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Researching the new Julie Taylor-directed film, the Oscar-winning costume designer visited the feminist icon at her home in New York and borrowed belts and jewelry for the production

For costume designer Sandy Powell, perhaps the biggest highlight of working on The Glorias — the new feature film about Gloria Steinem at four stages of life — was being invited to meet the feminist icon at home in New York and peak inside her closet. “It was exciting to actually meeting Gloria and ask her questions about her life and her clothes. That was the most thrilling thing. I went to her house and she showed me her closet,” says Powell, who says that Steinem, now 86, lent her some of her belts and jewelry, including rings, to use in costuming the Julia Taymor-helmed film, which was shot in Savannah, Georgia, and which stars Julianne Moore, Alicia Vikander, Janelle Monae, Bette Midler and Lorraine Toussaint. The film is on demand and streaming on Prime Video.

Images of Steinem at various stages of life, of course, were readily available to Powell. “Obviously there is a lot of information on her and she was so well documented, and the film was based on her autobiography,” says the costume designer. The challenge though was that the production’s budget was not large enough for it be possible for Powell to make and replicate every outfit. “I tried to make it as accurate as possible. I had to do a version of what the real Gloria Steinem wore. We had to be very resourceful,” says Powell, who pulled clothes from costume houses including Los Angeles’ Western Costume. The designs, she says, are mostly “a mixture of vintage and repurposed contemporary” items.

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There were two key looks though that demanded being remade as precisely as possible. “There was a particular outfit she wears when she’s giving a talk. She’s with [Ms. Magazine co-founder] Dorothy Pitman Hughes. It’s a little black mini-dress and Julia Taymor wanted me to recreate that one. She’s had to scramble up onto a platform and she has a very short dress on,” says Powell. The other outfit? “Of course, the Bunny Girl outfit,” says Powell, referring to the time when Steinem went undercover, as a journalist, working as a Playboy Bunny in 1963. “It was iconic in a way. We had to create the recreate the outfits.” Powell had them made by the original manufacturer of the Bunny Girl outfits.

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Early on in her career, Steinem was known for her dresses. “She wore short dresses,” says Powell, “and she came in for a lot of criticism by other women for doing that. They thought she couldn’t possibly be a feminist because she was looking sexy. And that had nothing to do with her dressing for men. She dressed for herself. She dressed in what she wanted to dress in.”

Later, in the '70s, her looked changed, taking on the style she’s most known for today. “Her iconic looks were jeans, black jeans, and t-shirts and belts. She wore very distinctive belts around her hips a lot of the time, even right up to the present,” says Powell. Moore actually wears one of the belts in the film that Steinem lent to the costume designer. “it’s a wide leather belt with a great big silver oval-shaped buckle on it.”

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The time period of the film, beginning in the 1940s, covers the same period as The Irishman, Powell’s previous movie, for which she was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Costume Design. (She's been nominated 15 times and won three times.) “It covered the same five decades, and I dressed mostly men. So it was quite refreshing to do The Glorias after that. They were polar opposites really,” says Powell, who underlines how much she enjoyed creating the wardrobes for other characters in the film such as Bella Abzug (played by Midler) — “famous for wearing many, many hats,” she says — and Florynce Kennedy (Toussaint). “They are fantastic larger-than-life characters,” she says, noting that the latter’s look included a “real Stetson-type hat, leather vests and huge earrings.”

Powell herself is known for her personal style, often seen wearing suits by labels including Aganovich, Thierry Mugler and Moschino. She was last seen on a major red carpet at the Oscars where she wore a cream-colored suit that had been signed by people in the film world, including Robert De Niro, Al Pacino, Scarlett Johansson, Brad Pitt, Bong Joon Ho, Leonardo DiCaprio, Laura Dern and Saoirse Ronan. It was later auctioned off, for 16,000 British pounds, to raise funds to preserve Prospect Cottage, the home of the late filmmaker Derek Jarman in Kent, England. “We ended up with 200 signatures, just before lockdown happened. [The cottage] is being turned into a museum and also residency for artists and the whole purpose of it was to protect his legacy.”

Currently, Powell is at work on a period drama called Mothering Sunday, starring Odessa Young, Josh O’Connor, Olivia Colman and Colin Firth. “It’s very English,” she says of the movie, which centers on the story of a young maid, played by Young. “It set in mostly 1924 and it also jumps to the late '40s.”

 

Article by: the Hollywood Reporter Fashion.

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The screenwriter, who wants to see director David Fincher return, has found inspiration in the 2019 book 'Zucked.'

Ten years ago, screenwriter Aaron Sorkin and director David Fincher unleashed The Social Network, the Oscar-winning look at the founding of Facebook.

In the intervening years, the real-life Facebook story has added twists to its story that few could have imagined back in 2010. The social media company has been embroiled in a number of scandals, including being accused of allowing misinformation to spread on its platform in ways that have affected democracy at home and around the world.

Sorkin and producer Scott Rudin would like to see a Social Network sequel happen, the screenwriter told filmmaker told MTV's Josh Horowitz on Wednesday's episode of the Happy.Sad.Confused podcast.

"I do want to see it. And Scott wants to see it," said Sorkin, who remains in contact with Fincher and recently spoke to him about the filmmaker's upcoming movie Mank. "People have been talking to me about it. What we’ve discovered is the dark side of Facebook."

The Social Network won Sorkin an Oscar and was based on The Accidental Billionaires, the 2009 book by author Ben Mezrich, who presented an inside look at the company's founding.

In more recent times, Sorkin has taken an interest in Roger McNamee, an early Facebook investor who published the 2019 book Zucked, which was critical of the company. Sorkin has met with McNamee, who raised red flags to Zuckerberg and Facebook CEO Sheryl Sandberg after noticing strange political activity on the platform.

"And Sandberg and Zuckerberg seem uninterested in doing anything about it," said Sorkin. "This all ends up with McNamee in a Senate basement secure conference room briefing Senate Intelligence subcommittee members on how Facebook is bringing down democracy. 'We have a huge problem here and something needs to be done about it.'"

Sorkin said he would like to write that movie, but under one condition. "I will only write it if David directs it."

Listen to the full podcast episode here, where Sorkin opens up about his new film Trial of the Chicago 7 and other career highlights.

 

Article by: Aaron Couch for the Hollywood Reporter.

 

 

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"Every single bit of information is coming in so fast. So fast that even a show like SNL that gives you everything up until the last minute didn't even have time to build half the sets they probably wanted to build to cover all this insanity," Rudolph said during her Tuesday night appearance on 'Watch What Happens Live'

Maya Rudolph has opened up about what it was like working on Saturday Night Live's season 46 premiere amid the rapidly changing news cycle and only a day or so after Trump's COVID-19 diagnosis.

Rudolph spoke about the experience while appearing on Tuesday night's episode of Watch What Happens Live. After host Andy Cohen praised the Emmy winner's performance as vice-presidential candidate Kamala Harris alongside Alec Baldwin's Donald Trump and Jim Carrey's Joe Biden during last Saturday's cold-opening, the actress and comedian described performing as "pretty wild."

"It's so insane," Rudolph said. "Everything is on steroids. Every single bit of information is coming in so fast. So fast that even a show like SNL that gives you everything up until the last minute didn't even have time to build half the sets they probably wanted to build to cover all this insanity."

Rudolph admitted that typically in her "post-cast-member-of-SNL-life," she'd thought about how much she'd want to be on the show, but that her appearance on last weekend's episode was actually "a real fascinating time." While Trump announcing he and first lady Melania Trump had tested positive for COVID-19 in a 1 a.m. tweet last Friday added to the chaos of Saturday's show, Rudolph said the on-set safety protocols prompted by the pandemic were already making it more difficult for the cast and crew to work during the show's live return.

"Believe it or not, everything was slower. It was a lot harder to get things to cards," Rudolph explained. "I didn't get my lines to cards, I mean, until air, so I had never run that sketch until we did it live."

Rudolph praised Carrey, who debuted his Biden impersonation last week, and SNL's crew for what they were able to pull off. "I can't believe what they were able to accomplish on Saturday," Rudolph said. "Bless Jim Carrey's heart because he just jumped right in."

Alec Baldwin also spoke about the harried experience of performing during Saturday Night Live's first live show since April in a recent Instagram post. During the nearly 15-minute video, Baldwin acknowledged the experience and professionalism of the sketch series' crew and creative team as they weighed how to cover Trump following Tuesday night's presidential debate and the sudden news of his COVID-19 diagnosis and hospitalization.

"This is a group of people that are pretty savvy. They're in network television, [SNL creator] Lorne [Michaels] is, you know, one of the smartest people in the business," Baldwin said in his Instagram post. "And the other people from the network who come and go but interact with him, they know that they don't want to sink the ship."

 

Article by: Abbey White for the Hollywood Reporter.

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Half his face is covered by a mask. And yet, Spike Lee still gets recognized on a walk in Fort Greene, Brooklyn.

On this sunny September morning, the 63-year-old director and activist is participating in a socially distanced photo shoot on the street outside his production company, 40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks. As Lee stands on the corner, a dark Subaru screeches to a halt. “I’m a huge fan,” proclaims the driver from inside the car. Lee nods, but he’s accustomed to stopping traffic. A few minutes later, a FedEx driver also rolls down his window to say hello.

As we follow Lee around, he keeps an ongoing dialogue with his neighbors — it’s hard to tell if they are fans or friends (or both). He points to his watch and tells a man, “You’re running late.” This is followed by a selfie with another man sitting on his stoop and a wave to a jogger coupled with a warning. “Where’s your mask?” he quizzes her. “Put it on your mouth!”

Lee is as synonymous with New York as J. Lo is with the 6 train. He’s lived here since grade school. His parents — his mom, Jacquelyn Lee, was a teacher and his dad, Bill, is a jazz musician — moved to Crown Heights in the ’60s, and they became what Lee recalls as the first Black family in Cobble Hill. Lee now splits his days between his Brooklyn production company, a brick building with flags that carry the names of some of his movies, and the Upper East Side apartment where he lives with his wife, Tonya Lewis, a lawyer and producer. When he’s not sitting courtside at a Knicks game, he’s a film professor and artistic director of the Graduate Film Program at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts. New York is the setting of many of Lee’s movies: his 1986 breakout hit (which debuted in Cannes) “She’s Gotta Have It,” 1989’s zeitgeist-defining masterpiece “Do the Right Thing,” 1994’s semi-memoir “Crooklyn” and 2002’s “25th Hour” among them.

His hometown has also been, of late, the source of heartbreak. The past six months have seen the deaths of at least 24,000 people in the city from COVID-19, as Donald Trump (whom Lee has nicknamed “Agent Orange”) dragged his feet and dodged responsibility for the U.S.’ inadequate response to the deadly virus. “It goes to show you, s— could change in a second,” Lee says. “The world changed.” But Lee isn’t going anywhere, and he dismisses any talk of his favorite city being finished.

Even in these times of uncertainty, Lee has had a prolific year. In June, Netflix released his latest film, “Da 5 Bloods,” a post-traumatic Vietnam war drama starring Delroy Lindo and Chadwick Boseman, who died at 43 in August from colon cancer. Lee wasn’t aware of his illness when they were making the movie together, but he recently rewatched it — discovering new meaning in a pivotal scene where Boseman’s character, Stormin’ Norman, is bathed in a heavenly white light. As a tribute, Lee now has a flag of Boseman flying outside his office.

In September, Lee opened the Toronto Film Festival with his film “American Utopia,” a cinematic recording of the Broadway show starring Talking Heads frontman David Byrne, which premieres on HBO on Oct. 17.

For 90 minutes, I sat down with Lee to talk about these times and his remarkable career. We hunkered down (after a temperature check and with six feet between us) in his office at 40 Acres and a Mule. To his right was a shelf of DVDs of his movies, including “Jungle Fever,” “Malcolm X” and three Blu-ray Criterion copies of “Do the Right Thing” (he’s one of only four Black directors whose films have been selected for inclusion in the collection). While Lee has yet to win an Oscar for directing, he took home a statuette for best adapted screenplay in 2019 for “BlacKkKlansman.”

Lee has a reputation for sometimes being Hollywood’s prickly uncle. You’re not quite sure if you’re going to be embraced with a hug or received with a snarl and a frown. But once he’s more comfortable, he lets you in and quickly warms up — cracking jokes, sharing memories and reminiscing about his unique journey as an artist.

How do you think New York is doing six months into COVID-19?

I got to give it up to Cuomo. I think he did a great job because it easily could’ve gone the other way. I remember all those movies — “Death Wish” and “Escape From New York” — it was full of drug addicts and prostitutes and dope dealers and muggers. And then, later, I remember the summer of ’77, the blackout, 9/11. New York was dead. And they’re running that same narrative. New York has always gone through hard times and rebounded, so I’m not buying that.

But here’s the thing — it was the Black and Brown people of New York City that kept this motherf—er going. And we saw it [with] MTA buses, the subway, hospital workers, cops, firemen, nurses, first responders. And also, we paid the price. We didn’t have a choice. We had to work. A lot of these people, I think, wanted to work. They wanted to help. And then, we suffered the most because of the condition we live in. We’re just not healthy. We don’t have the health services that other people have. I don’t think you have to be a medical Einstein to see that we over-index Black and Brown people: hypertension, obesity, we can go down the line.

Where do you think we’re headed?

I know they call me “Negrodamus,” but I can’t call this one. And also, Nov. 3, who knows what the world’s going to be like. And they might not be able to declare a winner. This could be a civil war. And we got to come out and vote because this motherf—er is not going to leave, and he’ll say that the vote was invalid or rigged. He’s doing that s— already. He’s laying the groundwork to say the election is bogus.

When Trump says, “Make America Great Again,” what does that really mean?

Roll back the clock. If it was up to him, I’d be singing, “Let my people go.” I’d be singing Negro spirituals, “Wade in the Water,” all types of stuff. Along with stealing the land from Native Americans and genocide, that’s how this country was built.

Fill in the blank for me. Donald Trump is —

On the wrong side of history. And he should not even talk about Abraham Lincoln.

How did you finance your first film, “She’s Gotta Have It”?

I got to thank my grandmother. My grandmother put me through film school and Morehouse. I was the first grandchild, and she used to save her Social Security checks for 50 years for her grandchildren’s education. And she gave me seed money for my thesis film, “Joe’s Bed-Stuy Barbershop,” which won a Student Academy Award. And the seed money for “She’s Gotta Have It.”

I first had to get the money to shoot. Then, the next stage, we get the money to get the film out of the lab. Then, they get enough money for me to live on so I could edit the film. And then, hopefully, in the third stage, I show it to potential investors and finish the film. I shot it in 12 days — two six-day weeks — for $175,000.

How does art speak to you at this time of your life compared with when you first started out?

It’s just what I do. That’s what I love. My father, Bill Lee, jazz musician, used to compose a lot of the scores for my films, so I just grew up in a very artistic household. My love of arts is never going to change.

Tell me about growing up in New York in the early ’60s.

I’m the product of New York City public schools from kindergarten. I’m the eldest. My mother was dragging me and my brother, Chris, to Broadway plays, movies, museums. My brother — my late brother, Chris — and I, we were my mother’s date. My father was on the go. He was taking me to the jazz clubs in Newport, jazz fests, stuff like that. And also, my love of sports comes from my father. I’m just so blessed because I grew up with both parents in the house. I didn’t want to see a lot of stuff. My mom would just say, “You’re going!”

I lost my big brother two and a half years ago. I’m sorry to hear about your brother.

His tag name was Shadow. He was one of the original graffiti people. He went to [High School of] Art and Design until he got kicked out. You ask people in the know, they knew my brother Shadow.

You had both “American Utopia” and “Da 5 Bloods” come out this year.

You saw that [flag] hanging outside? The thing with Chadwick? I didn’t know Chad was sick.

Were there any signs?

He did not look well, but my mind never took that he had cancer. It was a very strenuous shoot. I mean, we all didn’t get to Vietnam until the end of the movie at Ho Chi Minh City. But that other stuff, the jungle stuff, was shot in Thailand. It was 100 degrees every day. It was also at that time the worst air pollution in the world. I understand why Chadwick didn’t tell me because he didn’t want me to take it easy. If I had known, I wouldn’t have made him do the stuff. And I respect him for that.

How did you hear about Chadwick’s death?

That night, for some reason, I went to bed early. And the fact that I went to bed early, I woke up early. It must have been I was tired. I went to open my phone, and my phone — the whole thing had been blowing up. I turned it off. I was in shock. And most recently, with my lovely wife, Tonya, we watched it [“Da 5 Bloods”] again for the first time after his transition. And it plays totally different. He’s a ghost already. You know the scene I’m talking about? It’s the scene where he comes back, him and Delroy. I felt it when we shot it.

You’re talking about the scene at the end, where he’s standing in the light in the jungle and reveals his bullet wound?

It was God’s heavenly light. We didn’t have light. You know, Delroy’s talking to the camera, talking about his conversation with God? We go up, and we come down and we find this heavenly light. It’s Chadwick standing in that light, in that pose. That was God up there. I don’t care what nobody says. That was God’s heavenly light, because that scene’s not lit. That’s natural light. And that was God sending heavenly light on Chadwick. Paul, played by Delroy Lindo, he says, “I died for you.” I mean it was hard to look at the film again for me since his transition. It is just a whole ’nother experience.

There’s a line in the movie where Clarke [Peters] says he’s the best damn soldier ever. And Chadwick was — is — a soldier. This is conjecture: There’s a possibility he thought this might be his last film. And God gave him one more with “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom.” But now looking at that, he was playing it. Stormin’ Norman says, “If I have to go out, I’m going gangbusters.” And that’s what he did.

You and Delroy Lindo have collaborated on four movies. How did it feel to work together again?

Funny story. I saw Delroy in “Joe Turner’s Come and Gone.” That’s how I got to cast him as West Indian Archie in “Malcolm X.” Then he was in “Clockers.” So we are now working 25 years. He didn’t tell me, because I forgot; I offered him the role to be one of the corner men in “Do the Right Thing,” and he turned it down. And he said, “Glad Spike didn’t hold that against me!”

This was going to be an even bigger year for you. You were selected as the first Black jury president of the Cannes Film Festival, which was canceled due to COVID-19.

Yes. I’ll be there next May [as jury president].

What are your thoughts on the Academy’s new representation and diversity standards?

A lot of loopholes. Hire a white publicist. I need to sit down with somebody from the Academy. Look, I think their heart is in the right place. I will say that. But the battlefield for me is the rarefied air of the gatekeepers. These are the people, individuals who decide what we’re making and what we’re not making, who’s going to write it, who’s going to direct it, who’s going to produce it, who’s a star in this. In speaking about the subject, I always go to Lin-Manuel’s “Hamilton” — You got to be in the motherf—ing room. You got to be in the room where it happens. If we’re not in the motherf—ing room where the motherf—er happens, ain’t no motherf—ing thing going to change. Quote that!

We got to be in the room. I tell you, this is the truth. My early years in this industry, when I had meetings in Hollywood — and I’m not going to name who it is — they would bring Black people from the mailroom and have them in the meeting like they were executives. I didn’t know what was happening. So it wouldn’t be a “Lily-White” with the studio heads. And I peeped that s— right away. I understood why. Look, I wasn’t blaming my brothers; they just opened the mail. I knew what the deal was, but it’s just so obvious. “Come on, man, what’s your job?” And as soon as my meeting was over, I knew they’re going right back down to the mailroom. Word as a bond on my mother’s grave, they were doing that s—.

What message do you have for Oscar voters who don’t agree with the new set of rules?

They probably voted for “Driving Miss Daisy” and “Green Book.”

Only six Black filmmakers have been nominated for best director, including you for “BlacKkKlansman.” But none of them have been Black women.

They always have it harder, no matter what it is, so why should it be different in film? That’s that simple.

Did you think you were going to win the Oscar for best adapted screenplay for “BlacKkKlansman”?

I could have had a shot once I got nominated. I had a shot. You got to be in it to win it. I didn’t know a Morehouse brother, Samuel L. Jackson, was going to be presenting. He came out. I said, “Oh.” When he opened the envelope, he said, “The house!” I didn’t hear [my name], because the people were yelling and screaming. It was a great moment, and that picture’s famous where I jumped up. Sam luckily caught me. That was pure adrenaline and joy.

We’re both New Yorkers. We both love the Knicks. We haven’t won the NBA championship since 1973. How does that change?

I like our coach. I was at Game 7, the Willis Reed game. It’ll happen.

 

Article by: Clayton Davis for Variety.

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“Jurassic World: Dominion” had to temporarily suspend filming after people on set tested positive for coronavirus, director Colin Trevorrow announced.

“Woke up to the news we had a few positive Coronavirus tests on ‘Jurassic World: Dominion.’ All tested negative shortly after, but due to our safety protocols we’re going to pause for two weeks. Back soon,” Trevorrow said.

“Late last night, we were informed that the ‘Jurassic World: Dominion’ production experienced a small amount of positive tests for COVID-19,” a spokesperson for Universal said in a statement. “Even though subsequent tests proved negative this morning, due to our rigid protocols and to ensure that the safety and well-being of our entire cast and crew is paramount at all times, those who initially tested positive are currently self-isolating, as are those who they have come into contact with. As a result filming has been temporarily paused and will resume in accordance with established safety guidelines.”

The news comes a day after Universal, the studio behind the blockbuster franchise, reported that “Jurassic World: Dominion” has pushed back its release date. The upcoming installment will now debut on June 10, 2022 — a year later than planned. The movie was initially slated for summer 2021.

“Jurassic World: Dominion,” the sixth entry in the 27-year-old series, had just started rolling cameras in the U.K. when coronavirus started to spread across Europe in March. After a months-long shutdown, it was one of the first high-profile movies to resume filming. The studio implemented intense — and expensive — measures to ensure the production could stay coronavirus-free, including frequent testing and isolating the cast and crew in a hotel. “Dominion” has about three more weeks of material to shoot.

The “Jurassic” property is not the first that was forced to pause production after restarting amid the global health crisis. Days after “The Batman” commenced filming, the Warner Bros. comic book adaptation had to temporarily shut down again because the Caped Crusader himself, Robert Pattinson, tested positive for coronavirus.

Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard are reprising their roles in “Jurassic World: Dominion.” The ensemble cast also includes Laura Dern, Sam Neill, Jeff Goldblum and BD Wong. Trevorrow is returning behind the camera after previously directing 2015’s “Jurassic World.” He also co-wrote the script for the 2018 sequel “Fallen Kingdom.”

“Jurassic” installments are regularly among the highest-grossing movies of the year at the box office. Collectively, the five “Jurassic Park” and “Jurassic World” films have collected more than $5 billion globally. “Jurassic World” and its sequel “Fallen Kingdom” each grossed over $1 billion.

 

Article by: Rebecca Rubin for Variety.

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Creators have taken the undead horde, the blows to the head, the fleeing and wrapped them up with social commentary on issues like class and government ineptitude.

Angela Kang, “The Walking Dead” showrunner, was born and raised in California, but she has relatives in South Korea, where her parents are from. Over the years she had lost touch with them, but one day they contacted her. They had been watching “The Walking Dead.”

“They saw my name on the show,” she said. “They don't watch other American TV, but they were watching this show.” As a lifelong lover of zombies and horror who has worked on the hit show since 2011, Kang said she’s noticed a growing love for zombie lore in South Korea. She was also invited to speak on a panel in South Korea because of the popularity of “The Walking Dead,” which aired its season 10 finale Sunday.

 

It’s all part of a movement in which South Korean creators are taking the zombie genre and making it their own.

“Zombie stories are not a natively popular format in Korea — it's a newer genre out there,” she said.

These creators have put their own stamp on zombies by taking the trappings of the genre — the undead horde, the blows to the head and the continual fleeing — and wrapping it up with social commentary on issues like class and government ineptitude.

The first major Korean zombie film was Yeon Sang-ho’s 2016 thriller “Train to Busan,” which broke box-office records in South Korea and has a cult following stateside. University College London professor Keith B. Wagner called it “South Korea’s first zombie blockbuster” in the book “Rediscovering Korean Cinema.”

The success of “Train to Busan” inspired other Korean auteurs to take a stab at their own version of the zombie apocalypse, and it showed producers that the zombie genre could be lucrative in South Korea. “Kingdom,” written by Kim Eun-hee, is a period zombie television show that recently premiered its second season on Netflix. This past summer, audiences flocked to the theaters for two zombie films released in Korea: Yeon’s follow-up to “Train to Busan,” “Peninsula,” and Cho Il-hyung’s “#Alive,” which was then released on Netflix on Sept. 8.

All of these new Korean zombie works are part of what Kang calls a “creative renaissance happening in Asian storytelling for film and TV,” which recently reached a milestone when Bong Joon-ho’s “Parasite” became the first foreign-language film to win the Oscar for best picture.

How did Koreans even discover zombies in the first place? Through the infectiousness of American pop culture. Yeon said he was inspired by George Romero’s films and Danny Boyle’s “28 Days Later.”

Kim said she was inspired by “Dawn of the Dead” and Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Masque of the Red Death.” “I like zombie movies because of the dramatic tension it renders,” she said. “The fact that anyone, a member of the family, a lover or a next door neighbor can turn into a monster was intriguing. In such situations, I feel that horror and sorrow co-exist.”

“Train to Busan” was a compact thriller that took place primarily on a moving train. “Peninsula” is a combination of a zombie and heist film, about a band of fugitives who return to the overrun Korean peninsula in order to find treasure. It even features a car chase that was inspired by “Mad Max: Fury Road.” In “Peninsula,” similar to “The Walking Dead,” the humans, who kill each other over resources, are as monstrous as the monsters they are fleeing from.

“Through ‘Peninsula,’ I want to ask the question: In a desolate and hopeless world, how can we create hope?” Yeon said. “We will be faced with many unexpected setbacks and misfortunes. I hope this is an opportunity for us to think and ask ourselves, ‘How can we overcome this and not lose our humanity in the process?’”

When she originally created the popular comic “The Kingdom of the Gods,” which was the basis for the “Kingdom” show, Kim was inspired by a real-life epidemic that occurred during the Joseon dynasty. The disease was unknown, so she turned it into a zombie outbreak. In “Kingdom,” those in power are too busy squabbling to properly manage the disease, which soon spins out of control. “I wanted to depict the clumsy management of the epidemic,” she said.

In the end, the zombie outbreak does not discriminate based on class, infecting rich and poor alike. “I wanted to show the scenes where people of various classes — the aristocrats in silk robes, the butchers and gisaeng (similar to Japanese geisha) — devour human flesh in the same exact way to satisfy hunger,” Kim said. “I wanted to portray discrimination through this.” While most zombie narratives take place in the modern era, “Kingdom” sets itself apart by being a period piece (Kim admits that “Game of Thrones” is a “personal favorite” of hers).

In contrast to the sprawl of “Peninsula” and “Kingdom,” “#Alive” is a more intimate exploration of a zombie outbreak. Cho co-wrote the screenplay with American writer Matt Naylor. It follows a young man who is alone in his apartment when Seoul is overrun by the undead. While in isolation, his mental health starts to deteriorate.

When “#Alive” was released in South Korea, it had the highest first-day theater attendance rate since January. The film was finished before the Covid-19 outbreak, but Cho believes audiences flocked to see “#Alive” in theaters because its themes hit close to home.

“The film resonated with many people because it is comparable to our current reality, where we are quarantined and distanced, filled with uncertainty and fear,” he said. Cho added that the film was a metaphor for the importance of maintaining human connection, even in a world where humans can be a vector for disease.

“People tend to distance themselves from feeling emotions of love or wanting to understand each other when they are isolated and alone,” he said. “The convenience of civilization, such as technology in the modern world, makes it easy for people to conveniently isolate themselves and forget a society of sharing. I wanted the relationships in '#Alive' to portray the process of reclaiming those emotions in an extreme situation. I hoped the audience could be reminded of the emotion of being alive when being together, not when by ourselves.”

Cho sees zombies as the next evolution (or to use a term from “Kingdom,” a mutation) of the Korean horror genre. Dubbed “K-horror” by fans, the genre includes monster films like Bong Joon-ho’s “The Host” and ghost stories like Kim Jee-woon's “A Tale of Two Sisters.”

“I think zombies are an impactful genre with many global and multicultural factors, and those characteristics met with the Korean horror genre and are creating stronger and newer content,” he said. “Desire for something new is universal and natural in all genres.”

With the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic and the renewed public interest in pandemic narratives, zombie stories don’t seem to be dying out anytime soon. "The Walking Dead" has gone back to production and will air six new episodes in early 2021. AMC recently announced that the show will end in 2022, but Kang is working on a spinoff. Meanwhile, Netflix has taken an interest in producing and distributing Korean content; it co-produced “Kingdom” and its new original Korean zombie series, “All of Us Are Dead,” will be released in early 2021.

All of the artists interviewed for this story insisted that despite its bloody trappings, zombies are an inherently hopeful genre.

“I think that there can be hope, perversely, in the midst of a horror story,” Kang said. “The general structure tends to be that you face this unease and evil that feels so monstrous and hard to understand. And over time, you are drawing on inner strength and the strength of others around you to defeat it. There's something about that is inherently hopeful.”

At the very least, zombie narratives can teach audiences how to survive the present Covid-19 pandemic. Yeon said, “I believe that any disaster can be overcome when the system and the citizens work together.”

 

Article by: Diep Tran for NBC News.

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Trigger Warning: This article discusses s*xual ass*ult.

France’s National Film Board (CNC) has launched a workshop for producers who work in the film, TV and video games industry, along with other measures aimed at uncovering and preventing sexual misconduct during shoots and post-production.

The CNC collaborated with feminist orgs 50/50 Future and the European Association Against Violence Towards Women in the Workplace, and consulted with industry professionals to draft the measures.

“This year has been disrupted by [the pandemic] and will continue to be for the months to come but it’s not the time to back track on issues that are as important and crucial,” said Dominique Boutonnat, president of the CNC.

Boutonnat said the current health crisis has created some uncertainty for many workers within the industry who might fear losing their jobs. This could lead to situations where employees or freelancers won’t be inclined to speak out about abuse, in order to avoid compromising their livelihoods.

The first of the 90 workshops that will be hosted at the CNC took place on Tuesday (Oct. 6). Over the next three years, the CNC aims to have 9,000 professionals trained.

On top of completing the workshop, producers will need to have fulfilled other requirements in order to be eligible for all subsidies from the CNC.

Among the mandatory measures, companies with more than 250 employees will need to have an in-house counsellor specialized in sexual misconduct, and an internal hot line, as well as sign a pledge to ensure gender parity and diversity. During shoots, an on-site counsellor will also be mandatory.

“This is the beginning of a new era where we will all be on an even-level playing field,” said Boutonnat.

The French movie industry started fully embracing the #MeToo movement around a year ago, following allegations made by Adele Haenel, one of the country’s most powerful actresses, who accused the director Christophe Ruggia of having sexually harassed her for years from the time she was 12.

 

Article by: Elsa Keslassy for Variety.

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Between the cascade of release date changes announced by Warner Bros. yesterday — including moving “Dune” to Oct. 1, 2021, “The Batman” to March 4, 2022 and “The Flash” to Nov. 4, 2022 — and Disney’s announcement on Sept. 23 that the studio was moving the bulk of its 2020 feature releases to 2021, it’s safe to say that the domestic theatrical business has effectively shut down for the rest of 2020. Just three major studio releases —  DreamWorks’ “The Croods: A New Age,” Pixar’s “Soul,” and Warner Bros. “Wonder Woman 1984” — remain on the calendar for this year, the latter two written in the faintest pencil marks possible.

What is also immediately clear, however, is that theater owners now have a bonanza of potential blockbusters awaiting them to revive exhibition next year, especially when it comes to the backlog of superhero movies.

Consider that by the time “Black Widow” opens on its newest release date of May 7, 2021, it will have been 22 months since a film from the Marvel Cinematic Universe has played in theaters, a drought that has only further exacerbated the perilous health for exhibitors.

After the drought, comes the flood: After “Black Widow’s” premiere, eight Marvel Studios productions or co-productions are scheduled to play in theaters over the subsequent 14 months.

May 7, 2021: “Black Widow” (Marvel Studios)

July 9, 2021: “Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings” (Marvel Studios)

Nov. 5, 2021: “Eternals” (Marvel Studios)

Dec. 17, 2021: Untitled “Spider-Man: Far From Home” sequel (Sony Pictures and Marvel Studios)

Feb. 11, 2022: “Thor: Love and Thunder” (Marvel Studios)

March 25, 2022: “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” (Marvel Studios)

May 6, 2022: “Black Panther II” (Marvel Studios)

July 8, 2022: “Captain Marvel 2” (Marvel Studios)

At least, for now. “Black Widow” and “Eternals” are effectively finished, and “Shang-Chi” was midway through production during the shutdown. But after “Eternals” opens next November, there are five MCU features scheduled to open between December 2021 and July 2022, all of which would almost certainly have to start production in the first half of next year to make their dates, on top of the four TV series — “Hawkeye,” “Ms. Marvel,” “She-Hulk,” and “Moon Knight” — that Marvel Studios is producing for Disney Plus for 2022. (A fifth Marvel Studios/Disney Plus series centering on Samuel L. Jackson’s Nick Fury is currently in development.)

That is…a lot of titles to marshal amid a pandemic in which widespread vaccination is not expected until mid-2021 at the earliest, COVID-19 cases are spiking in Central Europe, and soundstage facilities required for massive productions are ever more scarce.

Also consider that Disney is packing a release calendar that also features superhero films from Sony Pictures (part of the studio’s expanding cinematic universe of Spider-Man characters) and the DC Films productions from Warner Bros.

When factoring all those films, 12 superhero movies are set to open over 16 months from March 2021 through July 2022.

March 19, 2021: “Morbius” (Sony Pictures)

May 7, 2021: “Black Widow” (Marvel Studios)

June 25, 2021: “Venom: Let There Be Carnage” (Sony Pictures)

July 9, 2021: “Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings” (Marvel Studios)

Aug, 6, 2021: “The Suicide Squad” (DC Films)

Nov. 5, 2021: “Eternals” (Marvel Studios)

Dec. 17, 2021: Untitled “Spider-Man: Far From Home” sequel (Sony Pictures and Marvel Studios)

Feb. 11, 2022: “Thor: Love and Thunder” (Marvel Studios)

March 4, 2022: “The Batman” (DC Films)

March 25, 2022: “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” (Marvel Studios)

May 6, 2022: “Black Panther II” (Marvel Studios)

July 8, 2022: “Captain Marvel 2” (Marvel Studios)

Granted, that’s as the release schedule looks today. If we’ve learned anything over these past six months — heck, over the past two weeks — it’s that the pandemic has felled the best laid plans of every studio in town. It’s unclear, for example, whether enough theaters can reopen to sustain DC Films’ “Wonder Woman 1984” at its newest release date of Dec. 25 — meaning that film may also need to push into the already cramped 2021 calendar. Production delays have already forced DC Films’ “Black Adam” to abandon a Dec. 2021 release and vacate the calendar entirely. After “The Batman” had to suspend production for roughly two weeks earlier this month after star Robert Pattinson tested positive for COVID-19, that movie’s release was pushed back five months — providing a stark example of how vulnerable all of these productions are to slowdowns and shutdowns. In light of the death of Chadwick Boseman, it’s also uncertain how Marvel Studios could proceed with “Black Panther II” in its current timeframe.

VFX houses, meanwhile, could be strained by the sheer number of effects-heavy projects to complete over such a concentrated period of time — not to mention the third “Jurassic World” movie, third “Fantastic Beasts” movie, seventh “Mission: Impossible” movie, and fourth “Matrix” movie, all of which are also set to debut over this period as well.

In other words, getting all these movies shot, completed, and released in rapid succession will be a superhuman task.

 

Article by: Adam B. Vary for Variety.

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UCLA's latest diversity report predicts a $159 million movie lacking authenticity from diverse voices will lose $32.2 million in its first weekend, and potentially $130 million in overall box office.

Big and medium-sized Hollywood movies lacking a diversity of voices in front and behind the camera risk box office blues, according to UCLA's latest Hollywood report on racial and cultural inclusivity.

Authentic diversity in storytelling goes well beyond ticking boxes to significantly bolstering a studio's prospects for box office success, researchers with the UCLA-based Center for Scholars and Storytellers concluded in a study unveiled on Tuesday.

They forecast Hollywood tentpoles risk a significant loss in opening weekend box office revenues when there is little racial, cultural or other diversity among cast and crew. A $159 million movie, they predict, will lose $32.2 million in the first weekend, or around 20 percent of its budget, with a potential overall loss of $130 million, or 82 percent, in overall box office.

And a mid-sized $78 million movie, the UCLA researchers estimate, will lose $13.8 million during its opening weekend, with a potential loss of $55.2 million, or 71 percent of its budget, at risk over the course of a box office run.

Their analysis is based on 109 Hollywood films released between 2016 to 2019. “We asked, what is the cost of lacking diversity? Hollywood is a business, and no business wants to leave money on the table,” Yalda Uhls, a UCLA adjunct assistant professor of psychology and founder and executive director of the center, said in a statement.

For their study, the UCLA researchers created an "authentically inclusive representation" rating to identify films with diverse voices, people and cultures, both in front of and behind the camera, and those films that lacked diversity.

The risk in not including diverse voices across a film's production team -- from set decorator or costume designer to director or actor -- is tentpole stories and characters will emerge as stereotypical and not ring true with movie-going audiences.

"While increasing numerical representation behind and in front of the camera is critical, truly empowering people from diverse backgrounds is the key. For example, make sure the writers’ room is open to dissenting opinions, that a wide net is cast for hiring, and that younger, less-tenured voices are encouraged," Uhls, the lead researcher in the UCLA study, recommended.

The report's findings follow box office success of inclusive Hollywood titles like Moonlight, Coco, Black Panther and Crazy Rich Asians, which had diverse casts and key decision-makers.

UCLA’s annual Hollywood Diversity has similarly shown movies with racially diverse casts perform better at the box office, while adding minorities and women still have far to go to achieve parity with their white and male counterparts, particularly in writing and directing jobs.

"The U.S. has a long way to go to make sure that our stories and the stories we tell about our own history truly reflect all of its people. We hope that our findings act as a call to action for the industry," Uhls said.

 

Article by: Etan Vlessing for the Hollywood Reporter.

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'Supermodels' Doc Series Lands at Apple

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Apple has ordered a docuseries that will focus on four of the most famous women ever to walk a runway.

Naomi Campbell, Cindy Crawford, Linda Evangelista and Christy Turlington are the subjects of The Supermodels, a four-part series from Brian Grazer and Ron Howard's Imagine Documentaries and Oscar winner Barbara Kopple (Harlan County, USA, American Dream). The series will feature interviews with all four models and look at how their collective disruption of the 1990s fashion scene continues to reverberate today.

"I have long been curious about the real story behind the 'original supermodels' — the four iconic women who not only defined the world of fashion in the 90s, they set the stage for how beauty became the access point for defining the culture," said Grazer in an Instagram post. "Ron and I feel honored to tell the never before told story of Naomi Campbell, Cindy Crawford, Christy Turlington and Linda Evangelista — and how they became cultural icons, activists for change and role models to millions around the globe. Thrilled to work with these 4 brilliant women and Oscar winning director Barbara Kopple to bring their story to the world."

The series will trace the four women's careers beginning in the 1980s, when they came together and collectively achieved a fame that transcended the fashion industry. It will also track their current efforts in activism, philanthropy and the business world and how they helped pave the way for future generations of models.

The Supermodels is part of an exclusive first-look deal Apple has with Imagine Documentaries for its TV+ streaming platform. Grazer and Howard executive produce with Campbell, Crawford, Evangelista, Turlington, Sara Bernstein and Justin Wilkes.

 

 

Article by: Rick Porter for the Hollywood Reporter.

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Hollywood got a huge shock Saturday night when mega-theater chain Cineworld revealed it is closing down again, including many of its Regal locations in the U.S.

With no new product in the marketplace, a rerelease of the 1993 Halloween cult classic Hocus Pocus was almost able to banish Christopher Nolan's Tenet and take the top spot at the weekend box office with a mere $2 million.

That's a stat no one wants to read, considering this was to have been the weekend that Wonder Woman 1984 unfurled. But, like numerous other fall tentpoles, the superhero sequel relocated out of concern that moviegoers aren't ready to return to the multiplex amid the ongoing pandemic.

That has forced cinema owners to rely on a diet of holdovers like Tenet — which launched over a month ago — smaller indie fare and rereleases, such as Disney's Hocus Pocus.

Over the Oct. 2-4 frame, Tenet took in an estimated $14.2 million globally as it crossed the $300 million mark worldwide. That included a domestic weekend of $2.7 million. Because of its hefty $200 million production budget before marketing, Tenet will need to do $400 million or more to break even. One boost could come if cinemas in New York City and Los Angeles are finally allowed to reopen.

The Warner Bros. film has fared far better overseas, where moviegoing has resumed in earnest — until now.

On Saturday night, Hollywood was left reeling when mega-circuit Cineworld revealed it could close its European locations and Regal Cinemas in the U.S. as early as this week. Insiders say it's not financially feasible for exhibitors to stay open 24/7 until there is a steady flow of event pics, which now isn't until next year.

The news came a day after MGM, Eon Productions and Universal said they were delaying 007 installment No Time to Die from November to April 2021. The only other tentpole remaining on the November calendar is Pixar's Soul, but that is now likely to move.

Cineworld is the second-largest exhibitor in the world and U.S. behind AMC Theatres. So far, neither AMC nor Cinemark have said how they'll respond to the Bond move (both had already reduced their hours of operation at many U.S. locations).

Sources say it could be difficult to release new movies without Regal in play.

 

Article by: Pamela McClintock for the Hollywood Reporter.

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The new James Bond film's delay has left the slate a "virtual ghost town during the months of October and November," says B. Riley's Eric Wold as cinema stocks fall sharply and speaks out against state restrictions.

Riley analyst Eric Wold in a Monday report commented on the delay of the latest James Bond film until April amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic and what it means for the exhibition industry, arguing that Hollywood studios must take a financial hit to help out exhibitors.

The 007 movie's postponement "creates [a] two-month calendar gap," he said. "With the news late Friday that No Time to Die is being moved from November 2020 to April 2021, the already shaky near-term film slate that we have been concerned about since June has now become a virtual ghost town during the months of October and November."

He also assumes that at least one of two animated films scheduled around Thanksgiving, namely Soul and The Croods: A New Age, will "move out of their slots," meaning that "the industry's film slate could essentially be on hold until December."

Wold also had some words for Hollywood studios and local authorities. "While we can understand the studios' desire to hold releases until the release environment is perfect, we also believe studios must be willing to take a hit to feed the industry and keep the exhibitor group from completely falling apart," he said.

And he argued that theater safety protocols are "not well appreciated" by states. "We are still surprised by the state-level restrictions that have continued to be placed upon theater operators while indoor dining and other entertainment options are facing much less severe restrictions," Wold explained. "We have been to the movies three times since the pandemic began (twice in Texas and finally this past weekend in the Bay Area) and have never felt anything less than comfortable about the cleaning procedures and consumer acceptance of the mask and distance requirements. We hope that state and local governments notice these cleaning procedures at some point before the exhibition industry is irreversibly harmed."

The analyst predicted that exhibitors will look to "preserve cash with studios not playing ball."

Cinema stocks opened the week lower despite the broader market moving higher. The London-listed shares of Regal owner Cineworld, which earlier in the day had said it would close its theaters in the U.S. and U.K., were down nearly 40 percent as of early afternoon London time.

In the U.S., AMC Theatres' stock was down more than 12 percent as of 9:45 a.m. New York time, while Cinema shares were down just less than 12 percent. Marcus Corp.'s stock dropped 7 percent, and Imax's stock fell less than 6 percent.

 

Article by: Georg Szalai for the Hollywood Reporter.

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Regal, the second-largest U.S. movie theater chain, is closing its theaters two months after reopening. It’s a decision, made in response to the delay of “No Time to Die,” that underscores the immense fallout surrounding the fact that moviegoing just isn’t a popular activity during a pandemic.

For now, it’s unclear if other major operations like AMC Theatres or Cinemark will follow suit. Cineworld, Regal’s parent company, is also shuttering locations in the U.K. Independently owned and operated theaters, many of which are in small towns across the country, have been feeling the pressure for some time now, with many concerned about their chances for survival in a world without exciting new movies to offer. Many have scaled back hours and limited the number of days they are open. Others, like Regal, opted to close back down entirely, surmising that they will lose less money with the lights off than they would with only a scant amount of patrons.

It wasn’t supposed to be this dire.

When Chris Johnson, CEO of Classic Cinemas, a family-operated movie theater chain with locations in Illinois and Wisconsin, reopened for business after months-long closures, he was in rarified company.

For the first time ever, his theaters ranked among the top 10 earners in the country based on weekend ticket sales. In pre-coronavirus times, that feat would be nearly impossible for a smaller venue. The highest-grossing theaters are routinely in New York and California, given higher ticket prices and the fact that they house more populous cities. But with cinemas still closed on the coasts, Johnson’s had an unexpected moment of glory.

“When we opened in June,” he recalled, “I had the No. 7 theater in the country. I thought that was cool.”

Yet in subsequent weeks, attendance wasn’t enough to justify keeping the lights on. After just a few weeks back in business, Johnson had to make what he refers to as a “heartbreaking” decision: He closed down his theaters. He doesn’t know, realistically, when he’ll be able to welcome customers again.

“We found there was a core audience who came out right away and was very excited, but those were the only ones who came out,” he said.

Johnson’s struggle is one that many in the exhibition community continue to face amid the coronavirus crisis. He followed the recommended safety protocols, instituting professional auditorium cleanings and training staff to adhere to enhanced cleaning procedures. But, he notes, “those costs are the same, whether it’s busy or not.” And though increased cleaning measures might ensure consumers feel safer in theaters, there’s nothing, cinema owners lament, that can make up for one plain fact: “Without consistent new movies, there isn’t enough to sustain the business,” Johnson said. “You can’t release one blockbuster and hope for the best.”

Rolando Rodriguez, president and CEO of Marcus Theaters, says he understands why Bond’s backers decided to postpone 007’s latest mission into 2021. Still, he called the news “challenging.” Even before the delay was announced, he had to close down 17 venues that had reopened. Marcus Theaters — with cinemas in Arkansas, Colorado, Georgia, New York, Pennsylvania and 12 other states — has 51 locations still open, but they are operating with reduced hours and less screen times.

“As exhibitors, we wish there were more films kept in this time period,” Rodriguez said. “But we recognize these are difficult financial decisions they have to make. We’re asking our friends in distribution to help us. We’re ready, and we need their film product.”

Like many in his position, Dale Coleman, who runs shop at Stone Theaters, chose strategically to turn marquee lights back on at his theaters in South Carolina in time for “Tenet” to debut over Labor Day weekend. But after “Tenet” reported lackluster U.S. ticket sales in the U.S., it sparked another mass exodus on the release calendar. In addition to “No Time to Die,” titles like “Wonder Woman 1984,” “Black Widow” and “Candyman” also pushed their release dates. Pixar’s animated adventure “Soul,” which opens on Nov. 20, is the next tentpole scheduled to hit the big screen — and “Wonder Woman 1984” and “Dune” are slated for release in December — but it’s looking increasingly likely those dates could change, especially if larger theater chains shut down and New York venues stay closed.

“We’ve been struggling and trying to keep things alive up until this point,” Coleman said. “It’s been very difficult.”

Coleman’s venues stayed open for less than a month. During those weeks, Coleman said his best-performing location was down 87% in revenues. After 24 days, he closed his theaters back down, citing that it was “a smarter business decision to close those locations until a time when there are really meaningful films that our valued guests want to see.”

“It was the hardest thing I’ve ever had to do in my career, and I’ve been doing this for a very long time,” Coleman said.

Roughly 30% of theaters remain closed, including most locations in New York and Los Angeles — the two biggest markets for moviegoing in the country. Box office experts predict it’s unlikely any release dates for major movies will stick without those cities open.

“The biggest problem is that middle America can’t support a tentpole film on its own. You really need the coasts,” said Eric Handler, a media and entertainment analyst at MKM Partners. “Until we can get New York and California back, I don’t think we’ll see any big major movies coming out.”

The issue is something of a chicken and egg situation. Studios are hesitant to theatrically release films, especially those they have paid hundreds of millions to make and market, if people aren’t willing to go to the movies. However, movie theaters can’t sustain business without new products to offer customers. The situation is already critical, but exhibitors are warning that if these conditions continue, they might not survive without government assistance. Leaders of the nation’s movie theater businesses are calling on Washington for help. They issued a letter last week, cautioning that nearly 70% of “small and mid-sized movie theater companies will be forced to file for bankruptcy or to close permanently” without help.

“We desperately need some government funding to help us. We need a second round of stimulus,” Coleman said. “There’s a time when we’re going to run out of resources and won’t be able to reopen. That’s about as blunt as I can put it. I don’t think that just applies to Stone Theaters. It applies to many exhibitors.”

 

Article by: Rebecca Rubin for Variety.

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Warner Bros. and Legendary Pictures have delayed the release of “Dune,” the sci-fi epic from director Denis Villeneuve. It will no longer premiere Dec. 18 and is now slated to debut in theaters Oct. 1, 2021.

A spokesperson for Warner Bros. declined to comment.

The move was expected after the studio pushed “Wonder Woman 1984” back from early October to Christmas Day, putting the comic book sequel’s big screen debut one week ahead of “Dune.” In normal circumstances, but especially during the pandemic, Warner Bros. wouldn’t cannibalize ticket sales for a fellow studio release.

Also accelerating the news: James Bond sequel “No Time to Die,” which was originally set to launch at the end of November, was pushed back to 2021. That decision prompted Regal, the second-biggest U.S. theater chain, to close down its venues after reopening in August. If major movies continue to vacate their release dates, other circuits may be forced to shut down again as well.

Warner Bros.’ “The Batman” — starring Robert Pattinson and directed by Matt Reeves — is also currently dated for Oct. 1, 2021, so there’s a chance the Caped Crusader’s next big screen adventure will be pushed back again.

“Dune” was originally scheduled for November but its release date has been shuffled multiple times amid the pandemic. It is one of many anticipated films that was shelved as a result of movie theater closures in March.

Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet,” also from Warner Bros., was expected to spark a nationwide return to the movies and give rival studios the confidence to unveil major tentpoles during the pandemic. But attendance has been slower than expected. “Tenet’s” lackluster ticket sales from U.S. cinemas has forced studios to pump the brakes on releasing big-budgeted movies in the midst of a global health crisis. Box office analysts don’t expect many new films to grace theaters until important moviegoing markets such as New York City and Los Angeles are granted permission to reopen. Given the reluctance to debut blockbusters, the holiday season — typically one of the busiest times of year for multiplexes — will likely be lighter than usual.

“Dune” is based on Frank Herbert’s 1965 novel and stars Timothee Chalamet, Rebecca Ferguson, Oscar Isaac, Josh Brolin and Zendaya.

 

Article by: Rebecca Rubin for Variety.

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Craving a flick on the big screen? Here’s our latest rundown of new and classic movies playing at drive-ins, pop-ups or rooftops near you. We’ll update as new titles and showtimes for this week are added:

 

Beyond Fest

Mission Tiki Drive-In Theatre, 10798 Ramona Ave., Montclair

$17-$42; advance purchase required. beyondfest.com

 

“Synchronic” with “Bad Hair,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 5

“The Dark and the Wicked” with “The Reckoning,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 6

 

Drive-in at the Park/L.A. County District 2

Various locations, L.A.

Free; advance reservations required. driveinatthepark.com

 

“Remember the Titans,” 7 p.m. Oct. 2 (Kenneth Hahn Park)

“Moana,” 7 p.m. Oct. 3 (Magic Johnson Park)

 

“Grace and Grit: Dance in the Time of Covid”

Santa Monica College, Bundy Campus, East Parking Lot, 3171 S. Bundy Drive, L.A.

$50 per car; advance purchase required. westsideballet.com

 

Dance film featuring Westside Ballet, Barak Ballet, Ballet Folklórico Flor de Mayo, and others, 7:30 and 10 p.m. Oct. 9-10

 

Legion Drive-in/The Hollywood Legion Theater at Post 43

2035 N. Highland Ave., Hollywood

$65 per car; advance tickets required. hollywoodlegiontheater.com

 

“E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 3“The Muppet Movie,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 4“Jaws,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 5“Ferris Bueller’s Day Off,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 6“Jurassic Park,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 7“Saving Private Ryan,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 8“Raiders of the Lost Ark,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 9

 

“Chinatown,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 13

 

Los Angeles Arts Society Drive-in Cinema

Gardena Cinema, 14948 Crenshaw Blvd., Gardena

$25-$50 per car. eventbrite.com

 

“Beetlejuice,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 1, 4-5“The Craft,” 10:30 p.m. Oct. 1-2“From Dusk Till Dawn,” 10:30 p.m. Oct. 3-4“The Monster Squad,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 8-9“Candyman” (1992), 10:30 p.m. Oct. 8-9“The Addams Family,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 10-11“Carrie” (1976), 10:30 p.m. Oct. 10-11“The Corpse Bride,” 7 p.m. Oct. 15-18“Scream,” 10 p.m. Oct. 15-18“8th Annual Sunscreen Film Festival,” 7 p.m. Oct. 22“Frankenstein” (1931), 7 p.m. Oct. 23“Bride of Frankenstein,” 7 p.m. Oct. 24-25“A Nightmare on Elm Street,” 10 p.m. Oct. 23-24“Friday the 13th” (1980), 12:30 a.m. and 10 p.m. Oct. 25“Halloween” (1978), 7 p.m. Oct. 29-Nov. 1

 

“The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” (1974), 10 p.m. Oct. 29-Nov. 1

 

Mission Tiki Drive-In Theatre

10798 Ramona Ave., Montclair

$10; kids ages 5-9, $1; under age 5, free. missiontiki.com

 

“Ava,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 1; 10:20 p.m. Oct. 2-5“The Broken Hearts Gallery,” 9:25 p.m. Oct. 1 “Deadpool,” 9:35 p.m. Oct. 1“The Last Shift,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 1; 9:25 p.m. Oct. 2-5“The New Mutants,” 7:35 p.m. Oct. 1; 7:30 and 11:15 p.m. Oct. 2-3; 7:30 p.m. Oct. 4-5“On the Rocks,” 7:30 and 11:20 p.m. Oct. 2-3; 7:30 p.m. Oct. 4-5“Shortcut,” 9:30 p.m. Oct. 2-5

 

“Tenet,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 1-5

 

Movies in Your Car at Seaside Cinema

Ventura County Fairgrounds, 10 Harbor Blvd., Ventura

$29 per car; advance purchase required. concertsinyourcar.com

 

“The Big Lebowski,” 7 p.m. Oct. 3“Ghostbusters” (1984), 7 p.m. Oct. 13“The Blair Witch Project,” 7 p.m. Oct. 14“Scream,” 7 p.m. Oct. 26“Hotel Transylvania,” 7 p.m. Oct. 27“The Silence of the Lambs,” 7 p.m. Oct. 28“Halloween” (1978), 7 p.m. Oct. 29

 

“The Biggest Little Farm,” 6 p.m. Nov. 1

 

Paramount Drive-In Theatres

7770 Rosecrans Ave., Paramount

$10; ages 5-8, $4; under age 5, free. paramountdrivein.com

 

“The Forty-Year-Old Version,” 10:55 p.m. Oct. 2-8“On the Rocks,” 10:55 p.m. Oct. 2-8

 

“Tenet,” 7:30 and 11 p.m. Oct 1; 7:30 p.m. Oct. 2-8

 

Regency Theatres’ the Plant Drive-in7876 Van Nuys Blvd., Van Nuys

 

$30 per car; regencymovies.com

 

“Demolition Man,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 1“Beetlejuice,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 2“Ghostbusters,” 9:45 p.m. Oct. 2“The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” (1974), 7:30 p.m. Oct. 3“The Lost Boys,” 9:45 p.m. Oct. 3“Hocus Pocus,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 4

 

“Stand by Me,” 7:30 p.m. Nov. 1

 

Rubidoux Drive-In

3770 Opal St., Riverside

$10; kids ages 5-9, $1; under age 5, free. rubidouxswapmeet.com

 

“Ava,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 1“The Call,” 9:35 p.m. Oct. 3-8“Deadpool,” 9:25 p.m. Oct. 1“Kajillionaire,” 9:20 p.m. Oct. 1“The New Mutants,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 1, 3-8“Possesser,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 3-8“Shortcut,” 9:25 p.m. Oct. 3-8

 

“Tenet,” 7:30 and 10:20 p.m. Oct. 1-8

 

San Fernando Valley Summer Drive-in Nights

Westfield Fashion Square, 14006 Riverside Drive, Sherman Oaks

$20-$95; ages 3 and under free; advance purchase required. myvalleypass.squarespace.com

 

“Pet Sematary” (1989), 10 p.m. Oct. 16“Child’s Play” (1988), 10 p.m. Oct. 17

 

“Poltergeist” (1982), 10 p.m. Oct. 23

 

Screamfest Horror Film Festival/Malibu

Calamigos Ranch, 327 Latigo Canyon Road, Malibu

Free; reservations required. screamfestla.com

 

“Books of Blood,” 7 p.m. Oct. 6

 

Screamfest Horror Film Festival/Van Nuys

The Plant Drive-in, 7876 Van Nuys Blvd., Van Nuys

$20; advance purchase required.

 

“Halloween” (1978) plus selected shorts, 7 p.m. Oct. 7“Halloween II,” 9:45 p.m. Oct. 7“Friday the 13th Part V: A New Beginning,” 7 p.m. Oct. 8“Initiation” plus selected shorts, 9 p.m. Oct. 8“An Ideal Host” plus selected shorts, 7 p.m. Oct. 9“Anonymous Animals” plus selected shorts, 6:30 p.m. Oct. 10“Caveat” plus selected shorts, 9 p.m. Oct. 10Selected shorts, 6:30 p.m. Oct. 11“The Brain That Wouldn’t Die” plus selected shorts, 9 p.m. Oct. 11“Sanzaru” plus selected shorts, 6:30 p.m. Oct. 12Selected shorts, 9:15 p.m. Oct. 11“Mr. Mercedes” 7 p.m. Oct. 13 (free screening)“A Ghost Awaits” plus selected shorts, 9 p.m. Oct. 13“Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers” plus selected shorts, 7 p.m. Oct. 14“Halloween 4: The Revenge of Michael Myers” plus selected shorts, 9:45 p.m. Oct. 14

 

“Thirst” plus selected shorts, 7 p.m. Oct. 15

 

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Secret Movie Club/Downtown L.A.

Parking lot, 1027 S. Los Angeles St., downtown L.A.

$23-$37; advance tickets required. secretmovieclub.com

 

“The Who’s Tommy” with “Pink Floyd’s The Wall,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 1

 

Secret Movie Club/Glendale

Sears Parking Lot, 211 W. California Ave., Glendale

$23-$37; advance tickets required. secretmovieclub.com

 

“Poltergeist” (1982), 7:15 p.m. Oct. 2“The Lost Boys,” 10 p.m. Oct. 2“The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” (1974), 7:15 p.m. Oct. 3“Phantasm,” 9:30 p.m. Oct. 3“E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial,” 7:15 p.m. Oct. 4“Death Proof,” 7:15 p.m. Oct. 8“Maximum Overdrive,” 10 p.m. Oct. 8“Trick R Treat,” 7:15 p.m. Oct. 9“Creepshow,” 9:30 p.m. Oct. 9“It: Chapter One,” 7:15 p.m. Oct. 10“Carrie” (1976), 10:15 p.m. Oct. 1o“Hocus Pocus,” 7 p.m. Oct. 11“Get Out,” 7:15 p.m. Oct. 16“The Cabin in the Woods,” 9:45 p.m. Oct. 16“The Exorcist,” 7:15 p.m. Oct. 17“The Conjuring,” 10:05 p.m. Oct. 17“A Nightmare on Elm Street,” 7:15 p.m. Oct. 23“A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: The Dream Warriors” 9:30 p.m. Oct. 23“Ghostbusters” (1984), 7 p.m. Oct. 24“Beetlejuice,” 9:30 p.m. Oct. 24“The Nightmare Before Christmas,” 7 p.m. Oct. 25“Friday the 13th,” 7:15 p.m. Oct. 30“Friday the 13th Part V: The Final Chapter” 9:30 p.m. Oct. 30

 

“Coco,” 7 p.m. Nov. 1

 

Starlite Movies

Brea Mall, 1065 Brea Mall, Brea

$35 per car; advance purchase required. starlitemovienight.com

 

“Casper,” 8 p.m. Oct. 1“The Goonies,” 8 p.m. Oct. 2

 

“Beetlejuice,” 8 p.m. Oct. 4

 

Summer Weekend Drive-in at the Roadium

The Roadium Open Air Market, 2500 W. Redondo Beach Blvd., Torrance

$25, $30 per car; tickets also available on-site. eventbrite.com

 

“12 Hour Shift,” 6:30 p.m. Oct. 1“Shrek 2,” 6 p.m. Oct. 2“She Is the Ocean,” 6:30 p.m. Oct. 8“Ghostbusters” (1984), 7 p.m. Oct. 10“A Nightmare on Elm Street,” 7 p.m. Oct. 29“Ratatouille,” 6 p.m. Nov. 14

 

“The Polar Express,” 6 p.m. Dec. 11

 

The Sunset Strip Presents Late Night Drive-In

The Andaz Hotel, 8401 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood

$56.25 per car. loop1tickets.com

 

“A Nightmare on Elm Street,” 8 p.m. Oct. 2“The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” (1974), 8 p.m. Oct. 3“The Long Goodbye,” 8 p.m. Oct. 9“The Man Who Fell to Earth,” 8 p.m. Oct. 10“Idiocracy” (1978), 8 p.m. Oct. 16“The Hills Have Eyes” (1977), 8 p.m. Oct. 23“Halloween” (1978), 8 p.m. Oct. 24“Suspiria” (1977), 8 p.m. Oct. 29“An American Werewolf in London,” 8 p.m. Oct. 30

 

“Young Frankenstein” with “Dead Alive,” 8 p.m. Oct. 31

 

Van Buren Drive-In Theatre

3035 Van Buren Blvd., Riverside

$10; kids ages 5-9, $1; under age 5, free. vanburendriveintheatre.com

 

“Ava,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 1“The Call,” 9:30 p.m. Oct. 2-5“Deadpool,” 9:25 p.m. Oct. 1“Kajillionaire,” 9:30 p.m. Oct. 1“The New Mutants,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 1; 7:30 and 11 p.m. Oct. 2-3; 7:30 p.m. Oct. 4-5“Possessor,” 7:30 and 11:15 p.m. Oct. 2-3; 7:30 p.m. Oct. 4-5“Short Cut,” 9:30 p.m. Oct. 2-5

 

“Tenet,” 7:30 and 10:30 p.m. Oct. 1-5

 

Vineland Drive-In Theatre

443 N. Vineland Ave., Industry

$4, $10; children under age 5, free. vinelanddriveintheater.com

 

“Alone,” 10:30 p.m. Oct. 1; 10:45 p.m. Oct. 2; 10:30 p.m. Oct. 4“Ava,” 7:45 p.m. Oct. 1; 10:45 p.m. Oct. 3, 5“Bill & Ted Face the Music,” 10:30 p.m. Oct. 1“The Broken Hearts Gallery,” 7:45 p.m. Oct. 1“The Call,” 10:45 p.m. Oct. 2; 10:30 p.m. Oct. 4, 6“The Forty-Year-Old Version,” 10:45 p.m. Oct. 2-3; 10:30 p.m. Oct. 4; 7:30 p.m. Oct. 5; 10:30 p.m. Oct. 6; 7:30 p.m. Oct. 7“The Last Shift,” 10:30 p.m. Oct. 1; 10:45 p.m. Oct. 3; 10:30 p.m. Oct. 7“No Escape,” 7:45 p.m. Oct. 1“On the Rocks,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 2-7“Possessor,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 2-4; 10:45 p.m. Oct. 5; 7:30 p.m. Oct. 6-7“Save Yourselves,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 2-5; 10:30 p.m. Oct. 6; 7:30 p.m. Oct. 7“Shortcut,” 7:45 p.m. Oct. 1“The Trial of the Chicago 7,” 7:30 p.m. Oct. 2-4; 10:45 p.m. Oct. 5; 7:30 p.m. Oct. 6; 10:30 p.m. Oct. 7“12 Hour Shift,” 10:45 p.m. Oct. 2-3; 10:30 p.m. Oct. 7

 

“Unhinged,” 10:30 p.m. Oct. 1, 4, 7

 

Yeti Film Tour: Drive-In Edition

City National Grove of Anaheim, 2200 E. Katella Ave., Anaheim

$20, $75 per car plus $23.50 per person; children under 5, free; advance purchase required. yeti.com

 

Selected outdoor-adventure documentaries, 8 p.m. Oct. 2

 

Article by: Matt Looper for the LA Times.

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"We see an elongated, challenging recovery for both film studios and movie theaters," Credit Suisse's Meghan Durkin wrote in an investors note.

With film production slowly restarting and cinemas reopening amid the COVID-19 pandemic, Credit Suisse analyst Meghan Durkin says Hollywood's content pipeline looks "increasingly risky."

And the questions of just how comfortable cinemagoers will be, given the pandemic's current trajectory and how much COVID-19 protocols and insurance are inflating film budgets, have raised red flags for the Wall Street market-watcher.

"While theater companies are optimistic regarding a stacked 2021 Hollywood film release slate, benefitting from key 2020 titles pushed out to 2021, we continue to see risk to both 4Q20 and 2021 releases due to concerns regarding movie-goers willingness to return to theaters as COVID-19 lingers," Durkin argued in an Oct. 1 investors note.

As film production resumes after being halted early on during the pandemic, the Credit Suisse analyst sees COVID-19 insurance and on-set costs jacking up studio budgets, and possibly changing the mix of tentpoles that reach the local multiplex.

Durkin said film production insurance that once cost less than 1 percent of a budget now runs to eight to 10 percent of production costs. "On top of this, COVID-19 insurance will cost another 7-10 percent, plus the costs of health and safety protocols on set. We estimate the total incremental COVID-19 costs range from 21 percent to 29 percent of a film’s production budget, or $26 milion on a $100 million film," the analyst wrote.

Durkin cited the Hollywood studios exploring the Premium video-on-demand window as a new business model as the prospect of more closed theaters and self-isolating audiences embracing streaming platforms has distributors pushing tentpole releases online.

But she urges the studios to reconsider which movies they greenlight in the future, given continuing pandemic risks.

"Studio chiefs that have been focused on evolving film windows and distribution methods might start to reconsider the types of films they produce near term – as comedies and dramas (which studios have been shifting away from in recent years) carry lower production risk than action films (which make up 35% of global box office the past four years)," Durkin argued.

The bottom line, she added, is the recovery for Hollywood's film pipeline needs to be pushed out.

"With 4Q20, 2020 and 2021 film slates looking unlikely to hold, especially with Hollywood film productions not yet ramping back to a normalized level, and film production costs dramatically higher in a COVID-19 world, we see an elongated, challenging recovery for both film studios and movie theaters," Durkin concluded.

 

Article by: Etan Vlessing for the Hollywood Reporter.

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In Hollywood, Hispanic stories usually mean ones from other countries. The features and documentaries on this list explore U.S. lives that deserve the spotlight, too.

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Hollywood still doesn’t get it.

Latinos are not a monolith. The context, details and nuances that go into telling the story of a family in Mexico City won’t be the same for the story of a family in Los Angeles, which would in turn differ for one in Miami. American-born or -raised Latinos have unique life experiences, straddling the line between assimilation and pride in their heritage, which the big studios frequently fail to acknowledge. Such movies do exist, though often on the periphery. And they’re worth seeking out to help foster conversations about the intricacies of Latinidad. That’s why, as we observe National Hispanic Heritage Month, I’ve put together a list of must-watch films centered on American Latino protagonists.

Why is such a specific list necessary?

Largely untold in mass media or classrooms, the history of Latinos in the United States is long, winding and impossible to dissect in simple terms. Shaped by arbitrary borders in the aftermath of wars, colonization and waves of migration from nearly two dozen nations across the Americas, our presence is intrinsic to this country. Yet, American Latinos remain mostly invisible in our collective narrative, a narrative that very much includes the images we consume.

We do get plenty of movies about Latino experiences, just not American ones. Every year festivals and theaters screen numerous films from Mexico and South America. Then there’s the work of the Three Amigos, the gifted Mexican directors Alfonso Cuarón, Alejandro González Iñárritu and Guillermo del Toro, who tell lavish stories with great universality that we can all enjoy. The same can be said of Pixar’s “Coco,” the 2017 hit set in a small Mexico town with Mexican characters. American Latinos can see themselves and their families in it because of our inherent connections, of course.

But border-crossing stories or those set in Latin America don’t fill the void created by the lack of American Latino narratives. They don’t reflect the lives of, say, Chicanos in California, Tejanos in rural Texas or Nuyoricans in the Bronx — specific identities that have faced oppression in the United States. Instead, the entertainment industry desperately tries to fit all Latinos under one label, devoid of nuance, often erasing Afro-Latinos and Indigenous peoples.

Ideally more movies would address the breadth of Latino experience, whether immigrant or born and raised here, Spanish speaker or English only. It’s not the Three Amigos’ personal responsibility to tap into those narratives, but the deserved success of Cuarón, Iñárritu and del Toro hasn’t translated into more access for American Latinos.

Not only are roles and productions centered on American Latinos scarce, but those that do exist rarely receive proper recognition. The last American Latino star to be nominated for an Academy Award was Benicio Del Toro for “21 Grams” (2003). No American Latinos have ever been nominated for best director. The Criterion Collection, the curated Blu-ray/DVD archive of acclaimed films, features only one with an American Latino protagonist (“The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez” by Robert M. Young). The sole American Latino filmmaker included, Gregory Nava, made it in for a film about Guatemalan migrants (“El Norte”).

There are, of course, landmark cultural artifacts that have afforded American Latinos a few opportunities to see themselves onscreen, even if some of these movies are not included in the mainstream canon: seminal works by Nava (“Selena,” “My Family”) and Luis Valdez (“Zoot Suit,” “La Bamba”), or those starring the likes of Edward James Olmos (“Stand and Deliver”) or Rita Moreno (“West Side Story”).

Thankfully, over the last two decades, a new generation of storytellers and actors has emerged and added contributions to this alternative canon.

The list below is not comprehensive but a primer, a collection of some of the most artistically remarkable or culturally significant stories centered on American Latino protagonists to hit screens since the year 2000, whether directed by Latinos or non-Latinos.

As a Latino film critic in a field that is largely white, I put this list together with the goal of presenting a mosaic of realities. I sought out films that represented the American Latino experience with complexity rather than stereotypes, that provided a deeper understanding. The vast majority of these choices had a prominent festival presence and received great critical reception. Yes, it’s still rare to see such stories at major film festivals, and so titles that managed that feat — like the Sundance selection “The Infiltrators,” a formally inventive indie that highlights young undocumented people for whom this country is the only home they’ve ever known — stood out.

There were other considerations. In some cases, as with “Spy Kids,” they are rare examples of box-office success and recognition among mainstream audiences. I also took into account that when we talk about American Latinos, Mexican-American stories dominate, so I tried to include movies from other points of views. And a handful of these choices deal with the intersection of Latino and LGBTQ identities, which I believe is also very important. (The ability to watch these films now was also crucial, and several standout titles, like the indie drama “Manito,” weren’t available to stream. That must change.)

Many documentaries made the list — a mode that has been especially accessible for American Latino directors over the years. Three are portraits of emblematic figures, some examine how the justice system fails marginalized individuals, and one takes on the intricacies of Puerto Rican perspectives. A handful are intergenerational stories about the clash between old conventions and modern points of view, others speak to the relationship between immigrant parents and their American-born children.

What all the movies on this list share on an ideological level is a focus on identity that’s not Latin American but neither conventionally American as defined by Hollywood. That they are truly American stories — accentuated by the beauty and in many cases the trauma of our ancestry — makes them invaluable.

 

2020

‘Mucho Mucho Amor’

First-person accounts explore the legacy of the Puerto Rican astrologer Walter Mercado.

This documentary features interviews with American Latinos who found a connection to their heritage in Mercado’s ubiquitous presence on Spanish-language television for several decades; at his peak, he had a viewership of more than 120 million. But while the astrologer’s cultural stature was obvious to the directors, Cristina Costantini and Kareem Tabsch, persuading non-Latino executives to make the film proved an uphill battle. It wasn’t until Lin-Manuel Miranda came on board for a touching encounter with Mercado featured prominently in the film, that others started to pay attention. At every step of the way, having other Latinos on their side in rooms where decisions were made was crucial. “As U.S. Latinos we are often considered too ‘foreign’ to be American and too American to be truly Latino,” Costantini and Tabsch said by email. “Walter managed to be a cultural bridge by entrancing our Spanish-speaking abuelitas [grandmothers] with words of inspiration while mesmerizing English-dominant millennials with a bold, unapologetic image that defied notions of gender and sexuality.”

 

2020

‘The Infiltrators’

Blending documentary footage with scripted re-enactments, this timely thriller follows undocumented youths risking their safety to infiltrate an ICE detention center in Florida to stop deportations.

“In Hollywood films, audiences are asked over and over to root for characters like ‘the outlaw,’ ‘the underdog,’ ‘the rebel,’” co-directors Alex Rivera and Cristina Ibarra said via email. There is something very American about characters who break the letter of the law as they pursue a higher moral code,” That description fits the protagonists of their hybrid feature “The Infiltrators”: a group of young undocumented men and women who came to this country as children, fighting not only for their right to remain in the country they call home, but also for others in the shadows who have been victimized by the American immigration system. The directors call their film the “‘Ocean’s 11’ of immigration” and their stars’ heroic quest — infiltrating a detention center to disseminate information to help detainees avoid deportation — is at once exhilarating and heart-rending.

 

2018

‘The Sentence’

After his sister receives an excessively harsh sentence and is ripped apart from her children, Rudy Valdez decided to capture the ordeal in a profoundly moving film documenting how the justice system failed a Mexican-American family.

Rudy Valdez, director: When I started this film, I have to be honest; I was stuck in the thinking that people from nonwhite backgrounds needed “saving.” I probably thought this way because it was all I had seen in movies and in documentaries growing up.  What began as a personal story about my family grew to become much bigger. The critical need for it became clear and I made the exact thing I needed to see when I was a kid. So often other-ized communities like mine are demonized. I wanted to humanize us. People who look like me can be heroes in our own stories, the authors of our own narratives. We are a part of the fabric of this country. People who look like me can be emblematic of what it means to be American.

 

2018

‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’

The first major movie starring an Afro-Latino superhero, this is the story of a New York teenager, Miles Morales, who gains superpowers after being bitten by a radioactive spider and discovers that there are others like him across multiple realities.

Luna Lauren Vélez, star: I’m really proud to have been part of this movie playing Miles’s mother, Rio Morales. I asked [the filmmakers] if they would do a screening in Puerto Rico, and they did. It was just absolutely amazing to see these kids’ faces when they saw themselves represented in this way, not only themselves, but to see their family, to see their relevance. A lot of people go back and forth and there’s the concept of mainlanders and islanders. So many of them felt, “Oh my gosh, that’s like going to visit my tía who lives in Brooklyn.” The movie was a bridge. That was one of the most significant moments of my career.

 

2018

‘We the Animals’

Adapted from Justin Torres’s best-selling novel, this drama set in upstate New York follows a chaotic, bicultural household that includes the sensitive young Jonah, his brothers and their father (played by Raúl Castillo).

Raúl Castillo: If I can highlight one theme in “We the Animals” that, to me, embodies Latinos in this country, it would have to be the story of the resilience of the human spirit. We are a resilient people and that shows itself in the family of this film and in the character of Jonah, specifically. How vehemently we have been attacked and vilified in recent years and yet we still rise. That, to me, is the story of the Latino family in this country. Justin Torres gave us a great gift with his story about a young, brown queer boy’s coming-of-age.

 

2017

‘Dolores’

This in-depth portrait of the activist Dolores Huerta explores her fight for racial, gender and labor justice for more than 60 years.

While assembling material for the documentary, the director Peter Bratt came across an old cassette tape of Huerta recalling how family members fought in American wars, including a great-grandfather who served in the Union Army during the Civil War. On the tape, Huerta says that as a young girl she was proud to be an American and to be part of a democracy where people could organize and make real change. But as she watched Black and Brown people killed for demanding their civil rights, she goes on to say, she had a devastating realization that in her birthplace she will always be perceived as a guest or a threat. “I will never be an American,” she declares. Bratt said that “even though the sound quality of the tape was poor, we knew this had to be in the film. It captures what so many of us who were born and raised here continue to experience, but are often unable to articulate.”

 

2016

‘Memories of a Penitent Heart’

The filmmaker Cecilia Aldarondo grapples with the complexity of Puerto Rican identity as she traces the life of her late uncle, Miguel Dieppa: a gay man caught between his religious upbringing on the island and his romantic partner in New York City.

Cecilia Aldarondo, director: There are parallels between my own experience and that of my uncle, even though he was raised in Puerto Rico and I was not, because to be Puerto Rican is to exist in a state of tremendous ambivalence vis-à-vis the idea of America. While some Puerto Ricans strongly identify as Americans, there are a lot of us who feel alienated from that category. Our American citizenship was forced upon us by colonialist practices; it’s not a choice. My uncle’s story is a Puerto Rican story that is inflected by American colonialist practices. The first time I ever heard my uncle speak in English was when I was making the film and I found a recording of him. I was so shocked because he had lived his whole life in Puerto Rico, and yet he spoke perfect English. There was a kind of convergence of different identities intersecting.

 

2016

‘Southwest of Salem’

Accused of heinous acts, four Latina lesbians in San Antonio fight to prove their innocence.

Deborah S. Esquenazi, director: The tale of American justice is something that we know is constantly demoralizing people of color, but I also think redemption is part of the American narrative. This is a story about four queer Latinas who made their own community inside a marginalized community. They lifted each other up while those in the state, those in their families, or those in their culture were trying to pull them down. I certainly believe that being women of color they were easy to indict. If they had been four white women, the allegations would have seemed ridiculous to begin with. Now, what is worth celebrating too is that by the time they were fighting for exoneration, the culture had changed and people were champing at the bit to help them. There’s something extraordinary about that flip.

 

2014

‘Cesar’s Last Fast’

Through never-before-seen footage from 1988, this powerful documentary humanizes labor leader Cesar Chavez as it dramatically chronicles his selfless and life-threatening protest against the use of pesticides on farmworkers. The film reminds us why his fight for civil rights still resonates today.

Richard Ray Perez, director: When I was 4, I was attending a preschool program for low-income kids in San Fernando, California. Idealistic Chicano students from the local college would volunteer. One day I noticed [one of the college students] was plucking the grapes out of the fruit cocktail that came with our free lunch. I asked him, “Why aren’t you eating your grapes?” He held up a grape and he described the horrible conditions under which the grape pickers were forced to work. Suddenly grapes became ugly in my mind and I couldn’t eat them anymore. My classmates all looked at their grapes and they too refused to eat them. At that moment, we inadvertently became part of a national grape boycott led by Cesar Chavez. Years later, I inherited a cache of dramatic footage of a 36-day fast Chavez undertook in 1988. My childhood experience joining the grape boycott, later learning that my father had been a migrant farmworker for decades, and the power of the footage I inherited made it clear that I had to make this documentary.

 

2012

‘Mosquita y Mari’

Two 15-year-old Chicanas in Huntington Park, Calif., grapple with their sexual and cultural identities.

Aurora Guerrero, director: I wanted to capture the ways in which children of immigrants navigate their identities while growing up in the States. As a kid I rarely saw my experience reflected onscreen and if I did there was always a rejection of one’s immigrant parent’s culture, as if that was important to becoming fully American. But what I felt growing up was the opposite. It was the fusions of these two cultures that made for a unique and powerful expression. My goal was to paint a complex portrait of two Chicanas who struggle to negotiate their parent’s dreams for them, rooted in the idea of the American dream, and their own experiences with growing up Brown and queer in this country.

 

2011

‘Gun Hill Road’

A Bronx transgender teenager clashes with her estranged and traditionally macho father.

“As a transgender Afro-Latina from the Bronx, I understood the lack of inclusion and visibility not only of transgender women in film, but specifically of Black and Brown transgender women,” said Harmony Santana, who became the first openly transgender performer nominated for a major American acting award when she drew an Independent Spirit nomination for her performance in Rashaad Ernesto Green’s “Gun Hill Road.” Santana said transgender people of color face a unique struggle: not only must they face the socioeconomic consequences of generational oppression, but also a lack of acceptance from their own communities as a result of patriarchal ideologies and toxic masculinity. That’s why onscreen representation is a lifeline: “The mental, spiritual, and physical changes a transgender person undergoes during their lifetime is something only another transgender person can fully understand, so when you are able to see people who look like you and share those similar experiences in a film, there is something within you that gains hope and feels less lonely in your experience.”

 

2010

‘La Mission’

Continue reading the main story

In San Francisco, a stubborn father struggles to find common ground with his gay son.

Benjamin Bratt, star: The sad reality is that we have largely been exoticized in American films, purposely “othered” as a foreign entity or an encroaching source of menace. Which is bitterly ironic, because in terms of geography and history, our people were here long before the West and Southwest became part of the United States. In the film, we celebrate that history with the recognition of our Indigenous roots; from the Aztec dancers and public murals, to the ceremonies and spiritual iconography that help define who we are. Added to that, the Chicano car culture originated as a uniquely American phenomenon. When white hot-rodders were jacking up their cars to go fast, homeboys were dropping their rides low, and slowing things down — a quintessentially countercultural move if ever there was one. And you can’t cruise without good music, so Motown and other Black American music became the soundtrack of choice. Cars, cruising, and oldies, man: what’s more American than that?

 

2009

‘Don’t Let Me Drown’

In post-9/11 New York, a Mexican-American young man falls in love as his father works in the city’s recovery efforts.

Cruz Angeles, director: When “Don’t Let Me Drown” was released, it was rare to see stories about New York-born and -raised characters of Mexican descent, which is why it was important for the main character, Lalo, to be first-generation American. As an American, he was proud that his father was working in the World Trade Center cleanup, but witnessed how his contribution remained largely invisible. The film is not just a love story in a time of grief and uncertainty in the midst of an American tragedy where Latinx people also lost lives, but also shows a new generation, the Latinx millennials, realizing that they must be bolder to be recognized.

 

2006

‘Quinceañera’

About to turn 15, a Mexican-American teenager, Magdalena, finds her life upended when she becomes pregnant in a poignant story that confronts homophobia and outdated views on womanhood.

Emily Rios, star: What makes America great is its diversity. Most people are rooted somewhere else, but have their feet planted here. I love that the character I played, Magdalena, was the same. She was born here but still carried on her family’s traditions by celebrating a Quinceañera, as opposed to a Sweet 16. Filming “Quinceañera” was a once-in-a-lifetime experience. It was a family-oriented set. It felt warm and homey. I think a lot of us were grateful that we were showcasing American-born Latinos as just people while tying in our culture and traditions. But really, we were just telling a story about a complicated family. Our heritage was almost incidental, yet valued, because of the lack of representation in the media at that time.

 

2006

‘Walkout’

Inspired by her teacher, a teenage girl leads the 1968 East Los Angeles school walkouts to demand better treatment for Chicano students.

Moctesuma Esparza, producer: “Walkout” is one of the very few films that documents the Chicano civil rights movement, which was pivotal in the advancement of rights for Latinos in the United States. I chose to be a filmmaker in pursuit of social justice and I had been seeking to get this movie made for more than 20 years until I finally got HBO to step up. To this day there are almost no American Latino movie stars who can [get executives to] greenlight a Hollywood theatrical movie. I had seen Michael Peña in “Crash.” He had a small role but gave such powerful performance that I argued with HBO that he should embody the role of Sal Castro, a Chicano teacher. I pushed for Alexa PenaVega, who had been the star in “Spy Kids,” and who was very committed to our movie. HBO said they still needed a little bit more star power, so I went to Edward James Olmos and asked him if he would direct. That’s how the movie finally came to be.

 

2003

‘Raising Victor Vargas’

Complicated family dynamics and a new love interest shape a confident Lower East Side teenager of Dominican descent in a vibrant slice-of-life narrative that shines for its authentic, yet universally relatable portrayal of adolescence.

 

Victor Rasuk, star: When someone says they recognize me from “Raising Victor Vargas” I can tell by the way they react that it meant something more to them than just watching a film — especially for Latinos. What makes it so special is that you rarely see an American story where the leads are all Hispanic. And yet people from any ethnic background can find it relatable, as it hits on important universal themes such as family and love. For me, it was really nice to be able to tell a story about the neighborhood where my friends and I grew up, where we all learned about the world, where we had our first love, our first kiss, our first heartbreak. The film is so close to my heart that it’s sort of bittersweet to watch it now, because there was a sense of innocence in my personal life as well as in my craft; it has some of the purest acting I’ve ever done in my career.

 

2002

‘Real Women Have Curves’

A Mexican-American teenage girl rebels against body shaming and sexism in a coming-of-age story based on Josefina López’s play.

America Ferrera, star: When “Real Women Have Curves” came out, it was the first time so many people were seeing themselves onscreen. It really resonated because it challenged so many cultural norms about what the standards of beauty are and also the cultural pressures and expectations for young women. I was lucky enough to get to travel the world meeting audiences that connected with my character: a 17-year-old chubby Brown Latina. I got to see how she transcended all of those labels. Another reason it’s still spoken about as iconic as far as Latino films go is because of the sad reality that there just haven’t been that many films about American Latinos since it came out in 2002. There have only been a handful of stories that are specific to a young Latina’s experience as an American, as a Latina in this country. One story about a Latino family does not satisfy the range of depth of the American Latino experience.

 

2001

‘Spy Kids’

In this landmark action adventure, which showed that a big-budget Hollywood film starring Latino characters could become a successful franchise, the Cortez siblings become precocious spies to rescue their kidnapped parents and save the world from impending doom.

Robert Rodriguez, director: When “El Mariachi” [his 1993 Spanish-language action tale] won Sundance, the idea of a Mexican-American filmmaker was suddenly more embraced by the industry. I found I now had the opportunity to hire Latinos both in front and behind the camera, many of them for the first time. Making movies became very mission-based for me. Until “Spy Kids,” most films with Latinx leads relied on tropes of gangs or criminal activity to show drama and conflict. But I wanted to make an adventure film inspired by my family. To appeal to a wider audience, I made them spies. The studio said, “This is a terrific story, but why risk appealing only to a smaller audience by making the family Hispanic? Why don’t you just make them American?” I said, “They are American, in fact they’re all based and named after my family, and even my uncle Gregorio actually is a special agent in the F.B.I.” There was still resistance. And since there was literally no other Latinx movie in existence that I could point to as a model showing how this could work, I finally argued, “You don’t have to be British to enjoy James Bond. The more specific you make the characters, the more universal they become.” Somehow that convinced them, and the ripple effects of sticking to that decision can still be felt today.

 

2001

‘Tortilla Soup’

Food brings together a loving but strict chef and his three daughters, each on a personal journey to independence, in this comedic portrait of a middle-class Latino family that touches on the still relevant topic of cultural assimilation.

Héctor Elizondo, star: Of all the movies I’ve done in 54 years, this was one of the sweetest. It depicted a Latino family without victimization or simple-minded determinism. It didn’t perpetuate any stereotypes. The character I played was such a responsible father, raising three girls on his own and expecting something great of them. One of them was played wonderfully by the late Elizabeth Peña, who was of Cuban heritage. She was one of the most heartfelt people I’ve met who also had a great sense of humor and a strong sense of justice, which I share. Early on in my career, as an actor with Puerto Rican ancestry, I made the decision not to take on any negative portrayals of Latinos. I can always make a living somehow, but I’d rather not do it by distorting my people. I made “Tortilla Soup” because it was an empowering movie about love. And who’s going to argue with a movie about food, romance and family?

 

2000

‘Girlfight’

Finding an outlet for her frustrations inside the boxing ring, Diana Guzman, an unruly teenage girl, defies gender conventions.

Michelle Rodriguez, star: There’s something a person can touch on when they are telling a story that reaches far beyond the umbilical cord of your culture, and I think the desire to break free from society’s idea of what a woman is and what she can do is what the film represented. Diana Guzman was definitely fighting against the machismo of Latino culture, but when you step outside all the boundaries of the cultural aspects, the story is about what women around the entire planet are feeling collectively. And that’s when you start speaking the universal language that makes the movies that come out of Hollywood so powerful. I mean “Girlfight” inspired “Million Dollar Baby.” I love that aspect of it, because for me it’s about what breaks through the barriers of communication.

 

Article by: Carlos Aguilar for the New York Times.

 

 

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"Cinemas are an essential industry that represent the best that American talent and creativity have to offer. But now we fear for their future," reads a letter sent to Capitol Hill lawmakers asking for additional pandemic relief.

Dozens of influential filmmakers on Wednesday joined the National Association of Theatre Owners, the Directors Guild of America and the Motion Picture Association in urging Congress to provide assistance to struggling theater owners impacted by the ongoing COVID-19 crisis. 

Together, they warn that many cinemas may not otherwise survive. The vast majority of exhibition companies — or 93 percent — weathered losses of 75 percent in the second quarter of 2020 after moviegoing came to an unprecedented stop in mid-March.

While more than half of theaters are now reopened, Hollywood continues to delay its major fall releases out of concern that many moviegoers aren't yet ready to return.

If this trend continues, NATO is warning that 69 percent of small- and mid-sized movie theaters will be forced to file for bankruptcy or close permanently, while 66 percent of theater jobs will be lost.

"I am extraordinarily grateful for the unprecedented support from our industry partners and the talented and concerned members of the movie industry creative community," NATO president-CEO John Fithian said in a statement. "The value of their recognition of the unique importance of movie theaters to our communities, culture, and economy, and their support before Congress of the unique needs of movie theaters in this pandemic cannot be underestimated."

The letter itself — which was addressed to Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer and House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy — asks that Capitol Hill lawmakers work in a bipartisan fashion to redirect unallocated funds from the CARES Act, or authorize new assistance programs for those businesses which have suffered the steepest revenue drops as a result of COVID-19.

"Cinemas are an essential industry that represent the best that American talent and creativity have to offer. But now we fear for their future," states the document. "Our country cannot afford to lose the social, economic, and cultural value that theaters provide. The moviegoing experience is central to American life. Theaters are great unifiers where our nation’s most talented storytellers showcase their cinematic accomplishments."

Continuing, the letter notes that theaters "supports millions of jobs in movie production and distribution, and countless others in surrounding restaurants and retailers that rely on theaters for foot traffic. Movie theaters are also leaders in employing underrepresented groups, including people with disabilities, senior citizens, and first-time job holders."

Below are the directors, writers and producers signing the document. 

Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje

Agustin Almodovar

Pedro Almodovar

Wes Anderson

Judd Apatow

Jon Avnet

Sean Baker

Noah Baumbach

Michael Bay

Susanne Bier

Barbara Broccoli

James Cameron

Antonio Campos

Damien Chazelle

Jon M. Chu

Sofia Coppola

Alfonso Cuarón

Lee Daniels

Dean Devlin

Clint Eastwood

Andrew Erwin

Jon Erwin

Paul Feig

Shana Feste

Scott Frank

Cary Joji Fukunaga

Greta Gerwig

Evan Goldberg

Paul Greengrass

Leslie Greif

Luca Guadagnino

Catherine Hardwicke

Alma Har’el

Albert Hughes

Allen Hughes

Alejandro Gonzalez Iñárritu

Barry Jenkins

Patty Jenkins

Rian Johnson

Miranda July

Nicole Kassell

Jon Landau

Francis Lawrence

Mimi Leder

Ang Lee

Rob Letterman

Shawn Levy

Richard Linklater

James Mangold

Sam Mendes

Adam McKay

Steve McQueen

Ted Melfi

Reed Morano

Christopher Nolan

David O. Russell

Jordan Peele

Todd Phillips

Guy Ritchie

Seth Rogen

Joachim Rønning

Michael R. Roskam

Martin Scorsese

Night Shyamalan

Zack Snyder

Steven Soderbergh

Joey Soloway

David E. Talbert

Betty Thomas

Emma Thomas

Liesl Tommy

Denis Villeneuve

Taika Waititi

James Wan

Lulu Wang

Chris Weitz

Paul Weitz

Michael G. Wilson

Edgar Wright

Joe Wright

Cathy Yan

David Yates

 

Article by: Pamela McClintock for the Hollywood Reporter.

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The British Academy published an extensive new rules governing eligibility for the 2021 BAFTA awards

The British Academy on Thursday published its extensive new rules governing eligibility for the 2021 BAFTA awards.

Most of the 120 wide-ranging changes — which overhaul diversity requirements, alter the nomination process, and significantly expand BAFTA membership to include more people from under-represented groups — were previously announced and have been already been discussed in detail.

The Academy said it was extending eligibility requirements "until further notice," allowing films that were unable to do a theatrical release in the U.K. due to the coronavirus pandemic to qualify for the BAFTAs if they release on an "approved commercial VOD platform" for a minimum of 30 days to U.K. audiences during the eligibility period.

The rule, which will only apply for the 2021 BAFTA film awards, will allow movies that have been released in the U.K., in cinemas or online, from between January 1, 2020 —April 9, 2021, to submit for award consideration. For documentaries and submissions to the Films Not in the English Language category, the release window is Jan. 1 2020 – April 30, 2021. Films which were on theatrical release in U.K. on March 12, the date cinemas closed due to COVID-19 lockdown, will all be eligible to submit for BAFTA consideration.

BAFTA's new rules, the result of an extensive review conducted by the British Academy, will introduce a new longlist round of voting in all categories, with the first round —between Jan. 12-26, 2021—ahead of the Feb.4 announcement of the first longlist of contenders. A second round, from Feb. 19-March 1, will pick the nominees, to be announced March 9. The final round, from March 25-April 7, will select the winners of the 2021 BAFTAs, which will be announced at the British Academy Film Awards on April 11, 2021.

As previously announced, to qualify for the 2021 BAFTAs, films must meet new diversity requirements including in areas of on-screen representation, inclusivity among key crew, opportunities and industry access, and developing underserved audiences. The U.S. Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences cribbed many of new BAFTA rules for its diversity-focused criteria that will apply to the best film Oscar category from 2024 on.

Other significant changes include a goal of adding "at least" 1,000 new voting members to the BAFTA roles, to bring numbers up to 7,700, with a focus on recruiting from under-represented groups, expanding the best director longlist to a top 20, with the top eight female and top eight male directors included, and increasing the number of nominees in the outstanding British film category from six to 10, to give more room for smaller independent titles.

In an effort to prevent films with big campaigning budgets from dominating the awards, BAFTA has discontinued DVD screeners and will require all contending films to be made available to voters on its BAFTA View digital platform. Full details of the BAFTA rule changes and the calendar for the 2021 awards is available on the BAFTA website.

 

Article by: Scott Roxborough for the Hollywood Reporter.

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For the portion of Western audiences previously stuck behind the one-inch barrier of subtitles, the multi-Oscar haul by Bong Joon Ho’s dark and provocative “Parasite” was a revelation. But for savvy viewers who had long ago moved past a perceived language barrier, Bong’s win is instead the latest splash in a succession of South Korean milestones that span film, music and television.

Thanks to vibrant talent and years of industrial-scale preparation, the rich Korean entertainment scene has solid foundations. Smartphones, YouTube and Netflix are now carrying the Korean wave, known as “Hallyu,” farther and faster.

In August alone, boy band BTS’ latest confection, “Dynamite,” racked up a record number of plays on YouTube and topped the Billboard music charts, while Korean zombie movie “Peninsula” smashed the Asian box office, and another zombie offering, “#Alive,” briefly was the most-watched item planetwide on Netflix.

“The current boom enjoyed by Korean cinema is less an extraordinary circumstance than a case of the industry finally reaching its natural state,” says Darcy Paquet, visiting professor at Kyunghee University and English subtitler of “Parasite.”

Screenwriter Soo Hugh (“The Whispers,” “The Terror,” “Under the Dome”) adds, “I’ve always wondered how it was that Korea makes such great television without crossing over to the U.S.”

The cultural flowering that followed the end of the Fifth Republic and martial law in 1987 has parallels to the artistic renaissance in Spain after the fall of the Franco regime. The first Busan International Film Festival in 1996 deliberately flouted an onerous censorship system, and reignited the flame of Korean film. It also sparked investment from financial and industrial conglomerates.

Most notable of these was CJ Cheil­Jedang, a food commodity group run by members of the same family that controls Samsung. Under scion Miky Lee (Lee Mie-kyung), CJ put up $300 million in 1995 to become an early investor in DreamWorks SKG. CJ also backed the building of Korea’s first multiplex, which opened in 1998, and began to invest in and produce films.

In 1999 and 2000, CJ and Korea enjoyed critical, commercial and international acclaim with hard-boiled thrillers “Shiri” (released under the defunct Samsung Pictures label) and “Joint Security Area.” Top directors Bong, Park Chan-wook and Kim Jee-woon and art-house icons Lee Chang-dong, Hong Sang-soo and Kim Ki-duk all emerged around this time, muscling their way into major festivals, Asian theaters and European video stores. 

Contemporary Korean music is also widely understood to have evolved in the 1990s, specifically with a 1992 MBC talent show and the debut of Seo Taiji and Boys, a band that mixed American rap influences with Korean lyrics. The group was booted off the show but enjoyed three months of chart-topping success with “I Know.”

The mid-1990s saw the emergence of a trio of rival studio-cum-management operations — SM Entertainment, YG Entertainment and JYP Entertainment — that took a holistic approach to talent development, signing many artists to long-term contracts and putting them through multidisciplinary boot camp. With talent in hand, the super agents built idol groups, both male and female, assembling them in different flavors for different tastes.

The 2000s saw the emergence of Girls’ Generation, Wonder Girls, 2NE1 and Super Junior, which all enjoyed success around Asia, as well as connecting with pockets of North American fans. The artist BoA was particularly successful in Japan, while Rain, after going solo, became one of the first Koreans to play Madison Square Garden, in 2005.

Without a large home market, the Korean music business lost two-thirds of its revenue between 2000-05 when the conventional disc business crumbled, but the upheaval ultimately made the K-pop industry more resourceful, according to Suk-Young Kim, a professor in UCLA’s School of Theater, Film & Television.

“Ironically these challenging circumstances pushed the K-pop industry to chart out foreign markets, and [work] much more aggressively to create foreign fandom,” says Kim.

K-pop overcame language barriers by becoming more urgent, up-tempo and visual. Great choreography and polished videos made the genre perfect for international distribution on upstart streaming platform YouTube (launched in 2005), which craved professionally generated content.

The big agents’ basic formula — long contracts and extreme grooming — hasn’t changed much in more than two decades. Their dominance goes hand in hand with the idiosyncratically Korean way that, throughout their careers, K-pop performers publicly display association with a particular management company.

What has changed between 2005 and the pivotal year of 2015, when BTS released its “Young Forever” album series, is the calculated and global sourcing process that now makes K-pop a Korea-based multinational business, rather than a strictly national enterprise. Designers and songwriters are regularly hired from Europe and the U.S., and the global supply chain increasingly applies to K-pop talent too.

Henry Lau, former member of Super Junior-M, is Canadian. Instead of becoming a classical violinist, he was recruited by SM at an audition in Toronto. “I spoke no Korean, and had to study both Korean and Chinese. It was a huge culture shock,” he tells Variety. “It was also very organized, like a big school. We needed to do full days of training.”

Lau thinks multicultural underpinnings reinforce the strong fan connections that are integral to K-pop’s global success. Other bands, such as JYP’s Got7, included three members who were nonnative but could outwardly pass as ethnically Korean, while other bands have courted Chinese fans through the inclusion of Chinese speakers. “K-pop is very engaging and engaged. Artists and fans are deeply connected. They’re friends,” says Lau.

The need to export beyond a relatively small home market is something music has in common with the nation’s TV and film industries. State-backed broadcasters KBS, MBC and SBS have enjoyed varying degrees of success as exporters of Korean content. They recently banded together with SK Telecom to create their own streaming platform and international sales operation, Wavve.

But today, Korean drama’s reputation is such that sector analyst Vivek Couto, executive director at Media Partners Asia, calls it a “gold rush time for Korean TV.”

“Korean shows, drama series in particular, are well-rounded, having some of the most innovative storylines, top-notch acting and world-class production values,” says Virginia Lim, chief content officer at Viu, a pan-Asian streaming platform backed by Hong Kong telco PCCW and, incongruously, built on Korean content. “Since Hallyu started more than a decade ago, Korean content has only gotten better.”

Viu has multiple supply deals with SBS and KBS through Wavve, another with MBC, and still others with CJ ENM and JTBC. These private sector companies now generate the biggest action.

JTBC, launched in 2011 with the backing of newspaper group Joong-Ang, has emerged as a top cable network and leading producer (“Sky Castle” and “The World of the Married,” the latter adapted from the BBC’s “Doctor Foster”). Studio Dragon, spun off from CJ ENM in 2016, has such a strong track record as producer-distributor that it has its own stock market listing. The company is considered so integral to Netflix’s advance in Korea that it has a put option that could oblige Netflix to buy a 5% stake.

“Popularity skewed a bit toward romance-driven titles in the earlier days,” Kim Minyoung, Netflix VP of content in Korea, tells Variety. “These helped create an appetite and fandom for Korean content and lowered the entry barrier. I believe [Netflix zombie series] ‘Kingdom’ benefited from this in Asia despite the fact that the DNA of the show is completely different.” Netflix doubled down on the show, commissioning two seasons from the get-go in 2018. It is particularly popular in India.

As the streamer has continued to penetrate the Korean market, Netflix’s role has evolved. In its early days, it delivered Western content to Korean viewers, and carried acquired and co-commissioned Korean content overseas. During that phase, Netflix did not have Korean rights, which were retained by Korean broadcasters. Now, of the more than 70 shows by Korean creators that have been introduced as Netflix Originals, 17 are Netflix-produced Original shows in Korea. The platform is broadening the genres of Korean content commissioned to include entertainment shows (“Busted!”), stand-up comedy specials (“Park Narae: Glamour Warning”) and animation (“Larva Island”).

Despite its breakneck growth, how much further K-content can go is widely debated.

A series of sex scandals, failure to properly address #MeToo issues, oligopolist corporations and a recent string of celebrity suicides seemingly prompted by social media bullying have all tarnished Korean entertainment’s sparkly reputation.

The conditions that led to the suicides must change, says UCLA’s Kim. “Fans and audience are generally treated to a small percentage of extreme success stories, but the vast majority of the trainees or idols fall out of the limelight before peaking, and often fall into debt, depression and forced sexual service. This dark side has to be dealt with. Nowadays, consumers care deeply about the ethical production of entertainment products.”

Others are simply waiting for a TV-sector catalyst that’s as powerful as BTS has been for the music industry, or as helpful as “Parasite” to the film sector. 

“Netflix has done very well with Korean content, but nothing has quite broken through the noise yet,” says screenwriter Hugh. “In television, we are waiting for our ‘Homeland’ [an adaptation of Israeli show ‘Hatufim’]. The minute that happens, Korean television will [rise] in public esteem.”

Hyun Park, head of international for Studio Dragon, notes, “We believe that Peacock and HBO and others will soon discover that half their subscribers are outside the U.S., and they’ll all arrive in Asia. My guess is that they’ll follow what Netflix is doing.”

Park is in the process of opening a Studio Dragon development and production outpost in Los Angeles, with the intention of working with U.S. creative talent on Korean content. Resulting productions could parallel TNT and Netflix’s “Snowpiercer” series, derived from Bong’s 2013 CJ-backed sci-fi film.

“We look at our competitors and other production companies,” Park says, “and we see Korean content not as a trend but as the hub of great global content, sourced from Asia.”

 

Article by: Patrick Frater for Variety.

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