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karina
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Karina on SpoutBlog
Tribeca’s Itch: Trade Roughage 04/21/08
Under discussion:
The Forbidden Kingdom
(2008)
With the Tribeca Film Festival beginning on Wednesday, Winter Miller analyises the festival’s “7 year itch” for
Variety
. “Logistics and that intangible thing known as the “festival experience” might well improve, but seven years after its founding as a call to bring the city together post 9/11, the fest is still seeking a clear identity,” hew writes. Perhaps the first step would be to do something about the fest’s institutional indifference to quality in its obsession with quantity, which Miller alludes to: “Unlike fests with mandates to screen what they perceive as the absolute cream of the crop, Tribeca wears its number of international and first-timer participants as a badge of honor.”
Martial arts epic
Forbidden Kingdom
grossed almost $21 million over the weekend, enough to take the top
box office
slot ahead of
Forgetting Sarah Marshall
; the latest widget from the Apatow factory earned a not-great, not-terrible $17 million. Also: the tactic of opening
Expelled
wide in rural and suburban communities paid off, as the doc made $3.1 million (and almost double per screen what Morgan Spurlock’s docu-farce
Where in the World Is Osama Bin Laden?
managed in a smaller run), in spite of almost universally negative reviews.
A former TV exec and a producer of
Bend it Like Beckham
have teamed up to launch Filmaka, a “a digital entertainment studio that sponsors worldwide contests for aspiring filmmakers.” According to
The Hollywood Reporter
, the first contest will be judged by a panel of filmmakers including Werner Herzog, Wim Wenders and Neil LaBute.
Originally posted on:
SpoutBlog » Karina Longworth
posted on Monday, April 21, 2008 9:01 AM by
Karina
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