September 21, 2017
#TBT: 25 Years of SXSW Film Festival – Andrew Haigh, Alex Winter, Dan Lindsay & TJ Martin, and Lynn Shelton
To commemorate the 25th edition of the SXSW Film Festival, we will spotlight careers launched, artists discovered, powerful performances, and more from our alumni with this week’s featured artists are Andrew Haigh, Alex Winter, Dan Lindsay & TJ Martin, and Lynn Shelton.
Andrew Haigh
Andrew Haigh‘s second feature Weekend premiered at SXSW in 2011 in the Emerging Visions category, where it won the Audience Award. Weekend tells the story of an intimate connection between two gay men. Haigh went on to co-create the HBO show Looking and wrote and directed the film of the same name. In 2015, Haigh directed and wrote the film 45 Years, which earned actress Charlotte Rampling an Oscar nomination for Best Actress. His newest film Lean on Pete, is based on the novel of the same name by Willy Vlautin, and premiered at the Venice International Film Festival.
“SXSW changed my life by having the courage to love Weekend before any one else did.
SXSW is the rarest of festivals. A lover of the outsider, and a champion of the new. The festival itself is a paean to artists; to those compelled to create and yet refuse to wait for permission. SXSW was both an inspiration and a catalyst in my/our careers.”
Alex Winter
Alex Winter is a talented actor, director, and screenwriter. One of Winter’s most notable roles is playing Bill S. Preston, Esquire from the Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure franchise. Winter has presented two world premieres at SXSW. The first, Downloaded (2012) is the story of Napster and the evolution of digital media. The second, Deep Web (2015) covers the trial of Ross Ulbricht, the creator of the Silk Road website. He’s currently working on another documentary about Frank Zappa.
“I love SXSW because it’s one of the most well-programmed, smoothly organized, and enjoyable film festivals in the world. I’ve had the honor of premiering two films at SX, as well as spoken on panels. I have returned just to hang out and watch movies despite having no business there at all, which is something I never do at any other festivals. The quality of the films, the passion and engagement of the audience and the sheer fun of being there is hard to match anywhere else.”
Dan Lindsay & TJ Martin
Lindsay and Martin’s documentary Undefeated had its world premiere at the film festival in 2011 and went on to win the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film follows the struggles of a high school football team in Memphis. Not only did the pair serve as directors, but also sound recorders, editors, and cinematographers. Their most recent collaboration, LA 92, about the LA riots, aired on National Geographic Channel earlier this year.
“SXSW changed our lives by offering to program our film Undefeated. They took a chance on two no-name directors and gave us a platform that ultimately lead to our film being sold and eventually it winning an Oscar. That definitely changed our lives and it all started at SXSW.”
Lynn Shelton
Shelton has had two films screen at SXSW, My Effortless Brilliance (2008) and Hump Day (2009). The latter starred fellow SXSW alum, Mark Duplass, whom she worked with again in Your Sister’s Sister. Shelton had directed episodes for numerous hit TV shows including Master of None, Fresh Off the Boat, and The Good Place to name a few. Shelton’s latest film Outside In, had its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival, the drama stars SXSW alum Jay Duplass and Edie Falco.
“I adore SXSW; I felt nothing but celebrated, valued, and embraced as a filmmaker by the festival. When I think of SXSW, I am filled with warm fuzzies.”
Join Us For SXSW 2018
Grab your Film Badge today for primary access to all SXSW Film events including world premieres, roundtables, workshops, and parties. Register to attend by Friday, October 20 and save before prices go up in November. Make your hotel reservations through SXSW Housing & Travel for the best available rates. We hope to see you in March!
Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and SXSW News for the latest SXSW coverage, announcements, application tips, and updates.
World Premiere of Weekend – Photo by Dustin Finklestein
World Premiere of Deep Web – Photo by Amy Price
World Premiere of Undefeated – Photo by Stephen Pun
World Premiere of Humpday – Photo by Jesse Knish
The post #TBT: 25 Years of SXSW Film Festival – Andrew Haigh, Alex Winter, Dan Lindsay & TJ Martin, and Lynn Shelton appeared first on SXSW.
Source: SxSW Film
September 21, 2017
2017 is the Year to Make History with StoryCorps
Save the date: November 23, 2017.
Nearly a quarter million people have recorded and shared their stories using the StoryCorps App.
More than 75,000 stories have been shared under the banner of The Great Thanksgiving Listen, our annual invitation for young people to interview an elder in their family or community. Now in its third year, the Great Thanksgiving Listen has grown from an experimental challenge issued by our Founder Dave Isay in 2015 into a vital intergenerational movement.
In 2017, we’re back for a third helping and inviting people across the country to make family history a topic at their Thanksgiving table. At a time when social media and technology creates echo chambers, isolating us from one another, The Great Thanksgiving Listen is an opportunity to use smartphones to bring Americans closer together.
New this year, we are working with our sponsor Adobe to use Adobe Spark to add photos, videos and other visual elements to StoryCorps recordings, enriching stories that will be uploaded to our archive and included in the special StoryCorps collection at the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress.
The Great Thanksgiving Listen is also supported by Knight Foundation, which today announced new support for StoryCorps, and Barnes & Noble College.
HERE’S HOW YOU CAN JOIN US:
- Get the StoryCorps App for Android, iOS or Kindle, and record and upload your own interview to this growing collection.
- Follow along on Facebook and Twitter using #TheGreatListen as we share interview tips, app updates and highlights from the archives.
- Know a teacher that would like to participate? Invite them to our StoryCorps in the Classroom Facebook page.
To help bring attention to this year’s Great Thanksgiving Listen, StoryCorps is working with national partners in media, technology and education, as well as school districts and educators in all 50 states. Education partners include National Education Association, Facing History and Ourselves, Teach For America, the National Council for the Social Studies (NCSS), Civic Nation, Jack and Jill of America and the Journalism Education Association, and school districts across the country. Media partners include NPR, TED and the Library of Congress.
Sign up and make a plan to record: visit thegreatlisten.org.
View our full media announcement here. (PDF)
Source: SNPR Story Corps
September 21, 2017
Fascinating Explanation Why Shepard Tones Give Such Haunting Feelings To Music Scores
Joel Lovell sent us this fascinating explanation why Shepard tones create such haunting feelings to music scores.<p>Frankly, I had never heard of a …
Source: CW’s Flipboard Feed
September 19, 2017
2018 SXSW Festival Submission Tips: Official Deadline September 22 [Video]
Only a few more days until the official film submission deadline on Friday, September 22 for the 2018 SXSW Film Festival. Check out our quick tips below before you submit your film.
Film Submissions Quick Tips
- Remember that you must have a secure link via the SXSW Cart for your film ready to go before you complete your application.
- While submitting by the Official Deadline will keep some extra money in your pocket, we never want filmmakers to rush their films, as we will only consider the first cut submitted. So take your time! Friday, October 20 is the final deadline to submit your film.
- Communication is key. After you’ve submitted we know that you will continue to work out your plans for the future of your film. If any information about your film changes after you’ve completed your application, let us know.
If you’ve been accepted to another festival, added a sales agent, or changed a major aspect of the film itself, email filmfest@sxsw.com to let us know.
- Be sure to take a look at our other submission tips about film eligibility and premiere status to ensure your film meets all the requirements to enter.
- Find out more information about deadlines and fees here. If you have questions, find answers in our Film FAQ. If you are ready to submit, take a few minutes to watch our How to Submit Your Film video posted above.
Lastly, SXSW Film asks that you be patient. We know waiting to hear from us can be excruciating, but it takes a lot of time for us to hone down the program into its final iteration. We are evaluating films through January so just because you haven’t heard from us yet, but your friends have, doesn’t mean we’ve forgotten about you. Everyone who submits a film to us will hear from us by February 9. Only after that date, email us if you haven’t heard anything.
Join Us For SXSW 2018
Grab your Film Badge today for primary access to all SXSW Film events including world premieres, roundtables, workshops, and parties. Register to attend by Friday, October 20 and save. Make your hotel reservations through SXSW Housing & Travel for the best available rates. We hope to see you in March!
Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and SXSW News for the latest SXSW coverage, announcements, application tips, and updates.
The post 2018 SXSW Festival Submission Tips: Official Deadline September 22 [Video] appeared first on SXSW.
Source: SxSW Film
September 18, 2017
Filmmaker In Focus: Barbecue, Easy Living, and Unrest
September brings a new wave of SXSW Film Festival alumni releases available for viewing. Many eye-opening experiences await, including a culinary journey around the world, a romantic comedy with a dark edge, and an investigation of the misunderstood phenomenon of chronic fatigue syndrome. Learn more about each film and read our short Q&A with the directors below.
Barbecue
Matthew Salleh is an Australian born, US and Australian based filmmaker who, with his partner Rose Tucker, have travelled to the corners of the globe to create his debut feature documentary Barbecue. His work focuses on capturing intimate portraits of unique and vibrant cultures as a pathway to understanding and appreciating the world we live in.
Q: Tell us a little about your film?
MS: My partner Rose Tucker and I travelled to twelve countries as a two person crew to capture portraits of how people cook meat over fire, and see how their interpretation of barbecue brings people together and is an indication of the cultural values they hold dear.
Q: What motivated you to tell this story?
MS: Having been fortunate to travel with previous projects, a constantly recurring theme was the pride people took in their version of barbecue. Everyone thought theirs was the best, and it ignited (pun intended) some pretty extreme passion. For me, ridiculously passionate people are the root of all good documentary storytelling.
Q: What do you want the audience to take away from this film?
MS: I hope people find a reaffirmed hope for humankind. It may sound silly, but when I started this film I was hoping that the global portrait we were creating would confirm my belief in the potential of humanity. And it was the everyday subjects of our film that gave me great inspiration – something that I hope the audience feels as well.
Easy Living
Adam Keleman‘s short, Going Black, premiered at SXSW in 2010. His work has shown work at a number of different film festivals around the country. As a film journalist and critic, he has written for Soma Magazine, AOL Moviefone, Slant, and Little Joe. Easy Living is Keleman’s first feature.
Q: Tell us a little about your film?
AK: Easy Living is about a self-destructive makeup saleswoman trying to make amends with the past while also paving a path for a future on her own terms. The film interweaves improvised makeup selling moments with non-actors into the scripted narrative.
Q: What motivated you to tell this story?
AK: I was re-watching the Maysles’s brothers film Salesman in 2010, and I thought about what a female version of that film might look like, and that was the first seed of the story. Easy Living is the third part in a triptych of films centered around female characters, exploring similar themes and locales of small town Americana.
Q: What do you want the audience to take away from this film?
AK:I hope they connect with the lead character despite all of her flaws, and appreciate the unconventional qualities of the film.
Unrest
Jennifer Brea is a filmmaker based in Los Angeles. She has an AB from Princeton University and was a PhD student at Harvard until sudden illness left her bedridden. In the aftermath, she rediscovered her first love, film. Unrest is her film debut.
Q: Tell us a little about your film?
JB: I was a PhD student at Harvard, engaged to the love of my life, when I came down with a fever of 104 degrees. I got sicker and sicker, to the point that I couldn’t even sit in a wheelchair, couldn’t write my own name — but doctors told me my symptoms were “all in my head.”
I began filming myself as a way to make sense of what I was going through, and eventually went online and found a hidden world of millions confined to their homes and bedrooms by ME, an illness commonly known as chronic fatigue syndrome. Unrest follows my personal story as my husband Omar and I grapple with how to live with the new reality of my illness, and also follows the stories of four other ME patients as technology enables us to connect, bedridden, from across the world.
Q: What motivated you to tell this story?
JB: I began shooting on my iPhone at a point when I was so sick that I couldn’t read or write. I had been a writer my whole life, but when that outlet was no longer available to me, filming myself became a way to make sense of what I was going through and to reclaim a piece of myself. It was also a way for me to convey the severity of what I was experiencing to doctors, who often minimized or reduced my symptoms when I tried to describe them in words.
The idea to make a feature film came later, and that really evolved from a desire for social justice. As I began to learn the long history of my disease, and the way millions living with ME have been forgotten by medicine and ignored because of misogyny and stigma, I thought that if I could share the experience of this disease with the world, perhaps I could help to bring about change.
Q: What do you want the audience to take away from this film?
JB: I hope people learn from the film that ME is a serious disease with a long history of neglect due to sexism, ignorance, and bias; that those of us living with disabilities are complex and human and deserve to be seen; and that we all have the ability to find strength and resilience in ourselves.
Barbecue is currently available to stream on Netflix, Easy Living will play in select theaters on September 15, and Unrest opens in theaters on September 22.
Join Us For SXSW 2018
Grab your Film Badge today for primary access to all SXSW Film events including world premieres, roundtables, workshops, and parties. Register to attend by Friday, October 20 and save before prices go up in November. Make your hotel reservations through SXSW Housing & Travel for the best available rates. We hope to see you in March!
Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and SXSW News for the latest SXSW coverage, announcements, application tips, and updates.
The post Filmmaker In Focus: Barbecue, Easy Living, and Unrest appeared first on SXSW.
Source: SxSW Film
September 17, 2017
‘It’ Lives Again, ‘mother!’ Dies at Box Office
Stephen King’s mighty “It” is single-handedly reviving box office totals after a bleak late summer. It is rare for the second weekend of a hit film to provide the majority of the gross for the time period, but that’s what Warner Bros. achieved on the horror flick’s second weekend. While not as dominant as it was in its September record initial three days, $60 million represented barely more than a 50 per cent drop. Not bad.
With almost $219 million in the till so far and a strong hold, forget $300 million as an ultimate domestic total — $350 million now looks possible. “It” is already the third-biggest modern-day September release ever after only ten days. It will soar past “Rush Hour” by next weekend, and end up almost certain behind “Crocodile Dundee” (adjusted to current ticket prices, at about $410 million) as best for the month in the era of wide initial releases.

“mother!”
Why ‘mother!’ bombed
On the other hand, Darren Aronofsky’s “mother!” marked a challenge for Paramount, which knowingly took on a major risk. Its failure ($7.5 million in 2,368 theaters, F Cinemascore rating despite favorable reviews) will bring much second-guessing about the decision to go wide.
The reality: there was no route for success. When one makes a $30-million film starring Jennifer Lawrence that falls outside of mainstream audience expectations, strong festival play and reviews aren’t enough to propel it to awards. It has no expectations of appealing to most of the artistically conservative older audiences essential for quality films.
That means that the alternative, trying a platform release with a slow word-of-mouth build also carries its own risks. Those include higher expenses, even more attention to initial box office response, and heading deeper into a fall release schedule that will only get more competitive.
Let’s assume Paramount knew the difficulties involved. These likely included expectations of negative audience response. They also had to keep their eye on foreign play and try to open around the world before the negative domestic reaction hurt its chances (it grossed a soft $6 million in its first 16 mostly European foreign territories) and increase awareness in order to get attention for later home viewing options. And at $30-million plus marketing, the studio needs to protect those possibilities. A slow release with a likely even worse wider break could have done more damage.
Personal, non-mass audience films from top auteurs are tricky. Five years ago Paul Thomas Anderson’s “The Master” opened limited to about $150,000 per theater platform dates, then expanded two weeks later to lackluster wider results (about $16 million total eventually). Aronofsky himself saw failure with “The Fountain” which went wide initially in 2006, with only $3.8 million initially (in 1,472 theaters). He rebounded with Oscar contenders “The Wrestler” and “Black Swan.”

“It”
The state of the box office
This weekend’s Top Ten Total would have qualified before last week as the second-biggest September gross ever (just behind “Rush Hour” adjusted at $62 million). The 51 per cent drop — below average for most $100 million-plus openings and terrific for a horror film (the genre usually falls more than others) — was boosted by post-hurricane reopening Florida theaters, but even so it’s is terrific.
The recent surge has reduced 2017’s gross shortfall from last year to about five per cent. It still will be a steep uphill climb to equal last year (full weeks will need to average about $27 million each to accomplish that feat, but is down from the $30 million per week number needed before “It” arrived).
Lionsgate
Two new releases had more normal numbers for September (i.e., under $15 million — last year three wide new films grossed just $8 million to $9.5 million). The action thriller “American Assassin” (CBS Films/Lionsgate), starring recent “Spider-Man” villain Michael Keaton, did a credible $14.8 million. That’s second only to “It” among new releases over the last four weeks. The gross is similar to Lionsgate’s first “John Wick” three years ago, which went on with good word of mouth to do well enough (particularly internationally) to justify a sequel. Indie Michael Cuesta (“12 and Holding”), who in recent years has been a major creative part of “Homeland,” with this film is trying to recreate a more sophisticated than usual action film.

“Wind River”
Holdovers
Overall the rest of the holdovers in the Top Ten held better than usual with less competition from Hurricane Irma and the NFL, not to mention wide openers, which only grossed $23 million.
Of note is “Wind River” (Weinstein), which at $29 million has surpassed last year’s Oscar-contender “Hell or High Water,” also written by Taylor Sheridan, who added directing this time around. “Wind River” did boast a much wider and expensive release, and should make it to at least $35 million.

“It”
The Top Ten
1. It (Warner Bros.) Week 2; Last weekend #1
$60,000,000 (-51%) in 4,148 theaters (+45); PTA (per theater average): $14,465; Cumulative: $218,711,000
2. American Assassin (Lionsgate) NEW – Cinemascore: B+; Metacritic: 46; Est. budget: $33 million
$14,800,000 in 3,154 theaters; PTA: $4,692; Cumulative: $14,800,000
3. mother! (Paramount) NEW – Cinemascore: F; Metacritic: 75; Est. budget: $30 million
$7,500,0003,167 in 2,368 theaters; PTA: $; Cumulative: $7,500,000
4. Home Again (Open Road) Week 2; Last weekend #
$5,334,000 (-38%) in 3,036 theaters (+96); PTA: $1,757; Cumulative: $17,135,000
5. Hitman’s Bodyguard (Lionsgate) Week 5; Last weekend #
$3,550,000 (-26%) in 3,272 theaters (-50); PTA: $1,085; Cumulative: $70,357,000
6. Annabelle: Creation (Warner Bros.) Week 6; Last weekend #
$2,600,000 (-35%) in 2,117 theaters (-886); PTA: $1,228; Cumulative: $99,900,000
7. Wind River (Weinstein) Week 7; Last weekend #
$2,554,000 (-18%) in 2,619 theaters (-271); PTA: $975; Cumulative: $29,122,000
8. Leap! (Weinstein) Week 4; Last weekend #
$2,118,000 (-13%) in 2,416 theaters (-275); PTA: $877; Cumulative: $18,660,000
9. Spider-Man: Homecoming (Sony) Week 11; Last weekend #
$1,875,000 (-7%) in 1,436 theaters (-221); PTA: $1,306; Cumulative: $330,262,000
10. Dunkirk (Warner Bros.) Week 9; Last weekend #
$1,305,000 (-30%) in 1,478 theaters (-632); PTA: $883; Cumulative: $185,142,000
Source: IndieWire film
September 17, 2017
‘Manhunt’ Trailer: John Woo Returns With His Latest Action Thriller — Watch
After working on historical epics for more than a decade, John Woo has returned to the present day with “Manhunt.” The “Hard Boiled,” “Face/Off” and “The Killer” director’s latest just screened in Toronto, where the conspiracy thriller earned favorable reviews. Watch the trailer below.
Here’s the synopsis, courtesy of TIFF: “Du Qiu (Zhang Hanyu) is a successful international lawyer from China who has long been working for Tenjin, a powerful Japanese pharmaceutical company. On the very night he announces his break with the company — at its lavish 65th-anniversary party — he is assaulted in his home, knocked unconscious, and wakes the next morning with a knife in his hand and a murdered employee of Tenjin in his bed. Pursued by authorities, including a police captain who begins to suspect his innocence (Masaharu Fukuyama), Du begins a desperate campaign to learn who framed him and why. The answers will involve corruption, cruelty, and a pair of seemingly invincible female assassins.”
The film has yet to receive stateside distribution. Woo most recently directed his two-part epic “The Crossing” and 2010’s “Reign of Assassins.”
Source: IndieWire film
September 17, 2017
TIFF 2017 Awards: ‘Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri’ Wins the Coveted People’s Choice Award
This year’s edition of the Toronto International Film Festival has come to a close, and the winner of the Grolsch People’s Choice Award has been named: Martin McDonagh’s “Three Billboards Outside, Ebbing Missouri.” Hundreds of movies once again screened at TIFF over the last 10 days, but only one could take home the coveted prize, which is often seen as an Oscar bellwether — previous winners include “La La Land,” “12 Years a Slave,” and “The King’s Speech.”
Craig Gillespie’s “I, Tonya” was the runner-up, Luca Guadagnino’s “Call Me by Your Name” the second runner-up.” Agnès Varda and JR’s “Faces Places” won the People’s Choice Documentary Award, with runner-up going to Morgan Spurlock’s “Super Size Me 2: Holy Chicken!” Joseph Kahn’s rap-battle drama took the People’s Choice Midnight Madness Award, meanwhile, and Craig Zahler’s Vince Vaughn–starring “Brawl in Cell Block 99” came in second place.
Other honorees include Robin Aubert’s “Les Affamés” (Best Canadian Feature Film), Sadaf Foroughi “Ava” (Prize of the International Federation of Film Critics (FIPRESCI) for the Discovery programme), and Warwick Thornton’s “Sweet Country” (Toronto Platform Prize). The full list may be found here.
Source: IndieWire film
September 17, 2017
Ben Stiller’s ‘Brad’s Status’ Leads Off Fall Specialty Film Season
Amazon Studios, which is releasing about a film a month, led the fall season specialized release barrage with Mike White college comedy “Brad’s Status,” starring Ben Stiller. Annapurna’s second release scored $25,000 per theater in two cities for a credible start.
“Brad’s Status” was one of four Toronto International Film Festival 2017 titles released while the festival is wrapping up (compared to only one last year). The others include Darren Aronofsky’s “mother!” (Paramount), which flopped in wide release with $7.5 million and a rare F Cinemascore (they poll mass-audience theaters and the scores don’t reflect all reactions). Frederick Wiseman’s library documentary “Ex Libris” (Zipporah) got a decent result in its exclusive New York run, and Angelina Jolie’s “First They Killed My Father” debuted on Netflix along with a smattering of theatrical dates (grosses hidden per usual).
Opening
Brad’s Status (Annapurna) – Metacritic: 70; Festivals include: Toronto 2017
$100,179 in 4 theaters; PTA (per theater average): $25,045
Mike White’s third screenplay of the year (after “Beatriz at Dinner” and “The Emoji Movie”) is his second outing as director (he debuted with 2007’s “Year of the Dog”). This time Amazon oversees the release, partnering with neophyte distributor Annapurna for the first time. (Amazon is starting to distribute its own slate.)
Following a favorable Toronto debut, the Ben Stiller vehicle got ahead of a crowded fall field with decent results in four prime New York/Los Angeles locations. The gross is the best in five weekends (early August debuts of “Ingrid Goes West” and “Good Time” were better–neither impressed when they went wide). And “Brad’s Status” comes a month earlier than last fall’s initial $20,000-plus platform PTA release of eventual Best Picture Oscar-winner “Moonlight.”
What comes next: Expect an accelerated weekly expansion ahead, aided by a relatively wide open field. The story of a dad reexamining his life as he takes his son on a colleges tour should be accessible to a wide audience.

“Ex-Libris”
Ex-Libris: New York Public Library (Zipporah) – Metacritic: 90; Festivals include: Venice, Toronto 2017
$11,175 in 1 theater; PTA: $11,175; Cumulative: $16,557
Veteran 87-year-old documentary master Frederick Wiseman’s latest three-hour plus effort (his first after winning the honorary Oscar) opened at Manhattan’s Film Forum on Wednesday. The initial gross (backed by the best reviews for any documentary this year) were strong considering the running time and subject. While Wiseman’s previous film, “In Jackson Heights” (2015) did somewhat better in a similar placement, this is a stellar number.
What comes next: Los Angeles and Washington open next in advance of other big city dates.
The Force (Kino Lorber) – Festivals include: Sundance, San Francisco, Seattle 2017
$19,500 in 4 theaters; PTA: $4,750
This Sundance award-winner (U.S. feature documentary directing) about the Oakland Police Department opened in several Bay area theaters this week. Though the initial results were bigger on Friday (with local tie-ins), the result is respectable for a serious issue documentary, particularly without prior New York/Los Angeles reviews.
What comes next: New York and Los Angeles open this Friday.

“May It Last: A Portrait of the Avett Brothers”
Oscilloscope
“May It Last: A Portrait of the Avett Brothers” (Oscilloscope)
$10,500 in 8 theaters; PTA: $1,313; Cumulative: $681,589
This documentary on the folk rock band was directed by Judd Apatow, with most of its gross coming from single night showings last Tuesday. A handful held through the weekend.
What comes next: The next step likely will be later home viewing opportunities.
Manolo: The Boy Who Made Shoes for Lizards (Music Box) – Metacritic: 50
$7,440 in 3 theaters; PTA: $2,480
Documentaries about fashion icons often resonate with urban arthouse audiences, but this one about iconic shoe designer Manolo Blahnik (not helped by mixed reviews) had limited initial response in New York and Los Angeles dates.
What comes next: Chicago and San Francisco are among the initial expanded cities this week as the film heads into wider release.
Week Two
Rebel in the Rye (IFC)
$101,118 in 49 theaters (+45); PTA: $2,064; Cumulative: $154,326
The aggressive expansion of this biopic about J.D. Salinger did modest business, although Saturday increases suggested some interest from older audiences still affected by classic “The Catcher in the Rye.”
The Unknown Girl (IFC)
$32,043 in 16 theaters (+14); PTA: $2,003; Cumulative: $52,725
The Dardennes Brothers latest release from Belgium expanded to top cities on its second weekend at a level under what their always domestic released titles usually do, even if better than many similar titles.
Trophy (The Orchard)
$2,742 in 2 theaters (+1); PTA: $1,371; Cumulative: $7,470
Los Angeles joined New York for this documentary about the complicated world of trophy hunting. This completes its Oscar qualifying run, a major aim of its theatrical release ahead of its future CNN showing.
Ongoing/expanding (Grosses over $50,000 in under 1,000 screens)
The Big Sick (Lionsgate) Week 13
$342,000 in 338 theaters (-197); Cumulative: $42,511,000
The year’s specialty hit, at the end of its third month in release, is still adding gross on the eve of its home availability date (September 19 for DVDs) and ranks best among films under 1,000 theaters.

“Viceroy’s House”
Screenshot/Pathe
The Viceroy’s House (IFC) Week 3
$229,372 in 112 theaters (+71); Cumulative: $481,611
This latest British and Empire-related historical exercise (India at the time of independence) expanded more broadly to some success. Its timing before the rush of recent festival related new titles is helping its chances.
Tulip Fever (Weinstein) Week 3
$112,072 in 247 theaters (-525); Cumulative: $2,235,000
Justin Chatwin’s troubled Netherlands-set costume drama winds down quickly with a low-end result despite its initial multi-hundred theater release.

“Dolores”
Dolores (PBS) Week 3 5-83
$68,120 in 18 theaters (+13); Cumulative: $151,227
This future PBS California Farm Workers’ organizer documentary continues its respectable run (and positioning for awards) with new dates. Chicago and cities closer to its Central California setting are next this week.
Columbus (Superlative) Week 7
$89,146 in 62 theaters (+26); Cumulative: $637,103
The impressive showing for this acclaimed mid-America set interaction between two seemingly different people continues with new dates (particularly in Indiana towns not normally known for specialized interest). This looks likely to go over $1 million with limited marketing expense.
Menashe (A24) Week 8
$87,210 in 90 theaters (-27); Cumulative: $1,576,000
Though subtitled, this American independent film (set in New York’s Orthodox Jewish community) is performing better than most English language art house-centered releases, with a gross of $2 million possible.
Ingrid Goes West (Neon) Week 6
$81,650 in 100 theaters (-100); Cumulative: $2,907,000
This social media turmoil drama, another recent release out of Sundance, will pass $3 million soon. But its aggressive release (at its height just under 700 theaters) suggests an expectation of more.
The Trip to Spain (IFC) Week 6; also available on Video on Demand
$76,338 in 103 theaters (-29); Cumulative: $923,086
This parallel to VOD showing third road trip in Europe led by Steve Coogan is doing less than its predecessors, but still is a decent bonus to its home viewing revenues.
Beach Rats (Neon) Week 4
$72,700 in 67 theaters (+33); Cumulative: $320,778
Minor results continue for another younger character (and audience) aimed Sundance title that is struggling to get attention.
Also noted:
Maudie (Sony Pictures Classics) – $38,870 in 63 theaters; Cumulative: $6,081,000
Good Time (A24) – $29,495 in 29 theaters; Cumulative: $1,933,000
California Typewriter (Gravitas Ventures) – $22,201 in 18 theaters; Cumulative: $128,919
Polina (Oscilloscope) – $30,000 in 30 theaters; Cumulative: $117,908
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Source: IndieWire film
September 17, 2017
Darren Aronofsky Wanted Joaquin Phoenix to Star in His Batman Movie, Which Was Too Dark to Get Made
With everyone who’s actually seen “mother!” — which, as reflected by its “F” CinemaScore, wasn’t too many people — arguing what Darren Aronofsky’s new movie is actually about, the writer/director himself is reflecting on the film he never got to make. Aronofsky was in talks to direct a new “Batman” movie before the role eventually went to Christopher Nolan, and now he’s revealed who he wanted to play the Caped Crusader: Joaquin Phoenix.
“I always wanted Joaquin Phoenix for Batman,” he said to Yahoo! Movies. “It’s funny, I think we were just sort of out of time with our idea. I understood that [with] comics, that there’s room for all different types of titles, but I think Hollywood at that time was still kind of in the Golden Age of comics, and they were still just doing the classic titles in classic ways.”
Aronofsky conceived of an R-rated take on the superhero that he’s described as “Travis Bickle meets ‘The French Connection,’” which was too dark for Warner Brothers; an executive said he “wanted to do a Batman he could take his kids to,” which ended up being Nolan’s “Batman Begins.” Read his full interview here.
Source: IndieWire film