Showing posts with label European films. Show all posts
Showing posts with label European films. Show all posts
03 December, 2010
European Films Set For Sundance Film Festival
by Sandy Mandelberger, North American Editor
European films will have a strong showing in the World Cinema Dramatic Competition of the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, which runs from 20-30 January in the ski resort town of Park City, Utah. The fact that the films are all world or international premieres is further testament to the Festival’s importance as an international launching pad for films, not only for the North American market. In this sense, Sundance is now competing head-to-head with the Berlin and other European showcases for first access to new European titles. The full roster of films in this year’s Festival was announced yesterday and can be viewed on the Festival website: http://www.sundance.org/festival/
For the World Cinema Dramatic Competition, five European films will compete for the top jury prizes. They include:
• “Days of Respite” (Quelque Jours de Repit, Algeria/France, Amor Hakkar). This timely film tells the story of a pair of gay men who have escaped from Iran who seek safe harbor in a small French village, where a lonely middle-aged woman offers aid.
• “The Guard” (Ireland, John Michael McDonagh). With a high profile cast that includes Brendan Gleeson, Don Cheadle, and Fionnula Flanagon, this subversive comedy focuses on a small-town cop with a confrontational personality, a fondness for prostitutes and absolutely no interest in the international drug-smuggling ring that has brought a straight-laced FBI agent to his door.
• “Happy, Happy” (Sykt Lykkelig, Norway, Anne Sewitsky). Norwegian actress Agnes Kittelsen stars as a perfect housewife, who just happens to be sex-starved, and struggles to keep her emotions in check when an attractive family moves in next door.
• “Lost Kisses” (I baci mai dati, Italy, Roberta Torre). In this intense coming-of-age tale, a 13-year-old girl in the deprived outskirts of a sprawling Sicilian city becomes a local celebrity when word spreads that she can perform miracles.
• “Tyrannosaur” (United Kingdom, Paddy Considine). Actor-turned-director Considine makes his directorial debut with this powerful drama about a man plagued by self-destructive violence and rage who has a chance of redemption when he meets a Christian charity shop worker with a devastating secret of her own.
21 June, 2010
2010 Troia Film Festival Award Winners
by Sandy Mandelberger, North American Editor
The 26th edition of FESTROIA, the oldest and most prestigious film event in Portugal, concluded last weekend with the announcement of the Golden Dolphin Awards. This has been a rough period for cultural organizations in Portugal, with an already uncertain economy facing new challenges from what could be a long period of austerity. However, despite this, Festival Director Fernanda Silva continues the traditions begun by Festival founder Mario Ventura to create an event that reaches high marks in terms of artistic quality and convivial atmosphere. No wonder people who have been to the Festival once with their films continue to ask about coming back....such is the sunlight, warmth and good spirits of the events in Setubal, about 20 miles south of Lisbon.
The big winner in the Festival's main competition section was A SOMEWHAT GENTLE MAN by Norwegian director Hans Petter Moland. The film won a Best Film Golden Dolphin, as well as nods as Best Director, Best Script and Best Actor (Stellan Skarsgaard). The intense drama focuses on a man who must decide after serving a prison sentence for killing a man for sleeping with his wife, whether he should try and reconcile with his family, or take revenge on those who turned him in. The film had its international premiere at the Berlin Film Festival.
This year's Festival continued its traditional competition sections for International Cinema, First Works and Man And His Environment, a critically important section that ranges from documentaries about ecology to strong dramas about globalization and international displacement. This year's focus country was Slovakia, and the Festival had a strong showing of emerging Slovakian talents.
For the traditional American Independents Competition, this year the Festival shifted focus. Rather than inviting a wide range of films from different sources, the Festival made the decision to honor a single company and highlight its output. American production and distribution company Elephant Eye Films, which had a major hit this past year with the intense urban drama PRECIOUS, was saluted, with a strong program of seven documentaries and fiction features, highlighting the company's eclectic interests and tastes.
Another important section added this year was Films of Resistance, which presented a mix of features and documenaries with the company theme of resistance to governmental and religious hierarchies. It was a diverse program of film styles from over 10 countries that highlighted a common bond of sacrifice and heroism under threat. The Festival also provided a showcase for recent Portugese cinema, bringing much needed attention to rising lights on the Portugese film scene.
2010 FESTROIA AWARD WINNERS
BEST FILM - GOLD DOLPHIN
A SOMEWHAT GENTLE MAN, by Hans Petter Moland, Norway
SPECIAL JURY PRIZE – SILVER DOLPHIN
HEARTBEATS, by Saara Cantell, Finland
BEST DIRECTOR – SILVER DOLPHIN
Hans Petter Moland, for A SOMEWHAT GENTLE MAN, Norway
BEST ACTRESS – SILVER DOLPHIN
Sylvia Hoeks, for THE STORM, The Netherlands/Belgium
BEST ACTOR – SILVER DOLPHIN
Stellen Skarsgard, for A SOMEWHAT GENTLE MAN, Norway
BEST SCRIPT – SILVER DOLPHIN
Kim Fupz Aakeson, for A SOMEWHAT GENTLE MAN, Norway
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY – SILVER DOLPHIN
Jakob Ihre, for A FAMILY, by Pernille Fischer Christensen, Denmark
AUDIENCE AWARD
SUBMARINO, by Thomas Vinterberg, Denmark/Sweden
PRIZE MAN AND HIS ENVIRONMENT
LETTERS TO FATHER JACOB, by Klaus Haro, Finland
PRIZE CITY HALL OF SETÚBAL – AMERICAN INDEPENDENTS
ELEPHANT EYE FILMS (Producer/Distributor, USA)
FIRST WORKS AWARD
SEBBE, by Babak Najafi, Sweden/Finland
FIPRESCI PRIZE
ALL THAT I LOVE, by Jacek Borcuch, Poland
SIGNIS PRIZE
A FAMILY, by Pernille Fischer Christensen, Denmark
CICAE PRIZE
ALL THAT I LOVE, by Jacek Borcuch, Poland
MÁRIO VENTURA AWARD
João Azevedo, Luis Lobo and Joana Cunha, (Screenwriters, ACT OF LIFE, Portugal)
MÁRIO VENTURA AWARD
Zvonimir Juric (Screenwriter, YELLOW MOON, Croatia)
18 May, 2010
European Cinema Highlights At Tribeca
SOUL KITCHEN (Fatih Akin, Germany)
by Sandy Mandelberger, North American Editor
This year’s Tribeca Film Festival, which concluded on May 2, featured a strong representation of both veteran and emerging European talents. As a whole, the Festival offered a tantalizing check of the pulse of current trends and styles in European filmmaking. How these films will fare in the US market is far from certain, but for the Festival's 12 days, European cinema ruled in downtown New York.
The narratives on display from European talents took in all genres and filmic styles. Making its world premiere debut at the Festival, the UK drama BRILLIANTLOVE takes place over a sweltering summer, as a novice photographer documents his sweaty affair with his taxidermist girlfriend. Director Ashley Horner finds a realistic yet poetic tempo to describe their affair and the pressures that ensue when the photog becomes celebrated in the local art scene.
In BURIED LAND, a co-production between the US and Bosnia Herzegovina, co-directors Geoffrey Alan Rhodes and Steven Eastwood unfold an existential flair mixing fiction and mockumentary in the storry of a small town that is discovered to have an underground valley of ancient pyramids that predate Egypt. The clash of cultures between the aggressive US crew and the world weary Bosnians is one of the film’s many delights.
THE CHAMELEON, directed by French debut director Jean-Paul Solome (an auteur name if I ever heard one), is an unsettling psychological thriller about a missing teenager who resurfaces after being presumed kidnapped and a local FBI agent’s campaign to prove he is an imposter. Ellen Barkin, not seen on screens of late, gives a scathing performance as the mother who wants to believe and yet has her doubts. She is matched by the willowy Famke Janssen, giving the FBI agent a fire and compulsion.
A kidnapping is also the core of the UK drama THE DISAPPEARANCE OF ALICE CREED by writer/director J Blakeson. When two men kidnap the daughter of a millionaire and keep her at a fortified location, things do not go exactly as planned. The girl refuses to play the victim and in facts turns the tables on her tormentors. This stylish thriller made its world premiere debut at the Festival.
The mood is decidedly more frothy in the French biopic GAINSBOURG, JE T’AIME….MOI NON PLUS by writer/director Joann Starr. Actor Eric Elmosnino uncannily resuscitates the insouciant energy of singer/composer Serge Gainsbourg, a 1960s pop icon and notorious lady’s man (with Brigitte Bardot and Jane Birkin among his lovers). The influential stylist’s personal story, beginning with his life in Nazi occupied Paris and his wild lifestyle at the center of swinging Sixties pop culture, is an entertaining romp while also examining the essence of the lost art of personal style.
In a more contemporary French mode, hot screen actors Romain Duris, Julie Ferrier and Vanessa Paradis bring the necessary heat to HEARTBREAKER, a new film by Pascal Chaumeil. Duris and Ferrier play a brother and sister who break up couples for a living. However, in one difficult assignment, both heartbreakers get their own hearts broken in what is a series of unexpected and illuminating events. This is yet another charming romantic comedy from the people who seem to have invented love in the first place.
What if you were an Arab, comfortable in your Islamic skin, and in one day not only do you discover that you were adopted but that you were born Jewish? Well, that is the calamity that befalls Mahmud (winningly played by comedian Omid Djalilli) in the very smart and very funny THE INFIDEL, directed by UK director Josh Appiganesi. As Mahumud (nee Solly) discovers his Jewish roots with the aid of a grouchy Jewish taxi driver (played by the WEST WING’s Richard Schiff, the film has much to say about identity politics and how loyalties stack up in a world that more often divides than unites.
British-Nigerian director Thomas Ikimi builds considerable suspense in the psychological thriller LEGACY. The story centers on a soldier who participated in a botched terrorist related mission in Eastern Europe. The psychological underpinnings of the character, strongly played by Idris Elba of the television series THE WIRE, details a man’s attempt at personal salvation amidst the hypocrisy and crushing bureaucracy of the war machine.
A much lighter tone occurs in Turkish-Italian director Fezan Ozpetek’s family comedy LOOSE CANNONS, a hit at the recent Berlin Film Festival. A patriarchal Italian family that has been in the pasta business for generations is upended by news that both the prodigal sons are gay. A witty roundelay of sex, comedy and clashing values marks this entertaining film from one of Europe’s most intriguing directors.
The future is not nearly so bright in the Orwellian drama METROPIA, a Swedish/Danish/Norwegian co-production by Swedish director Tarik Saleh. In the not so distant future, Europe is connected via a series of underground railways and is united by a Big Brother like governmental body. When the cogs in the wheel begin to revolt, the strong arm of the government comes down hard. Actors as diverse as Juliette Lewis, Udo Kier and Stellan Skarsgaard give voice to this computer generated reflection on the “worst that could happen” theme.
Jean-Pierre Jeunet, the hyper-imaginative director behind such films as DELICATESSEN and AMELIE, brought his latest work MICMACS to Tribeca. In a whimsical tale of underdogs, the film focuses on Bazil, a gentle man with a bullet lodged in his brain and his misfit pals who devise a plot to lay low a giant weapons manufacturer. The stunning visuals and the restrained comedic style make this one of the more interesting entries in this year’s Festival lineup.
From Ireland, which has been experiencing a mini-renaissance of late, several impressive films are on display. In MY BROTHERS, directed by Paul Fraser, two brothers hijack a bread van for a road trip across country that becomes an emotional odyssey. In a stellar directorial debut, Paul Fraser, a protégé of Shane Meadows, shares with his mentor a love of the working class and a studied look at the disparities that still exist between the classes. Academy Award winning writer/director Neil Jordan (THE CRYING GAME) weaves a cinematic fairy tale in the lovely ONDINE, starring Colin Farrell as a lonely fisherman who one day pull in a mermaid-like beauty. Is this real, a fable or just a lonely man’s fantasy? The director never points in any one direction which makes this lovely romantic tale an odd balancing act between lilting fantasy and harsh reality.
Ireland is on a roll with the inclusion of SNAP, a gripping psychological drama about three generations of a family who create harm and imbalance for one another. Director Carmel Winters brings a terrific ensemble cast, headed by Aisling O’Sullivan’s calloused matriarch, into sharp focus in this emotional rollercoaster of a drama. In ZONAD, directed by John and Kieran Carney, (whose ONCE was an Oscar winning arthouse hit), the setting is a small Irish town in the 1950s. When a brutish thug, dressed as an alien, arrives, it throws the small town’s equilibrium into disarray.
The Belgians have always had a soft spot for coming-of-age stories, so the latest in this series is another gem. MY QUEEN KARO, directed by Dorothee van den Berghee, is anchored by a 10 year old girl who moves with her parents to a carefree squatter’s commune in 1970s Amsterdam. Human emotions, sexual tension and childhood awareness clash as the ideals of the commune are challenged by forces of control, selfishness and the messiness of human emotions.
The fine line between fantasy and reality, complete with a punk rock score, is at the core of SEX & DRUGS & ROCK & ROLL, which also makes its world premiere debut at Tribeca. The films paints a stylized portrait of British punk pioneer Ian Dury (with a standout performance by Andy Serkis), a physically deformed yet imaginative genius, as he juggles the demands of career, relationships and fatherhood. Mat Whitecross, who has collaborated on the films of Michael Winterbottom, makes his directorial debut here, with fine performances and a lilting nostalgia for 1970s London.
Ensemble acting is also the hallmark of SOUL KITCHEN, the latest film from Turkish/German director Fatih Akin. The setting is a Berlin restaurant, where the hapless owner has to juggle the demands and emotional needs of his employees and customers. Akin once again makes a statement about the new cross-cultural Europe, where traditions from different backgrounds crash and collide but finally find some kind of synthesis.
A second film from Germany also explores the tensions between local Turks and Germans. In WHEN WE LEAVE, a young Turkish-German woman flees Istanbul with her young son after suffering abuse from her husband. When they move back in with their family in Berlin, old wounds and emotional scars are revealed.
For more information on these films and even some you can watch online, visit: http://www.tribecafilm.com/
The narratives on display from European talents took in all genres and filmic styles. Making its world premiere debut at the Festival, the UK drama BRILLIANTLOVE takes place over a sweltering summer, as a novice photographer documents his sweaty affair with his taxidermist girlfriend. Director Ashley Horner finds a realistic yet poetic tempo to describe their affair and the pressures that ensue when the photog becomes celebrated in the local art scene.
In BURIED LAND, a co-production between the US and Bosnia Herzegovina, co-directors Geoffrey Alan Rhodes and Steven Eastwood unfold an existential flair mixing fiction and mockumentary in the storry of a small town that is discovered to have an underground valley of ancient pyramids that predate Egypt. The clash of cultures between the aggressive US crew and the world weary Bosnians is one of the film’s many delights.
THE CHAMELEON, directed by French debut director Jean-Paul Solome (an auteur name if I ever heard one), is an unsettling psychological thriller about a missing teenager who resurfaces after being presumed kidnapped and a local FBI agent’s campaign to prove he is an imposter. Ellen Barkin, not seen on screens of late, gives a scathing performance as the mother who wants to believe and yet has her doubts. She is matched by the willowy Famke Janssen, giving the FBI agent a fire and compulsion.
A kidnapping is also the core of the UK drama THE DISAPPEARANCE OF ALICE CREED by writer/director J Blakeson. When two men kidnap the daughter of a millionaire and keep her at a fortified location, things do not go exactly as planned. The girl refuses to play the victim and in facts turns the tables on her tormentors. This stylish thriller made its world premiere debut at the Festival.
The mood is decidedly more frothy in the French biopic GAINSBOURG, JE T’AIME….MOI NON PLUS by writer/director Joann Starr. Actor Eric Elmosnino uncannily resuscitates the insouciant energy of singer/composer Serge Gainsbourg, a 1960s pop icon and notorious lady’s man (with Brigitte Bardot and Jane Birkin among his lovers). The influential stylist’s personal story, beginning with his life in Nazi occupied Paris and his wild lifestyle at the center of swinging Sixties pop culture, is an entertaining romp while also examining the essence of the lost art of personal style.
In a more contemporary French mode, hot screen actors Romain Duris, Julie Ferrier and Vanessa Paradis bring the necessary heat to HEARTBREAKER, a new film by Pascal Chaumeil. Duris and Ferrier play a brother and sister who break up couples for a living. However, in one difficult assignment, both heartbreakers get their own hearts broken in what is a series of unexpected and illuminating events. This is yet another charming romantic comedy from the people who seem to have invented love in the first place.
What if you were an Arab, comfortable in your Islamic skin, and in one day not only do you discover that you were adopted but that you were born Jewish? Well, that is the calamity that befalls Mahmud (winningly played by comedian Omid Djalilli) in the very smart and very funny THE INFIDEL, directed by UK director Josh Appiganesi. As Mahumud (nee Solly) discovers his Jewish roots with the aid of a grouchy Jewish taxi driver (played by the WEST WING’s Richard Schiff, the film has much to say about identity politics and how loyalties stack up in a world that more often divides than unites.
British-Nigerian director Thomas Ikimi builds considerable suspense in the psychological thriller LEGACY. The story centers on a soldier who participated in a botched terrorist related mission in Eastern Europe. The psychological underpinnings of the character, strongly played by Idris Elba of the television series THE WIRE, details a man’s attempt at personal salvation amidst the hypocrisy and crushing bureaucracy of the war machine.
A much lighter tone occurs in Turkish-Italian director Fezan Ozpetek’s family comedy LOOSE CANNONS, a hit at the recent Berlin Film Festival. A patriarchal Italian family that has been in the pasta business for generations is upended by news that both the prodigal sons are gay. A witty roundelay of sex, comedy and clashing values marks this entertaining film from one of Europe’s most intriguing directors.
The future is not nearly so bright in the Orwellian drama METROPIA, a Swedish/Danish/Norwegian co-production by Swedish director Tarik Saleh. In the not so distant future, Europe is connected via a series of underground railways and is united by a Big Brother like governmental body. When the cogs in the wheel begin to revolt, the strong arm of the government comes down hard. Actors as diverse as Juliette Lewis, Udo Kier and Stellan Skarsgaard give voice to this computer generated reflection on the “worst that could happen” theme.
Jean-Pierre Jeunet, the hyper-imaginative director behind such films as DELICATESSEN and AMELIE, brought his latest work MICMACS to Tribeca. In a whimsical tale of underdogs, the film focuses on Bazil, a gentle man with a bullet lodged in his brain and his misfit pals who devise a plot to lay low a giant weapons manufacturer. The stunning visuals and the restrained comedic style make this one of the more interesting entries in this year’s Festival lineup.
From Ireland, which has been experiencing a mini-renaissance of late, several impressive films are on display. In MY BROTHERS, directed by Paul Fraser, two brothers hijack a bread van for a road trip across country that becomes an emotional odyssey. In a stellar directorial debut, Paul Fraser, a protégé of Shane Meadows, shares with his mentor a love of the working class and a studied look at the disparities that still exist between the classes. Academy Award winning writer/director Neil Jordan (THE CRYING GAME) weaves a cinematic fairy tale in the lovely ONDINE, starring Colin Farrell as a lonely fisherman who one day pull in a mermaid-like beauty. Is this real, a fable or just a lonely man’s fantasy? The director never points in any one direction which makes this lovely romantic tale an odd balancing act between lilting fantasy and harsh reality.
Ireland is on a roll with the inclusion of SNAP, a gripping psychological drama about three generations of a family who create harm and imbalance for one another. Director Carmel Winters brings a terrific ensemble cast, headed by Aisling O’Sullivan’s calloused matriarch, into sharp focus in this emotional rollercoaster of a drama. In ZONAD, directed by John and Kieran Carney, (whose ONCE was an Oscar winning arthouse hit), the setting is a small Irish town in the 1950s. When a brutish thug, dressed as an alien, arrives, it throws the small town’s equilibrium into disarray.
The Belgians have always had a soft spot for coming-of-age stories, so the latest in this series is another gem. MY QUEEN KARO, directed by Dorothee van den Berghee, is anchored by a 10 year old girl who moves with her parents to a carefree squatter’s commune in 1970s Amsterdam. Human emotions, sexual tension and childhood awareness clash as the ideals of the commune are challenged by forces of control, selfishness and the messiness of human emotions.
The fine line between fantasy and reality, complete with a punk rock score, is at the core of SEX & DRUGS & ROCK & ROLL, which also makes its world premiere debut at Tribeca. The films paints a stylized portrait of British punk pioneer Ian Dury (with a standout performance by Andy Serkis), a physically deformed yet imaginative genius, as he juggles the demands of career, relationships and fatherhood. Mat Whitecross, who has collaborated on the films of Michael Winterbottom, makes his directorial debut here, with fine performances and a lilting nostalgia for 1970s London.
Ensemble acting is also the hallmark of SOUL KITCHEN, the latest film from Turkish/German director Fatih Akin. The setting is a Berlin restaurant, where the hapless owner has to juggle the demands and emotional needs of his employees and customers. Akin once again makes a statement about the new cross-cultural Europe, where traditions from different backgrounds crash and collide but finally find some kind of synthesis.
A second film from Germany also explores the tensions between local Turks and Germans. In WHEN WE LEAVE, a young Turkish-German woman flees Istanbul with her young son after suffering abuse from her husband. When they move back in with their family in Berlin, old wounds and emotional scars are revealed.
For more information on these films and even some you can watch online, visit: http://www.tribecafilm.com/
Labels:
European films,
New York,
Tribeca Film Festival
10 July, 2009
The Anti-Blockbuster: European Films On American Screens
by Sandy Mandelberger, North American Editor
Summer is the traditional time at movie multiplexes for blockbuster films from the Hollywood studios that tend to focus more on explosions and special effects than effective storylines. While there is no denying the box office clout of such films as TRANSFORMERS, TERMINATOR SALVATION and WOLVERINE, there are some less deafening art films that are also being released on American screens. Call it counter-programming, a strategy of offering a breather from the summer staples, that is proving to be an effective marketing ploy. Films that appeal to adults and to sophisticated tastes in the heart of summer.....who knew?
This week alone two French films have opened to rapturous reviews. THE BEACHES OF AGNES, an impressionistic documentary essay film by Nouvelle Vague favorite Agnes Varda, has captured the imagination of the arthouse crowd and is proving to be a summer sleeper hit.
THE GIRL FROM MONACO, a splashy romancier by Anne Fontaine, provides the requisite helping of sex, seduction and romantic settings that appeal to the Francophile crowd.
These two new entries come on the heels of several other French films that have remained remarkably popular in the light of so much Hollywood competition. One of the big hits of the summer season has been the film SUMMER HOURS by Olivier Assayas. The film opened back in May and continues a remarkable run that has yielded almost $2 million at the American box office. SERAPHINE, the celebrated biopic of outsider artist Seraphine Louis directed by Martin Provost, has also been a strong contender this season, as it expands its run outside of the traditional centers of New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Chicago to become a modest but well esteemed arthouse hit.
Other European titles filling the void include CHERI, the Stephen Frears-Christopher Hampton adaptation of twin novels by French writer Colette that explores the fevered relationship between an aging courtesan (Michelle Pfeiffer) and her immature younger lover (Rupert Friend) in fin-de-siecle Paris; DEAD SNOW, a Norwegian horror satire by Tommy Wirkola populated by Nazi zombies (!!!) who terrorize a small town; LAILA'S BIRTHDAY, a Dutch/Palestine co-production by director Rashid Masharawi about the strange and disorienting everyday life for Palestinians in the Israel-occupied West Bank; MOON, a sci-fi meditation on loneliness and futuristic alienation by UK director Duncan Jones; and QUIET CHAOS, a slice-of-life Italian drama starring Nanni Moretti and directed by Antonello Grimaldi.
Add to this the retrospective of the existential films of Russian auteur Andrei Tarkovsky at New York's Film Society of Lincoln Center (and scheduled to do a national tour) and one finds that amdist the cyborgs and superheros, that summer movie-going (of a more discriminate palette) has its own pleasures.
07 December, 2008
New VOD Services Introduced At Baltic Event
by Sandy Mandelberger, North American Editor
One of the most interesting presentations held at the Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival's Baltic Event was the introduction of 4 new Video On Demand (VOD) services based in Europe and focusing on the alternative distribution of European cinema. The sessions focused on the profiles of the services, what kind of content they currently feature and plan to add in the coming months and how their business plans work vis a vis independent producers.
Moderated by John Dick of the Media Programme, the panel/presentation covered many interesting aspects of these new services, and how they will impact the distribution chain in general and European independent producers in particular. The first presentation was by Belanski Films, a new and innovative world sales and distribution company focused on internet based and digial media platforms. Livis Abus, Head of Film Partnership and Andrea Di Tonto, Marketing and Communications Strategies, described how they acquire rights for arthouse cinema titles and how they market their over 100 titles (including features, documentaries and short films). Alternating between a classic international sales strategy (selling to individual territory distributors) and providing film packages to VOD platforms and mobile technology outlets, the Hungarian company is straddling both the traditional and the innovative worlds of international film distribution. For more information on the company, visit their website: http://www.belanski.com
UniversCine is a French VOD company launched in 2001 and entirely owned by a consortium of 50 French independent producers and distributors. Bruno Atlan, Manager of Marketing and International Development for the Paris-based firm, described how the company aggregates VOD rights on feature films from internatonal independent film producers, distributors and rights holders with a combination of new releases and library titles in the back catalogue. The company distributes VOD rights to the major VOD distributors and operators in France. In addition, the company serves as an editor/publisher of a VOD platform of its own in the French market, specifically of French films. Supported by the Media Programme, UniversCine is in the process of replicating its VOD services in Belgium, with plans to broaden its umbrella and unique model to build a network of VOD platforms across Europe. For more information on the company, visit their website: http://www.universcine.com
Affiliated with Trust Film, the Danish production and distribution banner founded by filmmaker Lars Von Trier and others, Movieurope is a VOD portal for distribution of European films via the Filmmakers' Independent Digital Distribution (FIDD), a filmmaker based cooperative organization. FIDD is building the infrastructure that allows European producers and distributors to reach wider audiences via digital distribution. FIDD was founded in January 2005 and is currently co-owned by more than 160 leading European filmmakers from 14 EU countries. The company is dedicated to optiming the earning potential of European films by cutting out the middle men and allowing a more diverse group of films to reach audiences via the internet. The company also maintains a television channel in Denmark, further expanding its efforts to reach a larger public. The company works on a revenue sharing model that fairly divides profits to great advantage than current international distribution deals (for which filmmakers receive a much smaller percentage with much higher marketing costs deducated from potential profits). For more information on this initiative, visit their website: http://www.movieurope.com
Finally, Paul Lilje, Content Services Manager for Estonian telecommunications giant Elion, owned by AS Eesti Telekom, explained how VOD services are expanding on the digital television services it provides over 75,000 household in Estonia. In addition, the company own Estonia most popular internet portals, NETI and hot.ee. The company provides both household and business communications services that includes telephony, internet, data communication and digital television. It is expanding its digital television bundled packages to include a mix of VOD services, games and myTV solutions. The VOD service offers more than 800 Estonian and foreign movies, television series, music videos and free of charge conference lectures. For more information, visit their website: http://www.elion.ee
While the current world economic crisis may slow down the timeframes of expanded services, it is clear that these and other initiatives provide a necessary "shot-in-the-arm" for the international independent film community, providing extensive and less costly means to the distribution stream and allowing for audiences to find, share and enjoy a more diverse menu of offerings than is currently available in the theatrical marketplace and at the home video/dvd retail outlet. The potential for European and other international non-Hollywood films is tremendously exciting.
25 June, 2008
EFP Screenings In New York
by Sandy Mandelberger, North American Editor
Wednesday, June 25------European Film Promotion (EFP), the pan-European association of governmental promotion agencies that represent the film industries of 25 European countries, continues its New York Industry Screenings as a way of targeting New York-based distributors, programmers and press. Over the past two days, EFP presented a program of 4 critically acclaimed European feature films with special screenings and receptions at the Tribeca Cinemas in lower Manhattan.
Films Distribution partner, François Yon believes that the screenings will offer distributors an all important follow-up opportunity to see films which have just been presented at major film festivals, including the recent Cannes International Film Festival. The four films getting the New York treatment include: No Network (Iceland, Ari Kristinsson), The Stranger In Me (Das Fremde In Mir, Germany, Emily Atef), Private Lessons (Eleve Libre, Belgium/France, Joachim Lafosse) and Eldorado (Belgium, Bouli Lanners).
No Network tells the story of Kalli, a young boy who is brought up by a single mother in the suburbs of Reykjavik. He thrives in a world of imaginary characters, where he gets most of his life experiences through screens: movies, television shows and computers. The film has won several major awards at children’s film festivals around the world, including Sprockets International Film Festival for Children, Kristiansand International Children’s Film Festival, Taiwan International Children’s TV and Film Festival, Stockholm Film Festival Junior and the Audience Award at the Zlin Film Festival. The sales agent for the film is Nonstop Sales, www.nonstopsales.com
The Stranger In Me offers an emotionally devastating portrait of post-pardum depression, as a young mother plunges into the depths of despair after having her baby. As her relationship with her husband unravels, she is advised to go to a clinic, where her maternal instincts are aroused and she learns to appreciate her role as a mother. The film had its premiere at the Semaine de la Critique section of the Cannes Film Festival and is represented internationally by Bavaria Film International, www.bavaria-film-international.com
Private Lessons is a provocative story of a troubled teenager who finds emotional sustenance with an older tutor. The young man, an aspiring tennis player is taken under the wing of an established player as his family life falls apart. The relationship verges on the physical and offers an intriguing portrait of male bonding. The film had its world premiere at the Director’s Fortnight section of the Cannes Film Festival and is represented internationally by French-based sales agent Films Distribution, www.filmsdistribution.com
Eldorado is a worthy addition to the European tradition of the “road movie”. In this tale, a 40-something man who is facing a mid-life crisis takes under his wing a young man who he discovers breaking into his home. The two head off on a road trip to reunite the boy with his family, and in the classic tradition of this genre, both learn valuable life lessons on the journey. The film premiered at last month’s Cannes Film Festival in the Director’s Fortnight section, winning the Europa Cinemas Label Award and the Regards Jeures Prize.
The promotion effort is occurring at a pivotal time for foreign language cinema in the U.S. In the past month, three distributors who had been very active in taking on European films (New Line, Picturehouse and Warner Independent Pictures) have announced that they will cease operations by year’s end. Another distributor who has championed European projects (THINKFilm) has been making headlines this past week as it faces economic hardships and lawsuits filed by various filmmakers who have not yet received their promised royalty payments.
Despite the recent box office successes of such films as The Lives Of Others, La Vie En Rose, Persepolis, 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days and The Counterfeiters, the landscape for foreign language films in the American market is as challenging as it has been in many decades. “We are rethinking how many sub-titled films we can really release into the market”, one prominent distributor shared with me. “The truth is that the audience for sub-titled films is aging and younger people seem far less interested in films from France, Italy, Spain, Scandinavia or other important meccas of cinema. That does not mean that a well made film can have crossover appeal, but it is definitely becoming a major concern since the cost of releasing films is at record levels.”
However, recent activity at the Cannes Film Festival, although very modest by previous years’ standards, demonstrates that there is still an appetite among U.S. film distributors for well-made European films that tackle subjects or themes that are not as heavily explored in American cinema. The continued advancement of digital download technology and the new release strategy of “day-and-date” (making films available on the same date in theaters and on Video On Demand platforms on cable and satellite television) will hopefully provide enough economic incentive for more activity in the future.
As an alternative to the summer blockbuster, there remains an appetite among American audiences for intelligent, mature and well-crafted films and European films of a certain stripe. EFP’s New York Screenings initiative provides a strong platform for European films seeking US distribution. Since the program first began in 2005, approximately 25% of the films screened in this series have subsequently secured US distribution. The NY Industry Screenings are financially supported by the MEDIA Programme of the European Union, Wallonie Bruxelles Images, German Films and the Icelandic Film Centre.
Labels:
EFP,
European Film Promotion,
European films,
New York
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