Thursday, 19 June 2008

YouTube opens virtual screening room

Will highlight four new independent films a week





Google Inc.'s YouTube is setting up a virtual screening room to bring the work of independent filmmakers to a global audience.


Struggling filmmakers already use YouTube to kick-start viral marketing campaigns. The new feature gives them an easy-to-find home -- and makes them partners in drawing new ad revenue.


"Hopefully as they see thousands of people watching their films, it's going to be a eye-opening experience," said Sara Pollack, YouTube's film and animation manager.


The screening room will highlight four new films a week, picked by a YouTube editorial panel.


Submissions are welcomed. The panel also will scour film festivals and work with partners such as the Sundance Channel to identify prospects.


Among the first eight titles to be showcased are "Love and War," a stop-motion puppet movie by a Swedish director; the Oscar-nominated short "I Met the Walrus," about an interview with John Lennon; and "Are You the Favorite Person of Anybody?" by performance artist Miranda July.


Filmmakers can choose to have a "Buy Now" button attached to their work for sales of DVDs or digital copies. They will also collect a majority share of ad revenue generated from views of their work.


YouTube said people whose clips regularly attract a million viewers can make several thousand dollars a month.


The bigger prize can be exposure.


When YouTube featured the nine-minute short "Spider" by Nash Edgerton in February, it became the fifth-best selling short on iTunes, Pollack said.


The creators of the full-length feature "Four Eyed Monsters," Susan Buice and Arin Crumley, got their break when more than a million YouTube views helped land them a TV and DVD distribution deal, she said.


"They ended up doing really, really well, ironically by putting their film online for free," Pollack said.



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Thursday, 12 June 2008

Dreamworks - Panda Messes With The Zohan



Although DreamWorks Animation's Kung Fu Panda and Sony's You Don't
Mess With the Zohan were expected to run neck-and-neck at the box office
over the weekend, the results weren't even close. The panda did in fact mess
with Zohan as it attracted an estimated $60 million in ticket sales to $40
million for Zohan. The figure for Panda was about twice what box-office
prognosticators had predicted it would earn. The two films together, combined
with solid holdover performances by Warner Bros.' Sex and the City and
Paramount's Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull boosted
the overall box office some 30 percent above the comparable weekend a years
ago.



The top ten films for the weekend, according to studio estimates compiled by
Media by Numbers:
1. Kung Fu Panda, $60 million; 2. You Don't
Mess With the Zohan, $40 million; 3. Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of
the Crystal Skull, $22.8 million; 4. Sex and the City, $21.3
million; 5. The Strangers, $9.3 million; 6. Iron Man, $7.5
million; 7. The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian, $5.5 million;
8. What Happens in Vegas, $3.4 million; 9. Baby Mama, $780,000;
10. Made Of Honor, $775,000.






09/06/2008





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Friday, 6 June 2008

Depp donates $2m to children's hospital

Johnny Depp paid a secret visit to London's Great Ormond Street Children's Hospital on Sunday - and donated $2m of his own money to thank staff for saving his young daughter's life.
The 'Sweeney Todd' star arrived unexpectedly at the hospital, where his eight-year-old daughter Lily-Rose was treated last year when her kidneys failed.
Last week, the actor - who has two children with his partner Vanessa Paradis - invited five Great Ormond Street doctors and nurses to the party for the London premiere of his film 'Sweeney Todd'.
Last November, unknown to the public, Depp spent four hours at the hospital telling bedtime stories to patients dressed as Captain Jack Sparrow after having his 'Pirates of the Caribbean' costume flown over from Los Angeles.
In March last year, Lily-Rose, Depp's oldest child, spent nine days at Great Ormond Street after E.coli poisoning led to the failure of her kidneys.
Filming at Pinewood Studios in Buckinghamshire had to be put on hold as her condition worsened so much it was feared she might not live.
Depp, who on Sunday was named Best Actor in a Musical or Comedy at the Golden Globes for his role in 'Sweeney Todd', later said of the scare: "It was the most frightening thing we have ever been through. It was hell.
"But the magic is that she pulled through beautifully. Great Ormond Street was terrific, a great hospital."