News & Updates

  • HBO Now to Launch Exclusively on Apple TV

    Posted by on March 09, 2015

    Price of Apple TV reduced from $99 to $69

    , Senior Editor @ Variety

    Apple TV will be the exclusive launch partner for HBO Now, the standalone subscription-based streaming service the pay cabler is rolling out as an attempt to court consumers that don’t want to sign up for cable service.

    HBO Now will be available for $14.99 a month, starting in April, in time for the return of “Game of Thrones.”

    Announcement was made at the start of an Apple press event, in San Francisco, on Monday.

    Apple has sold 25 million Apple TV units to date. The company announced it is lowering the price of Apple TV from $99 to $69.

    HBO Now also will be available on Apple’s iPhones and iPads.

     

     

    All you need to get HBO Now is a broadband connection and an Apple device,” said HBO CEO Richard Plepler. “When you subscribe to HBO NOW you will have access to all our acclaimed original programming — past, present and future — as well as our unmatched lineup of Hollywood blockbusters.

    Check this out at Variety.com

  • NALIPster Sara Seligman takes "Diego" to San Diego Latino Film Festival

    Posted by on March 05, 2015

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    NALIPster Sara Seligman´s short film "Diego" will be screening at the San Diego Latino Film Festival on Sunday March 15th 12:30pm as part of the "México raro y querido" short film program. 

    "Diego" takes place in a small town in Mexico, in Diego’s family, poverty, crime and abuse is an everyday thing. When a little girl is kidnapped by his family, Diego is left with a choice: follow in his family’s footsteps or risk his life by following his heart. Diego stars Humberto Busto (Amores Perros, The perfect Dictatorship, Los Héroes del Norte) Christian Vazquez (I hate love, Elysium, Cinco de Mayo la batalla).

    Sara Seligman's short has screened in over 20 film festivals including Palm Springs Short Fest, Raindance, FICG in LA. Currently Sara is in preproduction of her next short film about the Papantla Flyers and working on the final stages of development of her feature screenplay "Flacon Lake".

     

  • CAA Signs Chilean Filmmaker Nicolas Lopez

    Posted by on March 05, 2015

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     AP Images/Invision

    by Rebecca Sun @ HollywoodReporter

    CAA has signed Chilean filmmaker and frequent Eli Roth collaborator Nicolas LopezThe Hollywood Reporter has exclusively learned.

    Lopez first teamed up with the horror auteur for 2010's bilingual disaster flick Aftershock, starring Roth and directed by Lopez from a screenplay the two men wrote with Uruguayan filmmaker Guillermo Amoedo, another Lopez partner. The movie got Lopez attention at Toronto (where Dimension acquired it), and is part of his and Roth's "Chilewood" project, a mission to nurture small-budget Chile-based genre films that could play in the U.S. and beyond.

    The pair came together again for 2013's cannibal tale The Green Inferno (with Roth taking the director's chair and Lopez moving into a producer role) and January's Knock Knock, in which Keanu Reeves is seduced and then terrorized by two young women he lets into his house. Lopez served as producer and co-writer on the Roth-helmed thriller, which sold to Lionsgate at Sundance.

    Lopez is now preparing to direct his first English-language comedy, the indieI'm Not Crazy, which he wrote with Amoedo. He is also executive producing the sequel to last year's Chilean cop comedy Fuerzas Especiales, which he co-wrote and executive produced through his Sobras International Pictures.

    The banner originated as Sobras.com, an entertainment blog founded by a precocious 15-year-old Lopez. (His media career actually began three years earlier, as a 12-year-old columnist for Chilean newspaper El Mercurio.) When Lopez was 19, his first feature, the fantasy romantic comedy Promedio rojo, played in festivals including SXSW, Los Angeles, Tokyo, Sitges (in Spain) and Chile's own Vina del Mar, where it won a special jury award.

    His sophomore film, 2008's superhero comedy Santos, also won special jury honors at Fantastic Fest, and his romantic comedy Que pena tu vida (F— My Life) became Chile's highest-grossing movie of 2010 and spawned a Netflix co-produced trilogy with Que pena tu boda (F— My Wedding) — which topped Chile's box office in 2011 — and Que pena tu familia.

    Lopez is also repped by Circle of Confusion.

    Check this out at HollywoodReporter.com

  • The 80s Mexican Sci-Fi Show That Spawned Hollywood’s Best Filmmakers

    Posted by on March 05, 2015

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    Emmanuel Lubezki. Photo via Flickr user disneyabc

    by Oscar Raymundo

    The 2015 Academy Awards marked the second year in a row that Mexican filmmakers have taken home the Oscar for Best Director and Best Cinematography. On Sunday,Birdman director Alejandro González Iñárritu took home this year's Best Director and Best Original Screenplay awards. Last year Alfonso Cuarón won Best Director for his work on Gravity. To top it all off, the director of photography on both Birdman andGravity, Emmanuel Lubezki, scored two consecutive Academy Awards for Best Cinematography.

    Iñárritu, Cuarón, and Lubezki, along with fellow Oscar nominees Guillermo Del Toro (Pacific Rim), Guillermo Navarro (Pan's Labyrinth), and Rodrigo Prieto (Brokeback Mountain) are all part of a generation of Mexican-born auteurs who have managed to make their mark on Hollywood. The origins of these goddamn gifted Mexican filmmakers can be traced back to 1988, with the premiere of La Hora Marcada (The Marked Hour), a Mexican television anthology series devoted to tackling experimental horror, science fiction, and urban legends from Latin America. Think of it as the Mexican answer to The Twilight Zone and a predecessor to Black Mirror, Charlie Brooker's episodic sci-fi sensation. La Hora Marcada had only one recurring character: a "woman in black" with a large hat and veil who wouldn't seem out of place on today's American Horror Story.

    Cuarón started as an assistant director on the TV show, and Del Toro worked in special effects and makeup. The two young filmmakers bonded quickly over their creative differences after Cuarón directed his first episode for the series based on a Stephen King short story.

    According to Cuarón, Del Toro called him up after watching his episode and bluntly criticized his adaptation. "If the story is so good, then why is your episode so bad?" Del Toro asked. If egos had played a role, the quip might have soured the two men's working relationship. Instead, Cuarón and Del Toro began a creative partnership that has lasted almost 30 years.

    "I'll tell him if it's [garbage]," Del Toro told the Los Angeles Times. "That's what friends do."

    Read more at VICE.com

  • Networks Turn Up the Volume on Minority Actors This Pilot Season

    Posted by on March 05, 2015

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    Managing Editor: Television @Variety_Cynthia

    ABC knew going in to the casting process for its drama pilot “Runner” that it was looking for a Latino leading man, as specified in the script. But the female lead role had no racial or ethnic specificity.

    Paula Patton, an African-American actress, landed the role of a woman whose life is ripped apart when she learns her husband, played by Adam Rodriguez, is wrapped up in a Mexican gun-running cartel.

    “Runner” is but one example this pilot season of a surge of minority actors landing starring roles in prospective new series. Industry insiders say there’s an undeniable openness to African-American, Latino and Asian thesps on the heels of the success ABC and Fox have had with shows led by diverse casts.

    TV executives have talked for years about the need for the airwaves to reflect the growing cultural diversity of America. But the 2014-15 television season has marked a turning point in the embrace of diversity as a business strategy. Fox has fielded the biggest network TV hit in years with “Empire,” a soap with a largely African-American cast. ABC has scored with Viola Davis leading “How to Get Away With Murder” and the family comedies “Blackish” and “Fresh Off the Boat.”

    Such hits prove that broadcast TV in particular can no longer afford to ignore the value of discrete racial and ethnic groups. The role of  “How to Get Away With Murder’s” Annalise Keating was not specifically envisioned for an African-American actress, but the casting of Davis undoubtedly helped generate sampling among black viewers — a demographic group that has boosted the overall turnout for the show.

    ABC’s success this season “proves the point that audiences are hungry for shows that are well done but also reflect the world around us,” said Channing Dungey, exec VP of drama development, movies and miniseries for ABC. “It’s not about just diversity, it’s about authenticity. Audiences are really excited to see more of themselves on the screen.”

    “Runner” is an example of how this pilot season, minority actors are much more in demand than they have been in the recent past. And with “Black-ish” and “Fresh Off the Boat” drawing crossover demographics, there’s a greater appetite for shows with ethnically specific settings.

    “It’s been interesting to see how much more competitive it is with diverse actors and actresses now,” said Dungey, who added that she is proud ABC helped lead the way, not just with “Murder” but with the blossoming of Kerry Washington and “Scandal” into the first successful drama in decades led by an African-American actress.

    “The thing I really hope is that this isn’t a passing phase,” Dungey said. “I’m hoping this is a trend that will continue.”

     Check this out on Variety.com 

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  • Roy W. Dean Spring Grant

    Posted by · March 05, 2015

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    The Roy W. Dean Spring Grant is now accepting applications. Deadline is April 30th. The winner receives $25,000 in film goods, services, and funds to get their film started or completed. The grant seeks short films, documentaries, features, or series that are unique and make a contribution to society. 

    Now, in its 23rd year, the cash portion of the grant has increased to $3,500. Winner will receive about $25,000 in goods and services from Edgewise, Silver Sound, Edgewise, Nice shoes, Carmen Borgia and many more wonderful organizations who give back to filmmakers through our grant.

    But, if you don’t win, you still end up ahead.  Each applicant gets a consultation from Carole Dean, president of From The Heart Productions, author of the bestselling- book, “The Art of Film Funding”.  With over 20 years’ experience judging films, mentoring filmmakers, and helping films get funded, she will give the applicants advice on improving their story, their pitch, and their project.  

    Application and guidelines are on our website at www.fromtheheartproductions.com

     

  • WGA Study: Most Jobs Go To White Guys in Their 40s

    Posted by · March 05, 2015

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    by  @ Deadline

    The number of jobs for women, minority and older TV writers took a nose dive last year, according to a new study by the Writers Guild of America, West. “Women and minorities have actually lost ground as compared to their white male counterparts,” the study found, “both in terms of overall staff positions and in higher-level executive producer ranks.”

    Minority writers saw a nearly 7% decline in employment last season, falling from 15.6% of the workforce in 2011-12 to 13.7% in 2013-14, while employment of female writers fell 5%, from 30.5% to 29%.

    Among the major networks, CBS fared the worst in terms of its employment of minority staff writers. In its report card, the WGA found that minorities accounted for only 11.3% of the writers employed on CBS shows, compared with 16.1% at ABC, 14.2% at NBC and 13.9% at Fox.

    Ironically, it’s the guild’s own members – the showrunners and executive producers – who do most of the hiring. But it’s the networks, studios and production companies who hire the showrunners, and the report found that minorities held only 5.5% of those jobs during the 2013-14 season, down from 7.8% two years earlier, an overall decline of nearly 30%.

    “Blame is rightfully shared,” Hunt told Deadline, noting that showrunners, networks, studios, production companies and talent agencies that package the deals all need to do a better job of diversifying their writing staffs if audiences are going to continue to tune in to their shows. “Studies show that audiences do prefer more diverse programming,” he said. “I just don’t see how the industry is going to be viable if they don’t give increasingly diverse audiences what they want.”

    But he said the chances of that happening on its own are not good. “The market by itself is not going to fix it; there are too many obstacles,” Hunt said. “It’s not going to correct itself. Something else is going to have to happen.”

    Just what that might be, however, is anybody’s guess. Government interference is not a realistic or desirable option, and class-action lawsuits haven’t changed the diversity equation much either. In 2010, a massive class-action ageism suit against the networks and the talent agencies was settled for a record $70 million, but most TV writers older than 50 still find themselves largely unemployable.

    “Although writers over 40 continued to claim a majority of all staff writer positions,” the report found, “data from the most recent TV season show that their employment prospects drop dramatically after age 50. Such stark statistics continue to illustrate that the entertainment industry remains a glaringly unlevel playing field.”

    The report examined employment patterns of nearly 3,000 writers working on 292 TV shows that aired on 36 broadcast and cable networks during the 2013-14 season. Only 781 of those jobs were held by women. Last season’s drop in the percentage of women employed as TV writers “erases some of the slow but steady progress women writers have made in the sector since 2011, when their share of employment stood at only 26.8%,” the report concluded. “At slightly more than half of the U.S. population, women remain underrepresented among staff writers by nearly 2-to-1.”

    Despite last season’s decline in the percentages of women and minority staff writers, the report found that the trend over the last two decades has been upward, but still not fast enough to match the nation’s changing demographics. “Over the years, the fortunes of diverse writers in the television sector have ebbed and flowed,” the study concluded. “While the general pattern consists of an upward trajectory in diverse sector employment, the rate of progress has failed to keep pace with the rapid diversification of the nation’s population. This is significant not only in terms of employment opportunity but also in terms of industry bottom-line considerations. Indeed, research is beginning to confirm the common-sense notion that increasingly diverse audiences desire more diverse storytelling. When diverse voices are marginalized or missing altogether in the writers room, it is less likely that the stories told will hit the mark.”

    Check this out at Deadline.com