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Brazilian world sales company O2 Play nabs Marcelo Gomes’ ‘Portrait of a Certain Orient’ ahead of Rotterdam premiere

Marcelo Gomes’ new film “Portrait of a Certain Orient” will be represented for world sales by Brazil’s O2 Play.

 

The deal was sealed ahead of the film’s premiere at the International Film Festival Rotterdam, where it plays as part of the Big Screen Competition.

 

(Courtesy of IFFR)

                                                                      

O2 Play is the distribution arm of O2 Filmes group, a production, post-production and advertising company owned by Fernando Meirelles, the Oscar-nominated director behind “City of God,” “The Constant Gardener” and “The Two Popes.” Meirelles heads the company alongside Andrea Barata and Paulo Morelli. Founded by Igor Kupstas in 2013, O2 Play has theatrically released over a hundred films in Brazil, including Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s “Drive My Car,” Martin Scorsese’s “The Irishman” and, most recently, Sofia Coppola’s “Priscilla.”

 

Gomes, whose 2005 feature debut “Cinema, Aspirins and Vultures” was funded by IFFR’s Hubert Bals Fund, returns to the festival with his eighth feature, an adaptation of eminent Brazilian-Lebanese writer Milton Hatoum’s eponymous 1989 novel about a trio of Lebanese immigrants heading to Brazil.

 

Gomes said: “In my film, I try to show that the only way to deconstruct prejudices is by viewing the world through the eyes of others as an antidote to fanaticism. In view of the many crises engulfing us around the world that seems more important today than ever.”

 

Igor Kuptsas, director of O2 Play, said: “Marcelo’s body of work is proof that he is one of the most renowned Brazilian filmmakers working today, and his sensitive and incisive treatment of questions of migration and belonging go to the heart of one of today’s most pressing global issues in a family saga that is universally relatable.”

 

Speaking exclusively to Variety ahead of the film’s premiere, Gomes says he was attracted to Hatoum’s novel due to it being “unfilmable,” going on to explain he appreciated the idea of adapting a book featuring several streams of consciousness. The story, which follows two Catholic Lebanese siblings who meet a Muslim Lebanese man on a boat to Brazil, felt like a “puzzle” to the “Joaquim” director.

 

(Marcelo Gomes, Courtesy of Getty)

“I wanted to show the Amazon through the eyes of someone who had never been there, to show Brazil from the perspective of a foreigner. My first film is about a foreigner in the northeast of Brazil and I think that film made me understand my country better than any other films,” he added. “I love the thought of someone coming from the Middle East, from the desert, and landing in the Amazon.”

 

The director went on to describe the making of a film as a “saga.” “This film is a miracle! We were three days into shooting when we had to stop because of the pandemic. We all went back home and had to raise money again later on to restart production.” Still, even with the difficulties, Gomes managed to produce a film in several languages including Arabic, French and the Tucano Indigenous language, and featuring an international cast including Wafa’a Celine Halawi, Charbel Kamel, Zakaria Al Kaakour and Eros Galbiati.

 

This was vital to the director because, in the book, the Brazilian city of Manaus is described as a Babylon, with immigrants coming from countries such as Spain, Portugal and Lebanon to work in the region’s many plantations and factories. “It was a very cosmopolitan city, so I thought this film needed to be in multiple languages,” said Gomes. “I had to invite Lebanese actors because I needed actors speaking in their language and their own accents and I also wanted actors who had never seen the country with their own eyes. I thought this would give a truth to the film that was very important.”

 

Of broaching contemporary issues such as land demarcation and immigration in a period film, the director said: “Immigrants want a place to call home. This is a problem we have in Brazil. In the Amazon, farmers want to steal the land from the natives. The book was written in 1981, but I am a person living in 2024 and touched by the issues that are going on around me. I had to include Indigenous issues in the film, I had to mention the Middle East issues in the film and the immigration crisis.”

 

Premiering the film in Rotterdam has a special meaning to Gomes, who claims the festival to be “the most important of my career.” “I have shown my shorts there and, when I was developing the script for my first feature back in the late 90s, I had no money. So I applied for the Hubert Bals Fund and received the grant. Because of that grant, I wrote the script, applied for other grants, succeeded to make my film and then presented it at Cannes. The festival is like my mother.”

 

“Portrait of a Certain Orient” will premiere at IFFR on Jan. 27.

 

 

 

— Variety EXCLUSIVE

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Gaming regulator in China rescinds draft rules, published in December to set spending limits and ban daily login rewards in online games; Tencent rose 6%+

—  China’s gaming regulator has removed from its website rules it proposed last month aimed at curbing spending and rewards

 

Josh Ye / Reuters:

 

HONG KONG — China’s gaming regulator has removed from its website rules it proposed last month aimed at curbing spending and rewards that encourage playing video games, checks by Reuters on Tuesday showed, in a move that boosted gaming company shares.

(Tencent sign is seen at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai, China July 6, 2023. REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo Acquire Licensing Rights, opens new tab)

The link to the draft rules on the National Press and Publication Administration’s (NPPA) website was inaccessible as of Tuesday morning, after having worked on Monday.

 

The consultation period on the rules, which sparked market turmoil when they were first announced, expired on Monday.
The removal was described by analysts as unusual, with some saying a revision could be in store. The NPPA did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the reason for the removal.
Xiaoyue Hu, an analyst at Haitong Securities, said in a note to clients reviewed by Reuters that the removal of the announcement could signal “there might be further changes in the new measures.”

 

Hu said previous regulatory measures seeking opinions had a track record of staying on the government’s websites even after the consultation period ended.
Shares in Tencent Holdings (0700.HK), opens new tab, the world’s biggest gaming company, and its closest rival, NetEase (9999.HK), opens new tab, rose as much as 6% and 7% in morning trading respectively. The two companies’ shares were still up more than 4% at noon against a 2.4% increase in Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index (.HSI)

 

The draft rules, which proposed setting spending limits for online games, had sparked panic among investors, wiping off nearly $80 billion in market value from China’s two biggest gaming companies when they were announced.
Analysts also at the time said the plans brought the risk of potential regulatory change back to the fore in the minds of investors, hurting confidence at a time when the government has been trying to boost private-sector investment to spur a slowing economy.
But five days later, the NPPA struck a more conciliatory tone, saying it would improve them by “earnestly studying” public views. Earlier this month, Reuters reported that China removed a gaming regulatory official from his post, in a move linked to the rules.
Two of the most contentious articles in the proposed rules were articles 17 and 18, analysts said. The NPPA had acknowledged concern over those articles in December and analysts said there was a possibility they could be removed or changed.
Article 17 seeks to ban video games from forcing players into combat, which confused the industry as combat is the key mechanic of the majority of contemporary multi-player games.
Article 18 requires games to set a spending limit for players as well as barring features that incentivize players to spend in the game.
“Our base-case view expects the government to remove Article 17 (prohibition of mandatory player-versus-player) and 18 (imposing spending limit) from the final rule,” Ivan Su, an analyst at Morningstar, told Reuters.
Charlie Chai, a Shanghai-based analyst at 86Research, said regulators have been working to contain the fallout of the proposed rules.
“It seems (government) officials were caught off guard by the overwhelming negative reaction from investors, businesses, and the public,” he said, adding that the government has since “moderated its stance (and labelled) the proposal as ‘negotiable.'”

 

 

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— Techmeme

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‘In a Violent Nature’ review: A fresh Canadian spin on slasher conventions

Chris Nash’s gory debut feature subjects the usual nubile youth to the usual cabin-in-the-woods horror — but with a distinctive shift in perspective

 

Slasher movies often droop between grisly highlights due to the weak plotting and cardboard characters meant to lend structural integrity to their shock content, but not “In a Violent Mind.”

 

“In a Violent Mind” avoids those pitfalls by pretty much sidestepping entirely the standard niceties of narrative and psychological detail. There is explanatory backstory — however piecemeal and possibly-inaccurate — but otherwise writer-director Chris Nash’s first feature approaches the usual bloody business with a sort of minimalist purity, enabled by focusing almost wholly on the POV of one Unstoppable Killing Machine.

 

It’s a gambit that might easily turn monotonous. Yet this Canadian indie manages to keep us engaged, stirring queasy viewer dread if not much outright terror. Premiering in Sundance’s Midnight section, the Shudder Original is slated to begin streaming on that genre platform sometime this spring.

 

We seem to be back in “Blair Witch” territory at the beginning (and again during a panicked stretch at the end), as off-camera hikers poke around the ruins of a forest fire tower. One of them spies a necklace draped on a pipe, which he pockets before they leave. Our suspicion that removing this talisman might be a bad idea soon bears fruit, as immediately afterward the ground stirs, and a man’s figure covered with soil emerges from its grave. It lumbers to a decrepit house on the border of these parklands — in which the entity once lived, we glean — where a local poacher has the misfortune to be malingering.

 

This first kill is not graphic, but such restraint won’t last long. That evening, the ghoul is attracted to a campfire outside a cabin, introducing us to seven young adults staying there. One of them (Sam Roulston as Ehren) tells the local legend of the “White Pine Massacre,” which involved lumberjacks several years prior picking on the “mentally hindered” son of a store owner. Their pranks inadvertently led to the boy’s death — falling from that aforementioned fire tower — followed by the men’s own mysterious slaughter. (Later, in the present time, a game warden played by Reece Presley fleshes out this history a bit further).

 

Needless to say, our mute, relentless perp (Ry Barrett) is that wronged Johnny come back to vengeful half-life, wreaking grievous bodily harm on anyone he finds. Breaking into a ranger station, he acquires rusty tools of historical-turned-homicidal value from display cases. Subsequent mayhem is vivid, to say the least. While not all the gory prosthetic FX entirely convince, Nash’s penchant for long sustained shots encompass some coups of seamless transition between visibly intact actor and gruesome aftermath.

 

Naturally, there is a Final Girl (Andrea Pavlovic as Kris). But as we’re almost entirely locked into the undead killer’s perspective — primarily from a traveling camera position behind him as he creeps through the woods — these frequently petulant, argumentative victims never require much dimensionality. Their eventual realization that something is very wrong happens mostly off-screen, with dialogue overheard just briefly in moments before they face lethal peril.

 

Aside from the aforementioned stretches of spoken backstory, the only prolonged verbal interlude comes from Lauren Taylor in a late appearance as a passing Good Samaritan. Her monologue pushes the envelope in terms of risking dissipation of the creepy atmospherics. Still, ultimately the mood of menace is sustained enough for an unsettled, eerie fadeout.

 

Using an almost square aspect ratio, DP Pierce Derks makes the northern Ontario wilderness locations both lovely and sinister, with enough variety to the visual tactics that the film never gets stuck in found footage horror’s first-person-camera stylistic rut. A complete lack of any original scoring (some incidental music is heard from radios and such) mostly accentuates the tension.

 

“Violent Nature” isn’t exactly the scariest of screen horrors; it doesn’t have much in the way of humor or complexity. Yet its stripped-down approach to a familiar gist has a distinctiveness that is impressive, and is sure to please fans who are always up for a new slasher film — but wish most of them weren’t so interchangeable.

 

 

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— Variety

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Second TSMC factory for Arizona faces delays as US grants remain in flux

— The firm’s first fab in Arizona has been pushed back to 2025

— Biden White House has yet to hand out promised chip subsidies

 

Bloomberg:

 

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. announced another delay to its $40 billion site in Arizona, dealing a further blow to the Biden administration’s plans to boost manufacturing of critical components on U.S. soil.

Executives said their second plant in Arizona, whose shell is now being built, will start operations in 2027 or 2028, later than TSMC’s prior guidance of 2026. That’s after the company in July announced a delay to the first site, now due to start making 4-nanometer chips only in 2025, citing a lack of skilled labor and higher costs.

“Our overseas decisions are based on customer needs and the necessary level of government subsidy, or support,” Chairman Mark Liu said during TSMC’s earnings conference in Taipei on Thursday. The company’s upbeat outlook for the year drove a rally in chip stocks across Asia on Friday, with TSMC shares up as much as 6.3%.

Previously, TSMC had said it will make 3nm chips at the second factory, which is expected to be more advanced than the first in Arizona. But on Thursday, the company said that incentives from the U.S. government will help determine how advanced the tech inside will be, adding uncertainty to the project’s outcome.

Because of the setback with the first fab, TSMC has delayed its second factory too, according to Chief Financial Officer Wendell Huang. The Taiwanese chipmaker is in talks with the U.S. government about incentives and tax credits, Liu said. He also reiterated TSMC was working with the local union and trade partners in the state. The company has faced resistance to plans to bring in technicians from Taiwan for the construction project.

Pushing back the start of the second fab could mean a delay of as much as two years, time enough for semiconductor tech to advance by one generation.

More than a year after U.S. President Joe Biden signed the Chips and Science Act into law — which is supposed to provide tens of billions of dollars in subsidies to chipmakers expanding in the U.S. — the administration has yet to hand out any grants to major chipmakers like TSMC or Intel Corp. It has so far only provided some modest financial support to two minor industry players.

By contrast, TSMC publicized its plans for a more modest plant in Japan later than its Arizona project, but it has already received funds from the Japanese government. The facility is on track to start production in late 2024, according to the latest update the company provided.

 

— Techmeme

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Vicarius remediation service for supply-chain attacks, raised a $30M Series B led by Bright Pixel, for total funding of $57M

Kyle Wiggers / TechCrunch:

 

 

—  If the pitches reaching my inbox are any indication, one of the hot new things in generative AI is “copilots” for cybersecurity.

Microsoft has one. Google, too. So does Vicarius, the vulnerability remediation platform — recently, it launched a text-generating AI tool, vuln_GPT, that helps write system breach detection and remediation scripts.

Perhaps it’s Vicarius’ trend following that caught investors’ attention — as well as (I’d wager to guess) the startup’s 5x year-over-year growth. Vicarius co-founder and CEO Michael Assraf tells me that the company’s customer base recently eclipsed 400 brands, including PepsiCo, Hewlett Packard Enterprise and Equinix.

Whatever put Vicarius on backers’ radars, the company recently closed a $30 million Series B round led by Bright Pixel Capital, with participation from AllegisCyber Capital, AlleyCorp and Strait Capital, Vicarius announced today. The round, at double Vicarius’ previous valuation — a valuation Assraf declined to disclose, unfortunately — brings Vicarius’ total raised to ~$56.7 million, the bulk of which Assraf says is being put toward advancing Vicarius’ product roadmap and doubling the size of its 43-person team.

 

“Vicarius automates much of the discovery, prioritization and remediation workload plaguing security and IT teams,” Assraf said. “An early adopter of product-led growth, Vicarius’s self-service model changes the cybersecurity solution buyer’s paradigm by letting customers transparently test and find value … before purchasing.”

 

Vicarius was founded several years ago by Assraf, Yossi Ze’evi and Roi Cohen, who noticed — at least the way Assraf tells it — that attackers were reusing the same “building” blocks to carry out cyberattacks.

 

“Those building blocks are third-party and operating system APIs provided by software and operating system-compiled libraries,” Assraf said. “The main idea [with Vicarius] was to build an intelligent permission manager for system-level APIs.”

 

Today, Vicarius analyzes apps for vulnerabilities and alerts customers to these vulnerabilities. When a patch isn’t available, Vicarius applies what Assraf calls “in-memory protection,” which ostensibly secures the app without the need for a software upgrade (color me a bit skeptical, though).

Vicarius also offers access to a community of security vulnerability researchers where researchers can share remediation and detection scripts and get rewarded for it with a virtual currency, as well as a community dataset that Vicarius uses to train the aforementioned vuln_GPT. Vuln_GPT, speaking of, doesn’t run completely unsupervised — Assraf says that all AI-generated scripts are “validated” before being pushed to Vicarius’ customers. (Customers can give feedback on the scripts from a module).

 

“We wish to emphasize that Vicarius is looking to lead AI-based vulnerability remediation at any stage,” Assraf said, “from detection to prioritization to proactive remediation.”

 

Vicarius is ambitious, to be sure, with plans to allow security researchers in its community to spend their currency on products, launch educational courses and integrate the Vicarius platform with existing ticketing platforms like ServiceNow and Jira. The startup also aims to grow into new markets, in particular Asia Pacific, while expanding into markets in which it currently does business, including North America and Europe.

 

“For years, enterprises have been struggling with deploying vulnerability management processes that require too many tools and create too many alerts and too much work for overburdened security teams,” Assraf said. “While most security processes advanced one or two generations, the vulnerability remediation cycle management lagged, exposing businesses to cyber risk. As a result, customers are looking for a single platform that consolidates, personalizes and scales the vulnerability remediation process.”

 

 

 

— Techmeme

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The EU Council, Parliament reach a provisional deal on Anti-Money Laundering for crypto companies

—  Crypto firms have to do checks on transactions of 1,000 euro or more, and the framework adds measures to mitigate risks in transfers with self-hosted wallets

 

 

Sandali Handagama / CoinDesk:

 

 

Policymakers in the European Union on Wednesday reached a provisional deal on parts of a comprehensive regulatory package to combat money laundering that will force all crypto firms to run due diligence on their customers.

 

The Anti-Money Laundering Regulation (AMLR) is a broad-stroke effort to combat sanctions evasion and money laundering. It includes the creation of a single rulebook and sets up a supervisory authority that will also have purview over the crypto sector.

 

The European Parliament and Council (which gathers finance ministers from the bloc’s 27 member states) have agreed to measures, including for crypto firms to apply “customer due diligence measures when carrying out transactions amounting to €1,000 ($1,090) or more.”

 

The deal also adds measures to mitigate risks in relation to transactions with self-hosted wallets, Wednesday’s announcement said.

 

The EU last year finalized specific AML checks on crypto fund-transfers alongside its landmark Markets in Crypto Assets (MiCA) regulation. In December, the European Parliament and Council agreed on setting up the AML supervisory authority. Wednesday’s agreement specifically concerned the EU’s sixth money-laundering directive and the rulebook as part of the AMLR.

 

The package may have got tougher as it went through the EU’s complex legislative process in light of U.S. sanctions against crypto anonymizing tool Tornado Cash, as well as fears that crypto was being used to evade sanctions by Russia and even Hamas. A lawmaker leading the discussions on the package in Parliament last year assured the measures won’t seek to outlaw privacy-enhancing crypto.

 

Industry body, the EU Crypto Initiative, urged lawmakers in May 2023 to remove planned restrictions on privacy-preservation tools or, failing that, to include a “clear delineation between prohibited anonymous high-risk accounts and high-risk anonymizing instruments.”

 

“This agreement is part and parcel of the EU’s new anti-money laundering system. It will improve the way national systems against money laundering and terrorist financing are organized and work together. This will ensure that fraudsters, organized crime and terrorists will have no space left for legitimizing their proceeds through the financial system,” Belgian Minister of Finance, Vincent Van Peteghem, said in a press statement.

 

 

 

— Techmeme

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RASA Film Group launches collective focusing on strong female protagonists and positive Muslim characters

U.S.-based RASA Film Group is launching a film collective at the Sundance Film Festival.

 

The collective is actively exploring projects featuring strong female protagonists, narratives centered around social justice and stories that portray Muslim characters in positive and empowering roles.

 

RASA is in talks for future projects involving Muslim or Pakistani women talent such as Aizzah Fatima “(Americanish),” Mehreen Jabbar “(Farar),” Afia Nathaniel “(Dukhtar),” Mahnoor Euceph “(Eid Mubarak)” and Rehana Lew Mirza      (Wishtree).”

 

RASA is the brainchild of four partners of South Asian origin. Asad Butt is the founder and CEO of Rifelion Media, a film and podcast studio elevating diverse voices. He is the executive producer of the forthcoming “Ramadan America” film anthology and the “King of the World” podcast series. Butt is also a startup advisor and investor, primarily working with pet care and education founders and accelerator programs.

 

Sujit Chawla was a producer on the groundbreaking independent film “American Desi,” one of the seminal films chronicling the South Asian community in the U.S. Rohi Mirza Pandya is co-founder of Box Office Guru Media, Inc., a multicultural marketing agency, a creative producer and Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Belonging consultant (DEIB) for Desipina Productions. She is also one of the founders of the first ever South Asian House at SXSW and Tribeca Festival in 2023 and was an executive producer on Oscar-qualified short film “Eid Mubarak” which played at last year’s Red Sea International Film Festival.

 

Atul Prashar individually, or as founding partner of KMH Group, has invested in more than 200 public-private tech-first companies in media, entertainment and sports. With previous stints in music and Bollywood, he has increasingly focused investing and advisory efforts towards global film projects that positively promote the South Asian diaspora.

 

“We are thrilled to be a diverse group of partners with a deep love for film and storytelling,” said Rohi Mirza Pandya. “Our combined wisdom and financial support will allow innovation in the industry and make a lasting impact.”

 

 

— Variety (EXCLUSIVE) 

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US Patent Office invalidates Seagen patent in dispute between Daiichi Sankyo and Seagen

TOKYO & BASKING RIDGE, N.J. — (BUSINESS WIRE) — Daiichi Sankyo Co., Ltd. (TSE: 4568) (hereinafter, Daiichi Sankyo) announced today that the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (U.S. PTO) rendered a Final Written Decision invalidating all claims of Seagen Inc.’s U.S. patent 10,808,039 (the ’039 patent) that were challenged by Daiichi Sankyo in a post-grant review proceeding (PGR).

We are pleased that the U.S. PTO invalidated all challenged claims of the ’039 patent,” said Naoto Tsukaguchi, Corporate Officer and General Counsel, Daiichi Sankyo.

 

On Dec. 23, 2020, Daiichi Sankyo filed a PGR petition with the U.S. PTO contesting the patentability of certain claims of the ’039 patent. On April 7, 2022, the U.S. PTO granted Daiichi Sankyo’s request to institute the PGR.

 

The ’039 patent was the sole patent-in-suit in the infringement litigation between the parties in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, an appeal of which is now pending in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.

 

About Daiichi Sankyo

Daiichi Sankyo is an innovative global healthcare company contributing to the sustainable development of society that discovers, develops, and delivers new standards of care to enrich the quality of life around the world. With more than 120 years of experience, Daiichi Sankyo leverages its world-class science and technology to create new modalities and innovative medicines for people with cancer, cardiovascular and other diseases with high unmet medical need. For more information, please visit www.daiichisankyo.com.

 

Media Contacts:

Global/Japan:
Koji Ogiwara

Daiichi Sankyo Co., Ltd.

ogiwara.koji.ay@daiichisankyo.co.jp
+81 3 6225 1126 (office)

US
Kim Wix

Daiichi Sankyo, Inc.

kwix@dsi.com
+1 908 992 6633

Investor Relations Contact:
DaiichiSankyoIR@daiichisankyo.co.jp

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‘Hanu Man’ Indian superhero film emerges as hit, adds screens in North America

Telugu-language Indian superhero film “Hanu Man” has emerged as a hit and is adding screens in North America. The film is set in the fictional village of Anjanadri and follows Hanumanthu, who miraculously awakens Hindu god Lord Hanuman’s power after being involved in an accident near the sea.

 

It is directed by Prasanth Varma “(Zombie Reddy),” stars Teja Sajja “(Adbhutam),” Amritha Aiyer “(Arjuna Phalguna),” Varalaxmi Sarathkumar “(Kota Bommali PS)” and Vinay Rai “(Gandeevadhari Arjuna).” It is produced by Niranjan Reddy Kandagatla for Primeshow Entertainment.

 

“Hanu Man,” distributed by California-based Nirvana Studios in North America, opened in 430 locations to a three-day weekend debut of $2.3 million, according to numbers released by Comscore.

 

“It was a crowded release weekend but we were well prepared and put in a lot of thought, had a release strategy planned for the film, and we covered every city. For a film of this scale, opening across 430 locations is pretty good,” Nirvana’s Sundeep Yerramreddy told Variety.

 

India celebrates the Pongal/Sankranthi holiday on Monday, Jan. 15, which is also MLK day in the U.S., and several films released during the period to benefit from the long weekend. In the Indian film release lineup “Hanu Man” opened against Telugu-language action films, “Guntur Kaaram,” starring superstar Mahesh Babu, and “Saindhav,” headlined by veteran Venkatesh Daggubati and Nawazuddin Siddiqui; Tamil-language film period action epic “Captain Miller,” starring A-lister Dhanush; Sriram Raghavan’s thriller “Merry Christmas,” featuring Katrina Kaif and Vijay Sethupathi, in Tamil and Hindi-language versions; Tamil-language sci-fi film “Ayalaan,” starring Sivakarthikeyan; Telugu-language period action drama “Naa Saami Ranga,” headlined by Akkineni Nagarjuna; and Malayalam-language crime thriller “Abraham Ozler,” starring Jayaram.

 

Made on a modest budget of approximately $2.5 million, “Hanu Man” released Jan. 12 and has already grossed $9 million worldwide, including $6 million in India, $188,000 in the U.K., $181,000 in Australia and $136,000 in the U.A.E., besides the U.S. collections.

 

In North America, the film was promoted across radio and social media, especially Instagram. This was backed up by offline, on the ground promotions via tie-ups with South Asian restaurants and grocery stores. In Hindu mythology, Hanuman is the devoted companion of Lord Rama, in whom interest is exceptionally high these days ahead of the consecration of a temple in his name at Ayodhya, India, next week.

 

“The film received a tremendous response and we are receiving requests to add cities that we couldn’t get due to the competition in the first week,” Yerramreddy said. Nirvana is adding at least 100 locations across North America from Jan. 18. Yerramreddy anticipates that the film will cross $3 million during the extended MLK weekend. “The film is going very well and $6 million to $7 million is achievable at this point,” Yerramreddy said. If it does, “Hanu Man” will join the ranks of “RRR,” the “Baahubali” films and “Salaar” as one of the highest grossing Telugu-language films in North America.

 

As revealed at the end of “Hanu Man,” a sequel titled “Jai Hanuman” is due in 2025.

 

Meanwhile, the team is basking in the success of the film. Varma told Variety, “The response is overwhelming. It feels surreal. I’m humbled by all the praises and love.” Sajja added, “This is possible only because of the audience. This is their success. Just one word – gratitude.” Kandagatla said, “We are incredibly grateful to our amazing audience whose overwhelming support turned our film into a blockbuster. Your enthusiasm and love have made this journey truly unforgettable. Thank you.”

 

 

 

— Variety (EXCLUSIVE) 

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Kristen Stewart’s ‘Love Lies Bleeding,’ ‘Supersex’ Netflix series added to Berlin Film Festival Special lineup

“Love Lies Bleeding” starring Kristen Stewart and Netflix’s “Supersex” series have been added to Berlin Film Festival’s Special lineup.

 

A romantic thriller centered on a bodybuilder and gym manager, “Love Lies Bleeding” is directed by “Saint Maud” helmer Rose Glass and will have its world premiere at Sundance this month. “Love Lies Bleeding” also stars Katy O’Brian, Ed Harris, Jena Malone, Anna Baryshnikov and Dave Franco.

 

 

“Supersex,” based on the life of porn star Rocco Siffredi, is created and written by Francesca Manieri. The series, which premieres on Netflix March 6, will look at how “Rocco Tano — a simple guy from Ortona [a small town in central Italy] — became Rocco Siffredi, the most famous pornstar in the world.”

 

Another standout is “Made in England: The Films of Powell and Pressburger,” a documentary by David Hinton that features rare archival material from the filmmakers and is narrated by Martin Scorsese.

 

Other additions include Nicolas Philibert’s documentary “Averroès & Rosa Parks; Heo Myeong-haeng’s “Beom-Joe-do-si 4 (The Roundup: Punishment),” the latest chapter of the successful Korean action series; the documentary “Elf Mal Morgen: Berlinale Meets Fußball (Eleven Tomorrows: Berlinale Meets Football);” “Exergue – on documenta 14” by Dimitris Athiridis, the second-longest film ever made at 840 minutes; “Gakuryu Ishii’s “Hako Otoko (The Box Man),” described by the Berlinale as a “surreal story based on the iconic book by Kobo Abe in which a cardboard box becomes the perfect shell for men who want to withdraw from society and gaze without being seen”; “Das leere Grab (The Empty Grave)” by Agnes Lisa Wegner and Cece Mlay; “Shikun” by Amos Gitai; and Abel Ferrara’s Ukraine documentary “Turn in the Wound.”

 

Berlin Film Festival runs from Feb. 15-25.

 

 

 

— Variety