi, Notturno (Stemal Entertainment)

Ruben Woodin Dechamps, The Reason I Jump (Kino Lorber)

 

BEST EDITING

Lindy Jankura and Alex Keipper, Totally Under Control (Neon) (WINNER)

Don Bernier, Athlete A (Netflix)

Eli Despres, Greg Finton and Kim Roberts, The Fight (Magnolia/Topic Studios)

Helen Kearns, Assassins (Greenwich)

Victor Kossakovsky and Ainara Vera, Gunda (Neon)

Eileen Meyer and Andrew Gersh, Crip Camp (Netflix)

Charlotte Munch Bengtsen, The Truffle Hunters (Sony Classics)

 

BEST SCORE

Marco Beltrami, Brandon Roberts and Buck Sanders, The Way I See It (Focus) (WINNER)

Ari Balouzian and Ryan Hope, Feels Good Man (Wavelength Productions/PBS Independent Lens)

Tyler Durham, Sven Faulconer and Xander Rodzinski, The Last Ice (National Geographic)

Peter Nashel and Brian Deming, Totally Under Control (Neon)

Daniel Pemberton, Rising Phoenix (Netflix)

Jeff Tweedy, Long Gone Summer (ESPN)

Jeff Tweedy, Spencer Tweedy and Sammy Tweedy, Showbiz Kids (HBO)

 

BEST NARRATION

David Attenborough: A Life on Our Planet (Netflix), David Attenborough, narrator/writer (WINNER)

Dick Johnson is Dead (Netflix), Kirsten Johnson, narrator/writer

Fireball: Visitors From Darker Worlds (Apple), Werner Herzog, narrator/writer

Mr. SOUL! (Shoes in the Bed Productions), Blair Underwood, narrator, Ellis Haizlip, writer

My Octopus Teacher (Netflix), Craig Foster, narrator/writer

Time (Amazon), Fox Rich, narrator/writer

Totally Under Control (Neon), Alex Gibney, narrator/writer

 

BEST ARCHIVAL DOCUMENTARY

MLK/FBI (Field of Vision/IFC Films) (WINNER)

Ali & Cavett: The Tale of the Tapes (HBO)

Belushi (Showtime)

Class Action Park (HBO)

Crip Camp (Netflix)

Mr. SOUL! (Shoes in the Bed Productions)

Spaceship Earth (Neon)

 

BEST HISTORICAL/BIOGRAPHICAL DOCUMENTARY

John Lewis: Good Trouble (Magnolia/Participant) (WINNER)

Belushi (Showtime)

Crip Camp (Netflix)

Howard (Disney+)

Mr. SOUL! (Shoes in the Bed Production)

Mucho Mucho Amor: The Legend of Walter Mercado (Netflix)

Natalie Wood: What Remains Behind (HBO)

 

BEST MUSIC DOCUMENTARY

Beastie Boys Story (Apple) (WINNER - TIE)

The Go-Go's (Showtime) (WINNER - TIE)

Crock of Gold: A Few Rounds with Shane MacGowan (Magnolia)

Laurel Canyon (Epix)

Once Were Brothers: Robbie Robertson and The Band (Magnolia)

Other Music (Factory 25)

Zappa (Magnolia)

 

BEST POLITICAL DOCUMENTARY

Boys State (Apple) (WINNER)

All In: The Fight for Democracy (Amazon)

John Lewis: Good Trouble (Magnolia/Participant)

MLK/FBI (Field of Vision/IFC Films)

The Social Dilemma (Netflix)

Totally Under Control (Neon)

The Way I See It (Focus)

 

BEST SCIENCE/NATURE DOCUMENTARY

My Octopus Teacher (Netflix) (WINNER)

Coded Bias (7th Empire Media/PBS Independent Lens)

Fantastic Fungi (Moving Art)

Gunda (Neon)

I Am Greta (Hulu)

The Last Ice (National Geographic)

Spaceship Earth (Neon)

 

BEST SPORTS DOCUMENTARY

Ali & Cavett: The Tale of the Tapes (HBO) (WINNER - TIE)

Athlete A (Netflix) (WINNER - TIE)

Be Water (ESPN)

A Most Beautiful Thing (50 Eggs Films)

Red Penguins (Universal)

Rising Phoenix (Netflix)

You Cannot Kill David Arquette (Super LTD)

 

BEST SHORT DOCUMENTARY

St. Louis Superman (MTV Documentary Films) (WINNER)

Blackfeet Boxing: Not Invisible (ESPN)

The Claudia Kishi Club (Netflix)

Crescendo! (Quibi)

Elevator Pitch (Field of Vision)

Hunger Ward (Spin Film/Vulcan Productions/RYOT Films)

Into the Fire (National Geographic)

My Father the Mover (MTV)

The Rifleman (Field of Vision)

The Speed Cubers (Netflix)

 

MOST COMPELLING LIVING SUBJECTS OF A DOCUMENTARY (HONOR)

Dr. Rick Bright - Totally Under Control (Neon)

Steven Garza - Boys State (Apple)

The Go-Go's - The Go-Go's (Showtime)

Judith Heumann - Crip Camp (Netflix)

Dick Johnson - Dick Johnson is Dead (Netflix)

Maggie Nichols, Rachael Denhollander, Jamie Dantzscher - Athlete A (Netflix)

Fox Rich - Time (Amazon)

Pete Souza - The Way I See It (Focus)

Taylor Swift - Miss Americana (Netflix)

Greta Thunberg - I Am Greta (Hulu)

 

Article by: Hilary Lewis and Kimberly Nordyke for the Hollywood Reporter.

 

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'Breach of Trust,' a short film that screened at AFI Fest this year, explored allegations of an institutional cover-up over sexual misconduct claims made against former school gynecologist George Tyndall.

“This film is about an institution’s negligence,” says Sufian Abulohom, a graduate student in his final semester at the University of Southern California’s (USC) School of Cinematic Arts (SCA). In 2019, Abulohom produced a 24-minute short film at USC, Breach of Trust, for the graduate documentary thesis class. Rooted by the voices of survivors, the film centers on sexual misconduct allegations against former full-time school gynecologist George Tyndall and claims of a USC cover-up.

“It was an act of solidarity,” the film’s director, Mishal Mahmud says. “If USC was not going to validate what these women experienced and their role in it, it is very important to us, as students, to do that.”

On May 16, 2018, the Los Angeles Times published an investigation of sexual misconduct complaints, which dated back to the 1990s and were brought to light by a number of whistleblowers, including university nurse Cindy Gilbert, against Tyndall. The story alleges that the university was aware of the complaints and had been covering up Tyndall’s crimes for decades. The story sent shockwaves through the school, causing the faculty to put together a petition which led to the removal of then president Max Nikias.

In Feb. 2019, the school settled a $215 million class action lawsuit with the alleged victims, which offered the nearly 17,000 former patients of Tyndall's compensation of $2,500 and up. Greater compensation was offered to patients willing to provide further details about their experiences.

"We are pleased with the court's decision to order final approval of the federal class-action settlement," USC said in a Jan 2020 statement when the settlement was approved by a judge. "This settlement provides respectful and confidential relief to Tyndall patients at the student health center and formalizes a broad array of campus reforms."

Tyndall was arrested and charged with 29 felonies in June 2019, with five additional accounts added in July 2020. Tyndall pled not guilty on July 24, 2020 and is awaiting a preliminary hearing.

Breach of Trust has received overwhelming support from USC faculty and students. Despite a lack of participation from the school’s administration, the filmmakers were inspired and motivated by the opportunity to expose injustice in their community.

“I was a student at USC when the press conferences were happening on campus,” Mahmud, who graduated in May 2020, says of her original concept for the film. “I started meeting a lot of the women who were very interested in holding the university accountable and a lot of them were very open to talking to me, but not a lot of people were going to the press conferences. I was very surprised by that because the story is so outrageous, and the way USC had handled these issues was so outrageous.”

After a few of these conversations, Mahmud brought the idea to “pitch day,” where several student ideas are selected by faculty for production, mostly funded by SCA and made with school resources. “When Mishal pitched, she did an amazing job,” says Abulohom, “but I was one of the people who was like 'there is no way USC is going to let this happen, they would not pick this project.'”

To both of their surprise, the faculty decided to take the project on with enthusiastic support. “There were so many incredible professors who were so supportive,” Mahmud says. “While I was just beginning to have the idea of turning this into a film my professor was just endlessly supportive, and I felt always very shielded by that.”

“There was a lot of pressure around this specific film,” Abulohom adds. “Everybody was so invested in this one … You feel it in the room every time we screen, even the students, this is also their school, so there was that sense of pressure and it pushed us more.”

Thanks to faculty support, Mahmud and Abulohom both say retaliation from the university was not high on their list of concerns, though it’s never completely out of sight. “If you're from the outside looking in, the person who spoke out no longer works at USC, and it's not because they don't want to,” Abulohom explains. “That sends a very dangerous message about retaliation, so there is always that conversation about retaliation. Cindy Gilbert is a prime example of that.”

“If you look at the list of people, the faculty that did the town hall and started the petition to ask the president to step down were all tenured professors,” he continues. “There were so many professors who also wanted to push for change, but because they're not tenured they feared retaliation. So, I do think this is a huge problem within USC, within SCA, within our community, this idea of retaliation, and we feel that at all levels.”

Despite any potential obstacles, the filmmakers received a number of advantages by working within USC. “This film was truly made within the USC community,” Mahmud says. “Everyone who was featured in the doc were USC faculty, former USC students, even the journalist we interviewed, Matt Hamilton [who wrote the Los Angeles Times article], he was a USC alum … One thing that we pride ourselves on is that the subjects knew us really well, knew that we were all USC students and we all shared the same goal.”

The benefit of shared community came in handy especially when working with Gilbert, who had never done an on-camera interview since the scandal first broke. “She did one interview with the LA Times and refused to do any other interviews,” explains Abulohom. “So Mishal had coffee with her and then we all went to get lunch, then we did an audio interview and then a second audio interview, and then finally we did an on-camera interview. There is something to be said about building that trust.”

That trust, however, did not extend to USC’s administration, which did not end up making officials available for interviews for the film. “We wanted Wanda Austin, who was the interim president, to do an interview,” Abulohom says of Austin, who took over when Nikias stepped down in Aug. 2018. “They said they were interested; me and Mishal met one of her staff at Coffee Bean. He wanted to push us in a specific direction, gave us a list of survivors that settled with USC early … and then he asked us to send interview questions in advance. Mishal did that, which is something we never did with anyone in the film.”

The day of the interview Abulohom received a call from Austin’s staff with concerns about questions around Gilbert. Abulohom says the administration asked to make changes to the interview questions and the filmmakers did not want to agree to changes, so the interview never took place. (The USC administration, under current president Carol Folt, declined to comment on the film as it was completed while Austin was in office.)

“The team was in agreement that it would be irresponsible of us to collude with USC further in controlling their image,” Mahmud says.

The film debuted at Hollyshorts in Aug. 2019 and ended its festival run in Sept. 2020 at the American Film Institute festival with a virtual screening and Q&A. Breach of Trust was also shortlisted for the BAFTA student awards.

“Professors to this day are sending the doc to the board of trustees, to anyone they have a contact with,” Mahmud adds. “But in terms of what they think, we are completely in the dark, we don't even know if any of them have seen it or responded to it.”

“There is a kind of separation between the USC community and the upper administration,” she continues. “The community is so wonderful; they are the people who helped take the administration to task and held USC accountable. There is such a gap and, if anything, this film illustrates that.”

The filmmakers have seen the effects of a community driven film, the way it brings people together and continues to provide a platform for underserved voices, and they encourage others to do the same. When asked about her advice to filmmakers looking to expose a concern in their community, Mahmud says “just to do it, I don't think it's something anyone would ever regret,” with Abulohom adding: “if you don't hold your community accountable, no one will.”

 

Article by: Emily Hilton for the Hollywood Reporter.

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The Blumhouse and Universal pic came in on the lower end of expectations after movie theaters closed down again in select markets, while health authorities in states across the country urged consumers to stay home.

Blumhouse and Universal's Freaky — a twisted take on the classic body-swap pic Freaky Friday — topped the struggling North American box office with a $3.7 million weekend debut.

The movie came in on the lower end of expectations amid a surge in COVID-19 cases across the country, resulting in theater reclosures last week in major markets including San Diego and Sacramento, and warnings from health authorities in numerous states urging consumers to stay home.

Cinemas are also shutting down again in Oregon, where a two-week lockdown for certain public-facing businesses was announced on Saturday. That was followed Sunday by revised restrictions in Washington state and Michigan that will require theaters to close their doors for the next several weeks. Sources tell The Hollywood  Reporter that parts of New York's Westchester County, as well as Canada's Ontario province — including the greater Toronto area —  are likewise impacted. Temporary reclosures in other jurisdictions are expected in the days ahead.

Overall, 47.7 percent of theaters in the U.S. are up and running, compared to more than 50 percent last month.

Freaky is the 14th Blumhouse film to place No. 1 in its opening. Directed by Happy Death Day’s Christopher Landon, the R-rate film stars an innocent teenage girl (Kathryn Newton) who finds she has switched bodies with a  serial killer (Vince Vaughn).

"I think a combination of factors continues to make this a very challenging marketplace for theatrical releases and, as I’ve been saying all along, the fact that new movies have at least been drawing audiences (albeit in understandably small numbers) to theaters shows that there is still a desire for many consumers to get outside of the house for some sort of 'normal' activity," says Comscore's Paul Dergarabedian in discussing Freaky's debut.

Overseas, where cinemas have reclosed in a number of major European markets, Freaky grossed $1.9 million from 20 markets for a global start of $5.6 million.

Most major Hollywood studios are sitting out the fall season out because of the pandemic. The Universal stable, including Focus Features, is a major exception, in part because of a new early PVOD deal it has struck with AMC Theatres (Freaky hits PVOD on Dec. 3).

Over the weekend, Universal and Focus claimed three of the top five spots on the box office chart. Focus' Let Him Go placed No. 2 in its second weekend with $1.8 million for a domestic total of $6.9 million, while fellow Focus title Come Play came in No. 4 in its third weekend with $1.1 million for a total of $7.3 million.

Indie distributor 101 Studios' The War With Grandpa continued to laugh loudly in its sixth weekend, earning $1.3 million for a domestic total of $15.2 million. It placed third.

Open Road's The Honest Thief rounded out the top five with $800,000 for a domestic total of $12.4 million.

 

Article by:Pamela McClintock for the Hollywood Reporter.

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After a home entertainment run, the thriller will head to streaming on a yet-to-be-announced service.

Songbird— the COVID-19 inspired thriller produced by Michael Bay— will premiere in the U.S. as a PVOD release.

The STX feature will skip theaters and debut on Dec. 11 on all PVOD platforms for a home entertainment run, after which it will head to streaming on a yet-to-be-announced service.

The movie, notably the first to shoot in Los Angeles during the pandemic, takes place two years in the future, in which COVID-23 now wreaks havoc on the world by attacking the brain. Infected Americans are forced into quarantine camps called Q-Zones, while some fight back against these brutal restrictions. Amid this backdrop is the budding love story between a motorbike courier named Nico (K.J. Apa) who has rare immunity, and Sara (Sofia Carson), a young artist who is believed to be infected.

Craig Robinson, Bradley Whitford, Peter Stormare, Alexandra Daddario, Paul Walter Hauser and Demi Moore also star in the movie from director Adam Mason.

Said STXfilms' Adam Fogelson, “The pandemic has affected every aspect of our business, from production to release, but Songbird demonstrates that a nimble studio like STX can find effective and profitable ways to make their movies work, as we have similarly with Greenland and My Spy during these challenging times. The show must go on.”

 

Article by: Mia Galuppo for the Hollywood Reporter.

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For our film critic, watching actresses become action stars made her think differently about bodies and the meaning of representation.

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Like many women, I have spent a lot of time thinking about how to move through the world. How to walk with confidence but not too much swing. How to stand with my shoulders back without sticking out my chest. How to smile, like a nice girl. How to cross my legs, like a lady. How to speak up, within reason. How to take up space but not too much. Yet I love watching women who take up space, who swagger and sometimes wildly crash.

When I caught up with “Harley Quinn: Birds of Prey” in February, I grooved on an entire world populated by women taking up space with grins and seriously bad attitude. The movie had opened a few weeks earlier but had done soft business, and I saw it at a second-run theater. I didn’t expect much, yet I enjoyed its silliness and unremitting action. I dug how Margot Robbie’s Harley Quinn — a Mad Hatter of a heroine — pinwheeled across the screen, slicing and dicing and tossing confetti while having dirty good fun. I’d seen women in action,

A few years ago, I realized that I was spending a lot of time on YouTube watching stunt videos, the kind that movie companies produce to give fans behind-the-scenes peeks at how the action was created. Usually, I watch these videos because I’m reviewing the movie and want to see how certain scenes were executed — to see the training, sweat and cinematic sleights of hand in these high-flying tricks and blows. I’ve watched Emily Blunt soar and crash land to play a soldier in “Edge of Tomorrow”; performers transform into Amazons to populate “Wonder Woman”; Melissa McCarthy hang tough in “Spy”; and Charlize Theron kick butt, again and again, in “Atomic Blonde.”

I watch these videos because I greatly enjoy stunts, an appreciation that was kindled by Buster Keaton and nurtured by the wizardry of Jackie Chan. But I really enjoy watching women in action. I’d been a fan of the 1970s TV series “Wonder Woman” and later “Buffy the Vampire Slayer”; in film, I looked to Hong Kong (the great Michelle Yeoh), French nonsense (“La Femme Nikita”) and American exploitation flicks (the indelible Pam Grier), where the punches were in service to braless jiggling. Only recently did I grasp that the behind-the-scenes videos I was looking at were showing women kicking and punching their way to different kinds of female representation.

There’s nothing redeeming or relatable about “Birds of Prey,” which is in its favor. The movie is brand-extending entertainment from DC Films and Warner Bros., and its vision of female empowerment is reductive. You go, girl — kablooey! Even so, its feminism lite is agreeably anarchic. It’s a liberation cartoon about a nutty, dangerous sisterhood that, instructively, had women playing crucial roles behind the camera, among them the director Cathy Yan and the writer Christina Hodson. Robbie was among the producers: She pitched “Birds of Prey” to the studio and helped shepherd it to completion. Robbie also did much of her own action, with help from the stunt performer Renae Moneymaker (back flips) and the roller derby skaters Jocelyn Kay and Michelle Steilen.

I liked the women’s prickly camaraderie, but I really liked how relentlessly physical they were. It is very satisfying, I discovered, to see its petite co-star Rosie Perez land punches, partly because of “Do the Right Thing.” In that film, she wears a flirty boxer outfit but also appears in a sex scene that made her feel so bad she wept while it was being shot. It was similarly gratifying to watch Robbie use her legs — which she’d been directed to open in “The Wolf of Wall Street” for a man’s ogling — to turn herself into a circular saw. Harley’s grinning red mouth and playful lawlessness, her cartwheels of chaos, felt like a sly, unambiguously furious rejoinder to antediluvian ideas about women and the display of their bodies. How you like me now? Boom, splat, ha-ha.

I love watching other women — actors and stunt performers, dancers and gymnasts, trick riders and trapeze artists — move on and off the screen. A woman with a great walk always gets my attention. At least some of my enjoyment probably has to do with my own lack of coordination; I’ve never been sporty and am not at all graceful. There is also just the delight and awe we derive from looking at the human body in glorious motion, whether it’s the gymnast Katelyn Ohashi executing a series of flips or Harley Quinn clobbering a villain with a baseball bat. My brain lit up like the Fourth of July while watching Harley and her sisters.

In the films I saw growing up in the 1970s, including those from the classical era, women didn’t register as especially physical unless they were swimming, riding a horse or dancing, like Eleanor Powell and Ginger Rogers, whose athleticism was bound up with the feminine ideals of their era. Women in movies — the stars, at any rate, the desirable and desiring ones — were elegant, small, tidy and contained, even at their curviest. And then there was Shelley Winters, whose heroic swim in the 1972 disaster flick “The Poseidon Adventure” destroyed me. Her matronly Belle, a former competitive swimmer, takes the plunge to save the leading man. She succeeds but dies.

Winters put on 40 pounds for “The Poseidon Adventure.” She was 51 and did the stunt herself. Her character wasn’t an exemplary feminist figure, but given the often dire cinematic landscape for women of the time, she looked pretty good. There are many reasons that we fall for performers: their talent and beauty, the way they inhabit a role so thoroughly that it seems like magic or possession. They way they move matters, too — how they enter a room and navigate it, taking up space with simply their demeanor; how they draw the eye with a smile, a sneer, a shrug. There’s a potent feminist critique that women have long been made to be looked at for male pleasure in movies and elsewhere. But women also look, and the female gaze always complicates that dynamic. Winters’s big, powerful, fish-pale thighs complicated it for me.

The story of women in cinematic action mirrors the story of women in the movie industry. It grows convoluted as it winds through the male-dominated 20th century, even when men put women front and center, whether that man was the martial arts maestro King Hu, the exploitation maverick Roger Corman or Hollywood auteurs like Ridley Scott and James Cameron, who both have a thing for strong women. And the story begins at the dawn of cinema, when women helped invent the art, continuing into the teens with serial queens like Helen Holmes, the first star of “The Hazards of Helen” (1914-17), about a railroad telegraph operator with a fantastically exciting life.

Holmes wrote, directed and produced some episodes of the serial, and seems to have done some of her own stunts; her replacement, the even more daring Helen Gibson, has been called the first stunt woman. In the United States, most serials centered on a plucky heroine who lands in hot water and sometimes need to be rescued, but who also saves herself. With thrills and spills, these films offered female viewers bold new visions of themselves. They were, in other words, films for the new woman, a figure who beginning in the late 19th century would upend gender norms partly by venturing into a rapidly changing world of work, shopping, entertainment and derring-do.

Women flew planes, went over Niagara Falls in a barrel and rode broncos in Wild West shows — offscreen spectacles that drove and complemented adventures like Episode 13 of “The Hazards of Helen,” in which two men rob a wad of cash from our heroine’s office. She’s fired, but gets her job back after she finds the thieves, tussles with one atop a moving train and then falls into a river with him, all while in a long skirt. By 1920, the year that the 19th Amendment was ratified, the era of both the free-ranging female adventurer and pioneering female filmmaker was largely over. In the decades that followed, Hollywood kept women tamped down, sidelined and domesticated, even as they continued to take up more and more space in the rest of the world.

Female characters still could be unruly onscreen, deliriously so, a wildness that was often expressed through lacerating dialogue, a loaded gun and expedient death. They also continued to ride horses, fly through the air, fall down staircases and scuffle in cat fights, although often these feats were performed by female and sometimes disguised male stunt doubles. In “The Wizard of Oz,” the stunt woman Betty Danko was suspended by wires many feet off the ground to double for Margaret Hamilton’s Wicked Witch. The stunt went south and Danko landed in the hospital; Hamilton had been injured earlier, having suffered serious burns when the witch was leaving a fiery impression on Munchkinland.

A few Hollywood stars like Barbara Stanwyck and Maureen O’Hara liked doing their own stunts. For O’Hara, that was critical to reshaping and controlling her screen image. In the late 1940s, under a studio contract and tired of being treated as part of the scenery, she decided to muscle her way into the foreground. “I resolved to be such a dominant presence on the screen that I couldn’t be ignored,” she wrote in her memoir. Reader, she became a swashbuckler. O’Hara had ridden horses, fenced and knocked about when she was a child, and she was determined to combine her internal and physical strengths in order to “hold my own onscreen against the men.”

The history of women in movies often involves them trying to hold their own against men. Six years ago, while writing a series of articles about the barriers they face in the industry, I interviewed Gina Prince-Bythewood, who showed up in a Wonder Woman T-shirt. Prince-Bythewood hasn’t always had the film career she has deserved, but this year, she released the action movie “The Old Guard,” which stars Theron as an immortal fighter who swings a mighty ax. As tired as I am of the superhero death grip on movies, I can’t get enough of Theron, Robbie, Perez and other warriors who, with the likes of Prince-Bythewood, are smashing expectations and worlds to smithereens.

What is being demolished are stereotypes about women, a revolution that also includes performers as diverse as McCarthy, Octavia Spencer, Amy Schumer and Mindy Kaling. The first time I watched “Trainwreck,” Schumer’s breakout movie, I couldn’t stop looking at her legs. They were beautiful and muscular, nothing like the fragile-looking stems I was accustomed to seeing fetishized in movies. As you may have guessed, I have a thing about legs, partly because I spent a lifetime being self-conscious about my own. Schumer’s felt radical, liberating. This isn’t only about size, it is also about the emancipation of women’s bodies, their power, roles and moves.

The woman of action is an emblem of this change. The “Alien” and “Terminator” franchises were crucial to the re-emergence of this figure, though few other films were as bold. As gratifying as it could be to see women blast through the ensuing decades, too many movies anxiously reinforced sexist norms (they’re powerful, but hot!) and insisted on useless male love interests. Things have improved because of feminist agitation. Wonder Woman now has a film franchise; Black Widow has her own movie coming out. And then there’s Danai Gurira, who hurls her wig at a guy in “Black Panther” before taking him down. It’s a blissful emancipatory moment and serves as a rejoinder to the practice of “wigging,” when a stuntman doubles for a woman.

One reason Theron has become the reigning woman of cinematic action is that she often seems alone, sovereign, whether her character has a romantic foil or not. She’s given a fittingly disposable one in “Atomic Blonde.” It’s an absurd movie in most respects but she’s an astonishment as a spy, including in the action scenes. She slams and pummels, kicks and grunts. The grunts heighten the realism but they also signal Theron’s intense physicality and her extreme effort. Women in old Hollywood worked punishingly hard, too, and were pushed to their physical limits — Ginger Rogers rehearsed one dance so many times that her shoes filled with blood — but you scarcely ever saw those stars sweat. Women glow, as an old saying goes. Horses sweat.

There’s not much to “Atomic Blonde” except Theron in dynamic action and her character taking down armies of men, battles that have apt metaphoric resonance. (A woman’s work is never done!) The fights are ingeniously choreographed and intensely visceral, with a palpable quality that makes each thud resound. Stunt performers liken fights to dances, and these are to the death. They make the most of Theron’s strengths and her ballet-trained legs, finding a new beauty. A woman’s center of gravity tends to be lower than a man’s, so women in action often kick more than they punch. But Theron uses her fists a lot, too, thwacking foes so hard you stop seeing man, woman, gender — so hard it feels like she is jackhammering a message: How you like me now?

“Atomic Blonde” plays with ideas of masculinity and femininity, partly by blurring them. One of the most brutal fights is set in a kitchen, where Theron’s spy knocks out one guy out by flinging a pot at him and rapidly takes down another by slamming a freezer door in his face. Watching the scene the first time, I flashed on an old family friend who had hit her husband in the head with a cast-iron skillet. He survived; they split up. The incident had shocked me. I was fairly well-behaved, and life had trained me to respect and fear male power, to avoid walking alone at night, avoid giving anyone lip. Talking back could get me in trouble. But I was a mouthy kid and, reader, I became a critic. A critic who loves women who talk back, who fight back, who walk alone — women who own their power and ferociously, unapologetically, own the screen

 

Article by Manohla Dargis for the New York Times.

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On-location film permits for the Los Angeles area grew by 24% in October over September as productions staged a moderate recovery amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the FilmLA agency reported Tuesday.

The industry, which was mostly shuttered from March to June, has filed for 2,565 film permit applications for 1,967 unique projects over the last 20 weeks, according to the report. Monthly application intake increased in October to 880 permits, a gain of 169 from September. FilmLA’s daily intake now averages around 40 new applications per business day.

FilmLA said current activity levels have stabilized at just under 47% percent of what analysts would expect under normal filming conditions. The advertising industry (still photography and commercials) accounts for a 44% share of local permit requests, followed by television content at 25% with feature film production at only 4%.

“The expected October pick-up in scripted television production did occur; local reality TV production (6% of requests) was eclipsed by TV drama production (10% of requests) for the first time since June,” the agency noted.

FilmLA President Paul Audley noted a month ago that the September agreement between unions and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers on industry-wide safety protocols had led to feature film and television productions slowly ramping up production plans. Prior to that, producers were crafting agreements with unions on a project-by-project basis.

“As Los Angeles welcomes more episodic series and feature films back to production, we are grateful to local producers, crew and vendors for their adherence to safe filming practices,” Audley said Tuesday. “To push past our current production plateau with full community support, we need to continue to focus on keeping our workplaces safe.”

Broadcast and cable dramas and sitcoms shooting in the month of October include “NCIS LA” (CBS), “The Rookie” (ABC), “Mayans MC” (FX), “Animal Kingdom” (TNT), and “Shameless” (Showtime). Streaming series include “Dear White People” (Netflix), “Big Shot” (Disney Plus), “Made for Love” (HBO Max) and “Rutherford Falls “(Peacock). Reality TV and game shows that filmed in October include “American Idol” (ABC), “Dancing With the Stars” (ABC), “Shahs of Sunset” (Bravo), “Selena + Chef” (HBO Max), “House Hunters” (HGTV) and “Lucky Dog” (CBS).

Feature films that shot locally include “Soggy Bottom,” a Paul Thomas Anderson movie with Bradley Cooper set in the 1970s San Fernando Valley; Warner Bros.’ “King Richard” with Will Smith starring as the father of Venus and Serena Williams; and Channing Tatum’s “Dog.”

Commercials that filmed in Los Angeles last month included spots for Instagram, Uber, Subaru, Citibank, Starbucks, Kohl’s, JC Penney and Walmart. Also included were PSA commercials for the campaigns Vote Safe California and Get Out the Vote 2020.

 

Article by: Dave McNary for Variety.

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Sean Baker is close to wrapping “Red Rocket,” a secret film he has been shooting in Texas.

 

The dark comedy will star Simon Rex of the “Scary Movie” franchise and “Jack & Jill.” Plot details are being kept under wraps, but production should be finished this month. The film was independently financed and will be looking for distribution.

 

Baker isn’t the only director to take up his camera in secret. Steven Soderbergh applied a similar under-the-radar approach while making his upcoming movie “Let Them All Talk,” which will star Meryl Streep and Gemma Chan.

 

Work on “Red Rocket” commenced as Hollywood and the independent film community that Baker belongs to are trying to find a way to make movies safely during coronavirus. The film has employed industry standard safety protocols.

 

“Red Rocket” marks Baker’s first feature since 2017’s “The Florida Project,” which earned rhapsodic reviews, as well as an Oscar nomination for Willem Dafoe. Baker’s credits also include “Tangerine,” the 2015 comedy-drama about a transgender sex worker that took Sundance by storm in part because it was shot on an iPhone. He also directed “Prince of Broadway,” “Starlet” and “Take Out.”

 

Baker co-wrote the screenplay for “Red Rocket” with Chris Bergoch, who previously helped pen the scripts for “The Florida Project,” “Tangerine” and “Starlet.” Drew Daniels, who earned plaudits for his work on last year’s “Waves,” is serving as the film’s cinematographer.

 

Producers include Alex Coco, Samantha Quan, Alex Saks, Shih-Ching Tsou and Baker. Many of those producers have previously worked with Baker.

 

Article by Brent Lang for Variety.

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Several titles at the virtual market — from faith-based dramas and thrillers to rom-coms — don't just feature the pandemic as a central element of the storyline, but were shot and completed during the crisis.

There’s no shortage of big name filmmakers who are turning their dramatic lenses onto the COVID-19 crisis. The Michael Bay-produced Songbird — a sci-fi thriller set in 2024 in a world ravaged by a mutated version of the virus — finished shooting several months ago (the recently released trailer was met with mixed reactions), while Doug Liman has lined up an all-star cast of Anne Hathaway, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Ben Stiller, Mindy Kaling and Ben Kingsley for his pandemic-set heist rom-com Lockdown, penned by Peaky Blinders creator Steven Knight, to name just two.

But over at the American Film Market (now virtual, of course, due to COVID), there’s arguably a much broader array of films up for grabs that have given the ongoing real-world chaos their own fictitious spin. Thanks to micro-budgets and equally micro shooting schedules, several of these nimble projects — often with just a handful of crew — were able to get a significant jump-start on the more cumbersome Hollywood heavyweights, with some already complete, plying their trade online and looking for international buyers.

One of the first out of the gate was Applied Art Production’s faith-based drama Anti-Coronavirus — based around a man who inadvertently become patient zero when he brings the virus to the U.S from Italy — which managed to shoot and wrap while the pandemic was still very much in its infancy in March.

Director Mitesh Patel says production was complete in just seven days, shooting in Arizona and narrowly avoiding any disruptions.

“There was about 20 cases when we started, and by the time we were done it was up to about 1,000,” he says. “The day after we finished production the governor announced a lockdown, so it was the perfect time for us to make the movie.”

Undeterred by the new ruling to stay at home, Patel then focussed his energies onto another COVID-themed movie, House of Quarantine. A thriller about a group of filmmakers locked together in a house who eventually start killing each other, the production skirted the COVID restrictions by literally shooting inside one solitary location, this time over eight days. Patel even took advantage of the reality outside, using actual TV footage of the growing chaos within his film.

Another of the AFM’s super low budget virus titles shot amid the crisis is the recently-completed #MyCorona, from San Francisco-based director Phil Gorn and his Wonderphil Entertainment.

Forced to cancel another project due to stay-at-home orders, Gorn and his producer Kirk Zeller pivoted. “I was like, what can we shoot? But I didn’t want to do a drama, I wanted to do something different for the coronavirus and kind of own it.”

So they quickly put together an unlikely virus-themed romantic comedy, about two disconnected neighbours in an LA apartment block brought closer together by the sudden traffic-less quiet.

However, the building they wanted to use was in small town Nebraska, so Gorn — unable to travel — oversaw the entire six-day shoot remotely, directing two cameramen from his office in San Francisco while viewing the feed on his monitors. If he needed to speak to his actors after a scene, he’d just phone them up. As for social-distancing issues that might arise with a rom-com, Gorn says there’s just “one embrace” at the end. “And even then, I was like, oh no, actual contact!”

As it happens, #MyCorona isn’t the only pandemic-era rom-com in the AFM’s virtual aisles. Jimmy Kelly’s still-in-development Love Rolls with his own Fight On Entertainment banner takes one of the most comical early elements of the crisis — a shortage of toilet paper — and twists it into a comedic road movie about a romantic germaphobe who treks from Long Island to Brooklyn to provide his crush with some much-needed bathroom supplies.

While for the most part Kelly says Love Rolls is a small production and can be shot very simply, mostly on a microbudget and without any worry about restrictions, he’s hoping to attract a co-producer at the AFM to help with some of the film’s bigger sequences.

“I really think you would only need a week, but you would need to put in all the coronavirus protocols,” he says. “And with the protocols, you're increasing your budget anywhere between 10 percent to 50 percent.”

Also in development — and due to start shooting soon —is Into the Further from filmmaker Shawnda Christiansen and her Mega-Reel Entertainment production company. A documentary-style horror — inspired by an actual documentary, Six Feet of Separation, that Christiansen directed about the pandemic — the film follows a group of paranormal enthusiasts and a post-COVID world where people have been shuttered away for years.

“Most of the film will be shot in one location, like what you’d see in an episode of Ghost Hunters,” says Christiansen. “It has a really interesting spin that plays off the current social distancing situation.”

Although the budgets of AFM’s COVID-themed titles should reduce much of the financial risk, there’s still the issue of demand. Will audiences — and buyers — be hungry for movies set amid a crisis that much of the world would rather forget?

Patel says that both Anti-Coronavirus and House of Quarantine have already been picked up by a distributor in Japan, and he’s been distributing himself in the U.S. on platforms such as Vudu and iTunes. “But AFM is our big hope,” he says.

“Of course, we’re taking a risk, because it's a subject that some people like to watch, and some people don't," he says. "There's so much in the news and everywhere about the virus and maybe people don't want to watch it, it's completely normal.”

For Love Rolls and Into the Further, which aren’t yet made, there’s the added risk of seeming dated by the time they are ready. But the filmmakers are confident they’ll still find an audience.

“Once we have defeated the Coronavirus, and everything's back to normal, people can sit down and watch a movie with a theme about what we all went through. And compare notes,” says Christiansen. “I think that any movie that examines what we're all going through is going to be timeless because of that.”

Kelly agrees, and think moviegoers might want to reflect on the more insane elements on the crisis.

“Let’s just say, for argument’s sake, two or three years from now, the movie is out,” he says. “It would still work, because it would have this sense of nostalgia, like ‘oh my god, remember when we had to go through all this craziness for toilet paper? Man, it feels like a lifetime ago.”

 

Article by: Alex Ritman for the Hollywood Reporter.

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Until now, theater owners and Hollywood studios weren't even sure whether the 2021 calendar would hold.

The decimated box office received a jolt of good news on Monday.

Pfizer Inc. announced that its COVID-19 vaccine may be 90 percent effective, prompting top health authorities to speculate that life could begin to resemble normal by March or April. This provides theater owners and Hollywood studios clarity for the first time as to when moviegoing might resume in earnest.

"Pfizer said it is a game changer in terms of public health issues. And I think the vaccine is a game changer in terms of the movie industry. No one had a time frame before. The announcement puts bookends on in," Imax CEO Richard Gelfond told The Hollywood Reporter.

Exhibition and studios echoed Gelfond's sentiments, while stocks of Imax and other leading exhibition chains soared on Monday upon word of the vaccine, and following Saturday's announcement that President-elect Joe Biden has won the 2020 presidential race ahead of incumbent Donald Trump.

Until now, Hollywood studios weren't even sure if the 2021 release calendar was stable in terms of their big-budget tentpoles, and particularly the first part of the year. "The studios have really been struggling. Movies keep moving and people were getting frustrated," another top exec said.

"Exhibition has been so beaten down," adds Wall Street analyst Eric Handler. "Now, there is at least hope that we can get back to normal next year. There are a lot of people who won't go back to theaters until there is a vaccine."

He's right. Nearly 30 percent of U.S. consumers surveyed by leading Hollywood marketing and research film NRG say they don't plan on going back to the movies until there is a vaccine.

While it's true that nearly 50 percent of theaters across the United States have reopened, they are operating at anywhere from 25 percent to 50 percent capacity. In terms of content, they are relying on a diet of smaller Hollywood films and catalogue titles after studios delayed their fall and winter 2020 tentpoles.

On Monday, the National Association of Theatre Owners called on the lame-duck Congress to provide millions of dollars in relief to cinemas in the next several months, saying that 96 percent of theaters have seen losses this year of 70 percent of more.

 

Article by: Pamela McClintock for the Hollywood Reporter.

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For months, someone has been cold-calling actresses in the U.S. pretending to be British filmmaker Hugh Welchman. The calls begin with promising job offers, but quickly descend into coercion and sexual harassment.

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In early September, British filmmaker Hugh Welchman began receiving a series of bizarre and angry messages under his Instagram posts. They all came from one actress.

An Oscar winner in 2007 for the animated short Peter and the Wolf, but perhaps best-known as the co-director of 2017’s Vincent van Gogh biographical drama Loving Vincent — considered the first fully painted feature (and a runner-up to Coco at the Academy Awards) — Welchman didn’t know the woman at all. Yet the messages implied some sort of unsolicited relationship, describing him as a “predator.” Beneath a post in which he discussed his wife, the actress responded by saying “if only” she knew what he’d done to her on Skype.

Welchman, based in the Polish city of Sopot where he’s established his Breakthru Films production company, had no idea what the woman was talking about, so he deleted the messages and blocked her. But there was more to come. A week or so later, his manager David Neumann forwarded an email from another actress claiming that she had either been contacted by Welchman, in which case his reps needed to know what he was up to, or someone purporting to be him.

As it turned out, this wasn’t the first time his manager had heard about this. A different actress emailed in late May to say that she had been phoned by a man claiming to be the filmmaker, but she could tell that it was a hoax. Thinking this was just a one-off, Neumann didn’t feel the need to trouble his client at the time.

Feeling rather disturbed by what he’d heard, on Sept. 22 Welchman posted a video on Instagram warning about a “conman creep pretending to be me,” urging anyone who had been contacted to report it to authorities. As he pointed out, he “would never cold call any actors, actresses or crew.”

Then the messages steadily started flowing in, mostly from women in LA and New York, with one in Texas. Welchman started putting together a database of the victims, detailing the experiences they’d had with the imposter.

As it currently stands, there are 13 who have come forward, the earliest call dating back to May 2020, the most recent taking place mid October. There may be many more out there. The calls may still be going on.

But this isn’t simply a case of identity theft. And unlike similar sounding phone scams, such as the notorious Hollywood Con Queen, there’s no apparent financial profiteering involved – the motive here appears to be purely sexual.

Choosing to steal the identity of Welchman — a Poland-based British filmmaker specializing in animation — may seem an odd choice for a predator preying on U.S. actresses. But it lends support to the entire scam: Welchman is not an instantly recognizable name or someone a friend would likely know, yet he is one that, via a quick search online, comes with impressive industry credentials. “It’s someone obscure enough that it could be believable, and it’s someone who has won an Oscar, so again, it shows he’s a person in power,” says LA-based Canadian stand-up comedian and actress Kaitlin Mamie, who first received a call — from a withheld number — on Sept. 16.

Clearly adept at manipulation, the charlatan uses the classic lure of a potential film role (and with an Academy Award-winning director) to push his targets into deeply uncomfortable and personal conversations, often spending hours on the line each time. On several occasions he’s coerced the women to move to a video call, where at least three have exposed themselves for him. Thankfully his requests to actually meet up with his targets — at the least those that Welchman knows about — have been rejected. The LAPD has now assigned a detective to the case.

“Obviously it’s distressing for me as it’s my identity,” says Welchman, who filed a report with both the British police and FBI’s identity theft website (although is yet to hear back from either). “But it’s much more distressing for the women who he’s trying to dominate and exploit.”

Introducing himself at first as just “Hugh,” the caller told Mamie that she’d been recommended by Mike Clattenburg, creator of Canadian mockumentary series The Trailer Park Boys. Although she just had a minor role in the show, and felt slightly mismatched, his reference put her at ease.

From there he explained to Mamie that he was the celebrated filmmaker Hugh Welchman. She didn’t know the name, but he told her to watch the Loving Vincent trailer on her computer while he stayed on the line, describing how it was uniquely made using a vast team of artists over five years (all information readily available online) and how it had been hugely successful in Europe. “At this point I had no reason to believe this guy is not who he says he is,” she says.

Claiming that he had studied meditation, he then asked Mamie if she’d do some “energy work” with him to help “break down the walls.” As someone who practiced meditation herself, it didn’t seem too crazy, so she did as he said, lying down on the bed in the bedroom where she was taking the call (ushering her husband away in the process — “in my mind it was still a legitimate thing.”)

At this point the call took a decidedly creepy turn.

As he had Mamie breathing deeply in and out, the imposter started making personal comments, stating that there was “anxiety inside” her, that it had been a “really hard eight months” for her and that there “were tears” in her eyes, demanding a yes or no answer each time. Asking if she was single, she said she was married. “But you’re unhappy in your marriage, yes?” “There have been times in the last few months where you’ve thought about the marriage ending, yes?” It was getting deeply unpleasant.

Then he moved to the “energy” in the room. “Can you feel my energy, yes? Where can you feel my energy? My energy is stronger than your energy, yes? Can you feel that, yes?”

Mamie pulled the plug, telling the man that she felt uncomfortable and wanted to stop. “That’s good, that’s part of it all,” he responded. “I wanted to listen to your inner voice. That’s what the film is about.” She felt not great, but better. When he called back a short while later, she said in future he should go through her agent. The imposter hung up.

Mamie’s experience with the imposter fits into a specific pattern he seems to follow.

In his intro he’ll drop an industry name he knows the actress is somehow connected to, clearly having gleaned the information from IMDbPro or a personal website (the actresses’ phone numbers are another matter — while some are readily available on casting sites, others say they’re still perplexed as to how he tracked them down).

For New York-based Kyle Ocasio — whom he called on Sept. 14 — the reference was film editor Sonia Gonzalez-Martinez, a friend and someone she’d worked with on a web series. In the case of LA-based Alexis Capozzi — called on October 8 — he said she’d been recommended for the role by her former acting tutor Stan Kirsch.

This time there was an issue: Kirsch had died nine months earlier. Was he aware? “Yes,” he said, quickly adding that the reason he’d taken so long to reach out was because he “had just got funding.” Seizing an opportunity, he used the passing of Kirsch and its clear emotional impact on Capozzi as a manipulation tool (in a later call he said he’d rung again because he’d “been thinking about Stan” who had wanted him to “reach out and make sure everything was ok.”)

Early in the conversation he aggressively insists his target watch the trailer for Loving Vincent and — sometimes — the 2007 biopic La Vie En Rose (on which the real Welchman served as visual effects supervisor), clearly aiming to establish credibility.

But of the new project and role, there’s scant and conflicting information, with the predator getting irritable should he be asked to provide it. In one call, it was a remake of Loving Vincent, in another it was a coming-of-age story. One consistent factor is that it’s being shot in Italy and France, with him telling the actresses that they’ll have to respond “yes, sir” and “no, sir” on set, “because that’s culturally appropriate.” Domination and control is a key element throughout the call. At one point he asked Ocasio if she would “accept his total authority,” while he told Capozzi that she was “talking too much — I like to control the conversation.”

One of the more peculiar aspects of each conversation is a backstory he insists on providing. The real Hugh Welchman is from the south-east English county of Berkshire. Not only does the imposter regularly claim to have been born and raised in India, but he says his first language is Sanskrit, which hasn’t been considered a living language for well over a millennium. One actress thought this was perhaps part of the manipulation, to “make him sound smarter than you.”

Then there’s the accent. Mamie said when she found videos of Welchman speaking online afterwards, her caller did actually sound very similar (“but much scarier or dominating”). However, all the others have said it was clearly an American accent they heard (as was the case in a recording THR listened to).

“Maybe because I’m American he thought, fuck it, she’ll never know,” says Ocasio, who adds that — having heard Welchman since — the real filmmaker sounds much more masculine, whereas the imposter sounded “like a creepy yoga teacher.”

The meditation work comes up in each call, with the charlatan insisting his target be lying down, then asking repeat questions about where they can “feel” his energy. Many say they didn’t know how to respond, so just made up something – stomach, chest, back — that sounded neutral. During the energy work he begins asking personal questions about relationships and happiness, pushing the emotional needle to find a potential weak spot. On several occasions, he’s turned the violation up several deeply unpleasant notches, telling the women that he thinks they’ve been raped or molested.

For Capozzi, having already dismissed a few warning signs, being told by a stranger on the phone that she’d been raped was the reality check she needed. “I just had this kind of visceral reaction,” she says.

Insisting that no, she hadn’t been sexually assaulted (to which he attempted to deflect it back – “well why do I feel that’s what happened to you?”) and realizing that she was being manipulated on a call that was getting “far too sexual in nature,” she looked to shut it down. She said thanks, but she was done with the energy work.

He fought back. He needed his actresses to be “open and willing” to try different things, he claimed, and would look elsewhere. Eventually, with Capozzi having reined back the power in the conversation, explaining that it sounded like they wouldn’t be able to work together, he hung up.

Usually, this would signal the end to all interaction with the imposter, but he repeatedly called Capozzi back. Later that day. The following day. And on five occasions on Oct. 14. By this time, Capozzi had long since tracked down the real Welchman and filed a report with the LAPD, with an officer suggesting she gather more information. So she began recording him, stringing him on to gather as many clues as she could. Among his repeat insistences was that they talk via Skype, getting angry when Capozzi refused (she had been hoping the police would provide her with a special account to assist in the investigation, to no avail).

Others, however, have agreed to video calls.

One, asking to remain anonymous, said that when they did connect on Skype, his camera wouldn’t switch on – this “broken camera” is a consistent theme: nobody has seen the imposter’s face. Quickly moving onto the new film, he said that the actress would have to be comfortable with customs in Europe, where they’re “not as prudish about nudity.” She said fine, so long as the project called for it, at which point he requested she show him one of her bikinis, then go off-screen, change into it and come back. This was enough. She refused.

According to Welchman, as many as four of the women who contacted him said they went further, exposing themselves on video for the conman. None of these victims wished to discuss their experience with to THR. 

Whatever evidence the LAPD is looking at to track the sexual predator is unknown (while THR has the officer’s name and a report number, calls and emails haven’t been answered, although it's understood he has last spoke to one of the women only days ago). But the information gathered by Capozzi and Welchman offers a few pointers.

Despite claiming to be working in Europe, it’s almost certain he’s making the call from the U.S. Many of them have been made at times that would be deeply antisocial across the Atlantic, with his excuse — when asked — usually that he’s “working overnight” and has to make calls to India.

When pushed by Capozzi about his apparent last meeting with her late tutor, he said it had been in LA (to prove he was making it up she even fabricated a figure called Pete, who he said he’d also spoken to).

While almost all of the calls blocked the incoming number, on one occasion he used a U.S. number that couldn’t be tracked online and appears to be a generic IP number. He also revealed an email address and Skype account during the same conversation, via his repeated attempts to start a video call. Both of which — as yet — haven’t led anywhere, but are now with the police.

As for the imposter’s filmmaking credentials, Welchman — now working on a hand-painted animated adaptation of Wladyslaw Reymont's Nobel Prize-winning novel The Peasants — isn’t convinced. “To me he sounds like he’s not connected to the business,” he says.

And although he clearly read up enough about Loving Vincent to rattle off a few lines (most of the women noted that it sounded like he was reading from a script), there are some vital pieces missing. When Capozzi asked how she could actually watch the entire film, he had no idea, suggesting YouTube.

Regarding the actresses, there are few areas of correlation that appear to link them. None of them knew each other before the call. Ages range from early 20s to mid 40s. Despite a number being predominantly comics, there seems to be little else there to connect the dots.

But it has left many feeling deeply freaked out, violated and often ashamed at what happened. Even those who ended the conversation long before it could move to Skype have said it has affected them for weeks after, impacting their levels of trust. For those who went further, it’s obviously far worse (some have been too ashamed to tell their husbands).

One crucial connecting factor working to the predator’s advantage right now is that all of the women contacted aren’t just actresses looking for work in a tough industry, but are doing so during a time of intense crisis when jobs are scarce. Many claim they felt red flags very early on in the call, but ignored them, only adding to their sense of shame afterwards.

“Everybody’s really vulnerable, especially in the acting industry here in LA, where it’s kind of shut down right now,” says Mamie.

“He’s the perfect conman,” adds Capozzi. “He’s preying on a vulnerable industry at the most vulnerable time. He knows what he’s doing and he’s been doing it for months.”

And as far as the evidence suggests, he’s still doing it.

 

Article by: Alex Ritman for the Hollywood Reporter.

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More than 95 percent of theaters have reported losses of 70 percent or more this year due to the pandemic.
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The National Association of Theatre Owners on Monday called for the lame-duck Congress and Trump administration to pass relief legislation that would provide immediate aid to local movie theaters devastated by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“American movie theaters need help now,” NATO president-CEO John Fithian said in a statement issued two days after Democratic candidate Joe Biden was declared the victor in the 2020 presidential race, beating Donald Trump. President-elect Biden won't take office until January.

"Soon, a vaccine will allow our industry to return to normal, but without bipartisan action now in the lame duck session of Congress, hundreds of movie theaters will not make it. Local communities across the nation are and will be permanently damaged. This Congress and Administration still have a job to do," Fithian stated.

According to NATO, 96 percent of movie theaters have reported over 70 percent in losses in 2020. Even in places where movie theaters have reopened, reduced capacity and an anemic film slate have resulted in low attendance.

NATO says Congress can save cinemas by including $15 billion for grants for independent venues in a COVID-19 relief package. The lobbying organization says the “Save Our Stages” proposal is the solution that will provide the bridge that theaters need to see them into next year, when the industry has a chance at recovery.

Theater owners also called for continued aid to furloughed workers. A sample letter and automatic contacts for individual members of Congress is available here.

 

Article by: Pamela McClintock for the Hollywood Reporter.

 

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The studio will be on the hook for the star's full salary, even though he only had shot one scene since production began on September 20 in London.

On Nov. 5, the London crew of Warner Bros.’ untitled third Fantastic Beasts film were notified by the studio of a move that came as a surprise: Johnny Depp had been pulled from the shooting schedule.

The studio’s film chief Toby Emmerich had made the decision the previous day to sever ties with the star who was reprising his role as dark wizard Gellert Grindelwald in the five-film franchise. The call was prompted by a U.K. judge dismissing Depp’s defamation claims in a closely watched trial that pitted the actor against the publisher of The Sun after the British tabloid referred to Depp as a “wife-beater.” The judge’s ruling makes it a lot easier for news outlets to use similar depictions when referring to Depp’s stormy two-year marriage to actress Amber Heard, creating a PR headache for the studio.

Sources tell The Hollywood Reporter that Warners wanted to allow due process to take its course before making a decision on the embattled star’s future in the franchise. Once Judge Andrew Nicol ruled that he accepted Heard's testimony, which was detailed and painted a picture of Depp as an abuser, Emmerich’s decision was a fait accompli, with the studio opting to recast the role less than midway through the franchise.

Still, Warner Bros. will be on the hook for Depp’s full salary, even though he only had shot one scene since production began on September 20 in London. Like many A-list stars, Depp had a so-called pay-or-play contract, which requires that he be fully compensated whether or not the film is made and even if it is recast. As is common with stars of his level, there was no morality clause in his contract, even though it was amended with each new installment. Technically, Depp was not fired by Warner Bros. but asked to resign. It is unclear what recourse it would have had if the star refused.

Depp also is suing Heard for defamation in Virginia in a case that likely would be disruptive to the Fantastic Beasts shooting schedule, already thrown off course by the coronavirus pandemic. A judge recently ruled that Depp would have to appear in person for three consecutive days in November for an upcoming deposition.

In a Nov. 6 Instagram post, Depp wrote, “I’d like to thank everybody who has gifted me with their support and loyalty. I have been humbled and moved by your many messages of love and concern, particularly over the last few days.” But one source says that Fantastic Beasts writer J.K. Rowling — Depp’s highest-profile backer — did not push back on Warners’ move to cut the actor from the franchise. Rowling, who enjoys enormous sway at the studio because of her mega-successful Harry Potter series, wrote in a Dec. 2017 statement, “Based on our understanding of the circumstances, the filmmakers and I are not only comfortable sticking with our original casting, but genuinely happy to have Johnny playing a major character in the movies.”

While the first two installments of the Fantastic Beasts franchise have collectively grossed more than $1.4 billion globally, the second chapter, the Crimes of Grindelwald, declined from the first entry and took in $654 million. The third film is set for release on July 15, 2022.

The next Fantastic Beasts entry is described as a three-hander, with Depp, Jude Law and Eddie Redmayne sharing equal screen time. But with an eight-figure salary, Depp is the highest earner of the three thanks to his box-office track record that had been buoyed by the Pirates of the Caribbean movies. Disney has avoided weighing in definitively on the Depp matter by taking the next Pirates outing in a female-led direction with a script being currently written by Birds of Prey scribe Christina Hodson with Margot Robbie starring.

Depp concluded his Instagram post with a promise that “my life and career will not be defined by this moment in time.” But for now, he has lost out on perhaps his best opportunity to keep working in films made by the major studios, which are increasingly risk-adverse when it comes to #MeToo and domestic violence accusations.

 

Article by: Tatiana Siegel for the Hollywood Reporter.

 

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The ‘Quiet Place’ universe is expanding.

Jeff Nichols has been tapped to write and direct a third film in the franchise, based on an original idea from John Krasinski. The new installment will be released in 2022, Paramount announced Monday. Details of the story are being kept under wraps.

Nichols, who is best known for his dramas “Loving,” “Take Shelter,” “Mud” and “Midnight Special,” takes over the reins from Krasinski, who wrote and directed the franchise’s first two installments. Krasinski will produce the new film under his Sunday Night banner with partner Allyson Seeger (who serves as executive producer), as well as Platinum Dunes’ Michael Bay, Andrew Form and Brad Fuller.

The original 2018 film — starring Krasinski and Emily Blunt — was a box office juggernaut, grossing nearly $340 million worldwide and setting records for the largest opening weekend totals for a horror movie (earning more than $50 million). “A Quiet Place Part II” was scheduled to be released in March, but the film was pushed back to April 23, 2021, due to theater closures amid the coronavirus pandemic. The films follow the Abbot family — Evelyn (Blunt) and her children, Regan (Millicent Simmonds), Marcus (Noah Jupe) and a newborn baby — as they fight to survive in a world where people must live in silence in order to hide from creatures that hunt for prey using sound.

“We were both really reluctant and unnerved at the idea of trying to do another one. A lot of people came into the studio and tried to pitch ideas and we were both like, ‘We’re not going to do it.’” Blunt admitted to Variety at the premiere of “A Quiet Place Part II” in March, which took place before the COVID-related lockdown.

Krasinski explained that it was key to treat the film as a continuation rather than a sequel.

“If the first movie is from the parents to the kids, this is the love letter from the kids to the parents,” he said. “It’s a letter of dreams and hopes. I hope [my children are] this brave, and I hope they’re this courageous, and I hope they’re the ones that, when time gets dark, they’re cool enough to light the candle.”

 

Article by: Angelique Jackson for Variety.

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Kristen Stewart and Mackenzie Davis bring holiday cheer in the first trailer for the lesbian Christmas rom-com “Happiest Season.”

“Happiest Season” follows Abby (Stewart), who plans on proposing to Harper (Davis) at Harper’s family holiday party. But things change when Abby discovers that her girlfriend has yet to come out to her conservative family.

“I am scared that if I tell them who I really am, I will lose them,” Harper says tearfully in the trailer. “I am not hiding you, I am hiding me.“

“Everybody’s story is different. Just because Harper isn’t ready, doesn’t mean she doesn’t love you,” Dan Levy’s character John later says when he comes to “rescue” his friend Abby, who the family thinks is Harper’s orphan friend.

The movie was penned by the writing team of Clea DuVall and Mary Holland. The pic marks DuVall’s directorial debut on a major studio feature.

“Happiest Season” also stars Mary Steenburgen, Victor Garber, Alison Brie, Aubrey Plaza and Holland. Marty Bowen and Isaac Klausner produce with Jaclyn Huntling for Temple Hill. The executive producers are Jonathan McCoy and Wyck Godfrey.

TriStar Pictures will handle worldwide distribution, aside from the U.K. and Canada, which will be overseen by eOne.

Stewart last starred in “Charlie’s Angels,” “Underwater” and “Seberg.” Davis played the titular role in “Tully” opposite Charlize Theron. She also toplined Tim Miller’s “Terminator” reboot with Linda Hamilton and Arnold Schwarzenegger.

“Happiest Season” debuts Dec. 25 on Hulu, joining other studio films skipping a theatrical release in light of the coronavirus pandemic.

 

Article by: Janet W. Lee for Variety

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'Schitt's Creek' remains No. 1 for the week of Oct. 5-11.

The anecdotal, social media evidence of "everyone" watching Emily in Paris on Netflix shortly after its early October premiere now has some statistical backup.

The Darren Star comedy, starring Lily Collins as the title character, ranks sixth in Nielsen's top 10 streaming shows for the week of Oct. 5. It's one of three Netflix originals to make the rankings for the first time, along with The Haunting of Bly Manor (second) and the Adam Sandler movie Hubie Halloween (third).

Netflix users watched a lot of Bly Manor over its first three days. The series debuted on Oct. 9 and racked up 1.18 billion minutes of viewing time by Oct. 11. Hubie Halloween premiered on Oct. 7; it gathered 969 million minutes of watch time over five days, equivalent to about 9.5 million full runs of the 102-minute film.

Schitt's Creek spent its second consecutive week at No. 1 — and grew by almost 500 million minutes week to week. Its 80 episodes accounted for 1.46 billion minutes of viewing time.

Netflix users watched 676 million minutes of Emily in Paris, which was originally developed for ViacomCBS' Paramount Network before landing at the streamer. It's likely the show got much wider exposure — not to mention social chatter — where it ended up than it would have if it had stayed on linear TV.

Amazon's The Boys also remained in the top 10 for a sixth straight week — the longest streak for any original streaming series or film since Nielsen started releasing weekly rankings two months ago.

Streaming platforms contend Nielsen's methodology doesn't capture the full scope of viewing on devices other than TV sets. Nielsen also only measures U.S. audiences, not those in other countries.

Nielsen's top 10 streaming programs for Oct. 5-11 are below, with the prior week's rank in parentheses. Original streaming series and films are marked with an asterisk.

1 (1). Schitt's Creek (Netflix), 1.46 billion minutes viewed

2 (nr). The Haunting of Bly Manor* (Netflix), 1.18 billion

3 (nr). Hubie Halloween* (Netflix), 969 million

4 (2). The Office (Netflix), 862 million

5 (7). The Boys* (Amazon), 752 million

6 (nr). Emily in Paris* (Netflix), 676 million

7 (T3). Grey's Anatomy (Netflix), 668 million

8 (nr). The 100 (Netflix), 664 million

9 (8). Criminal Minds (Netflix), 656 million

10 (T3). The Blacklist (Netflix), 644 million

 

Article by: Rick Porter for the Hollywood Reporter.

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