Exclusive: Faith-based distributor Pure Flix has closed deals in Cannes on the follow-up to the Us box office hit.
Pure Flix / Quality Flix sales chief Ron Gell, in Cannes with a slate of new titles, has cut a raft of deals on God’s Not Dead 2, the follow-up to the 2014 faith-based Us smash.
God’s Not Dead 2 screens in the market at Cannes today [May 14] and Monday and opened in the Us last month, where it has grossed more than $20m theatrically.
Gell has licensed rights for Australia (Crossroads), Hong Kong (United Artists), Latin America, France, Spain, Italy, Portugal, Scandinavia (California Filmes), Germany (Other Films), South Korea (Sycomad), and Eastern Europe/Poland (Revolutionary Releasing/Monolith), and Africa (Cmd).
Tanweer has picked up God’s Not Dead and God’s Not Dead 2 for the Middle East and vice-president of international sales and distribution Gell is closing in on sales for mainland China and Sri Lanka. Dominus licensed...
Pure Flix / Quality Flix sales chief Ron Gell, in Cannes with a slate of new titles, has cut a raft of deals on God’s Not Dead 2, the follow-up to the 2014 faith-based Us smash.
God’s Not Dead 2 screens in the market at Cannes today [May 14] and Monday and opened in the Us last month, where it has grossed more than $20m theatrically.
Gell has licensed rights for Australia (Crossroads), Hong Kong (United Artists), Latin America, France, Spain, Italy, Portugal, Scandinavia (California Filmes), Germany (Other Films), South Korea (Sycomad), and Eastern Europe/Poland (Revolutionary Releasing/Monolith), and Africa (Cmd).
Tanweer has picked up God’s Not Dead and God’s Not Dead 2 for the Middle East and vice-president of international sales and distribution Gell is closing in on sales for mainland China and Sri Lanka. Dominus licensed...
- 5/14/2016
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
Exclusive: The Us faith-based entertainment company has closed a raft of sales on its slate led by Do You Believe?, the recent Us release and follow-up to the breakout God’s Not Dead.
Rights have gone in Brazil and Latin America (California Filmes), Canada (Mongrel), South Africa (Times Media Films) and Poland (Kino Swiat).
Mira Sorvino, Cybill Shepherd and Sean Astin are among the cast on Do You Believe?, Jon Gunn’s ensemble drama about a group of people searching for faith and forgiveness.
Vice-president of international sales and distribution Ron Gell is fielding multiple offers from Eastern Europe, South Korea and Indonesia.
Gell also licensed South African rights to Cmd on God’s Not Dead, Black Rider and Mission Air.
Two films sold in Spain, with Art-Mood acquiring Finding Normal and CorbiMedia taking Taken By Grace.
Camp Harlow went to Life Media for Poland and Ksm for Germany, while Mig acquired Book Of Daniel and Book...
Rights have gone in Brazil and Latin America (California Filmes), Canada (Mongrel), South Africa (Times Media Films) and Poland (Kino Swiat).
Mira Sorvino, Cybill Shepherd and Sean Astin are among the cast on Do You Believe?, Jon Gunn’s ensemble drama about a group of people searching for faith and forgiveness.
Vice-president of international sales and distribution Ron Gell is fielding multiple offers from Eastern Europe, South Korea and Indonesia.
Gell also licensed South African rights to Cmd on God’s Not Dead, Black Rider and Mission Air.
Two films sold in Spain, with Art-Mood acquiring Finding Normal and CorbiMedia taking Taken By Grace.
Camp Harlow went to Life Media for Poland and Ksm for Germany, while Mig acquired Book Of Daniel and Book...
- 5/20/2015
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
Exclusive: The Us faith-based entertainment company has closed a raft of sales on its slate led by Do You Believe?, the recent Us release and follow-up to the breakout God’s Not Dead.
Rights have gone in Brazil and Latin America (California Filmes), Canada (Mongrel), South Africa (Times Media Films) and Poland (Kino Swiat).
Mira Sorvino, Cybill Shepherd and Sean Astin are among the cast on Do You Believe?, Jon Gunn’s ensemble drama about a group of people searching for faith and forgiveness.
Vice-president of international sales and distribution Ron Gell is fielding multiple offers from Eastern Europe, South Korea and Indonesia.
Gell also licensed South African rights to Cmd on God’s Not Dead, Black Rider and Mission Air.
Two films sold in Spain, with Art-Mood acquiring Finding Normal and CorbiMedia taking Taken By Grace.
Camp Harlow went to Life Media for Poland and Ksm for Germany, while Mig acquired Book Of Daniel and Book...
Rights have gone in Brazil and Latin America (California Filmes), Canada (Mongrel), South Africa (Times Media Films) and Poland (Kino Swiat).
Mira Sorvino, Cybill Shepherd and Sean Astin are among the cast on Do You Believe?, Jon Gunn’s ensemble drama about a group of people searching for faith and forgiveness.
Vice-president of international sales and distribution Ron Gell is fielding multiple offers from Eastern Europe, South Korea and Indonesia.
Gell also licensed South African rights to Cmd on God’s Not Dead, Black Rider and Mission Air.
Two films sold in Spain, with Art-Mood acquiring Finding Normal and CorbiMedia taking Taken By Grace.
Camp Harlow went to Life Media for Poland and Ksm for Germany, while Mig acquired Book Of Daniel and Book...
- 5/20/2015
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
More from the history books... This one is titled "Schwarzfahrer" (aka "Black Rider") - a 1993 German short film directed by Pepe Danquart, which won the Academy Award in 1994 for Best Short Subject. The 10-minute black and white film follows an incident of racism on a tram in Germany: In short, an elderly white woman verbally abuses a black man, expressing her prejudices against asylum-seekers and immigrants. The other passengers eavesdrop, but don’t intervene. When the ticket inspector turns up to check everyone’s tickets something unexpected occurs and the tables turn... The young black man was played by Paul...
- 7/8/2014
- by Tambay A. Obenson
- ShadowAndAct
One of CBS' pilots just got a whole lot sexier. Josh Holloway, who starred as the roguish Sawyer on "Lost," has been cast in the lead role of "Intelligence."
Holloway will play Gabriel Black, a former Navy Seal and current intelligence officer, according to a report from Deadline.com. Black is the center of a special unit at the U.S. Cyber Command due to a microchip implanted in his brain. With it, the agent can access any part of the electromagnetic spectrum in order to be a super-spy.
"Intelligence" is based on an unpublished book, "Dissident," written by John Dixon. The pilot was written by Michael Seitzman who will executive produce with David Semel (who will direct) and Tripp Vinson.
While a well-known actor thanks to his six years on "Lost," Holloway has relatively few credits to his name. He appeared in small roles prior to being cast as...
Holloway will play Gabriel Black, a former Navy Seal and current intelligence officer, according to a report from Deadline.com. Black is the center of a special unit at the U.S. Cyber Command due to a microchip implanted in his brain. With it, the agent can access any part of the electromagnetic spectrum in order to be a super-spy.
"Intelligence" is based on an unpublished book, "Dissident," written by John Dixon. The pilot was written by Michael Seitzman who will executive produce with David Semel (who will direct) and Tripp Vinson.
While a well-known actor thanks to his six years on "Lost," Holloway has relatively few credits to his name. He appeared in small roles prior to being cast as...
- 2/11/2013
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Zap2It - From Inside the Box
Feature Juliette Harrisson Feb 7, 2013
To celebrate Community's long-awaited return, Juliette counts down ten of its geekiest references to other TV shows and films...
There’s a reason Community, while struggling in the ratings out in the big wide world, often seems to be the most popular show on the internet. This is a show that has not only embraced geek culture, it threw geek culture a big party, baked it a cake then cleaned up afterwards and sent geek culture to bed with a cup of hot cocoa. From brief references to geek staples, to one-liners and visual gags, all the way up to complete spoof episodes, no show on television celebrates geek culture in quite the way that Community does. In preparation for the long-delayed return of everyone’s favourite gang of community college students, we celebrate ten of the show’s geekiest gags.
Each reference has been...
To celebrate Community's long-awaited return, Juliette counts down ten of its geekiest references to other TV shows and films...
There’s a reason Community, while struggling in the ratings out in the big wide world, often seems to be the most popular show on the internet. This is a show that has not only embraced geek culture, it threw geek culture a big party, baked it a cake then cleaned up afterwards and sent geek culture to bed with a cup of hot cocoa. From brief references to geek staples, to one-liners and visual gags, all the way up to complete spoof episodes, no show on television celebrates geek culture in quite the way that Community does. In preparation for the long-delayed return of everyone’s favourite gang of community college students, we celebrate ten of the show’s geekiest gags.
Each reference has been...
- 2/6/2013
- by louisamellor
- Den of Geek
Ahead of 30 Rock's final season we look at the greatest comedy appearances, from Cher to Noel Fielding. Anyone we've missed?
It's a show known for its great guest star appearances. There are the top-billing megastars who reveal another side to themselves on the show – Oprah as Liz Lemon's exaggerated, hallucinatory 'Opraaaah', Jennifer Aniston's intensely obsessive Claire, Carrie Fisher's washed up writer Rosemary and Liz's very own Ghost Of Christmas Future. The repeat-appearance kooks – Will Arnett's Devon Banks and Marceline Hugot's Kathy Geiss – and the one-off show stealers (Wayne Brady as Liz's dull date). And yet somehow 30 Rock has a way of not making its guest stars seem perfunctory or like window dressing.
So the excitement surrounding the guest-star list for 30 Rock's final season, which begins airing in the Us at the beginning of next month, is understandable. Leaks suggest it might include Breaking Bad's Bryan Cranston...
It's a show known for its great guest star appearances. There are the top-billing megastars who reveal another side to themselves on the show – Oprah as Liz Lemon's exaggerated, hallucinatory 'Opraaaah', Jennifer Aniston's intensely obsessive Claire, Carrie Fisher's washed up writer Rosemary and Liz's very own Ghost Of Christmas Future. The repeat-appearance kooks – Will Arnett's Devon Banks and Marceline Hugot's Kathy Geiss – and the one-off show stealers (Wayne Brady as Liz's dull date). And yet somehow 30 Rock has a way of not making its guest stars seem perfunctory or like window dressing.
So the excitement surrounding the guest-star list for 30 Rock's final season, which begins airing in the Us at the beginning of next month, is understandable. Leaks suggest it might include Breaking Bad's Bryan Cranston...
- 9/12/2012
- by Priya Elan
- The Guardian - Film News
Man, was I excited to see The Fellowship of the Ring just a tad over ten years ago. Though I had only seen the well-intentioned-but-still-very-mediocre The Frighteners before sitting down in the theater that cold December night, I was very confident of Peter Jackson’s ability to transcribe J.R.R. Tolkien’s fully-realized literary world onto the big screen lovingly, faithfully, and, above all, accurately. After all, several million people on the internet couldn’t be wrong about his filmmaking bona fides, right?
They were wrong. Horribly, tragically, depressingly wrong.
Fellowship of the Ring is one of the most epic failures Hollywood has produced in the last quarter century, if not longer. And it’s apparent from literally the first moment the screen flickers to life, when a ten-minute(!) narration explaining every last nook and cranny of Tolkien’s millennia-long backstory starts up. The origins – and even the visage – of Sauron,...
They were wrong. Horribly, tragically, depressingly wrong.
Fellowship of the Ring is one of the most epic failures Hollywood has produced in the last quarter century, if not longer. And it’s apparent from literally the first moment the screen flickers to life, when a ten-minute(!) narration explaining every last nook and cranny of Tolkien’s millennia-long backstory starts up. The origins – and even the visage – of Sauron,...
- 2/15/2012
- by msunyata
- Corona's Coming Attractions
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