giovedì 9 ottobre 2003

Celluloid's Dream lotta perché Buongiorno, notte venga distribuito negli USA
Decide il NYT

www.INDIEwire. com New York - October, 9 2003
Still For Sale: Notable World Offerings Up For Grabs at the New York Film Festival

by Anthony Kaufman


Time is running out for eight films showing at the 41st New York Film Festival. While the movies have screened at such prestigious showcases as Cannes and Venice over the last year, their playdates in New York may be their final moments in the spotlight. From master directors (Marco Bellocchio's "Good Morning, Night" Tsai Ming-liang's "Goodbye Dragon Inn," Lester James Peries' "Mansion by the Lake") to promising up-and-comers (Faouzi Bensaidi's "A Thousand Months" and Barbara Albert's "Free Radicals") to NYFF newcomers (Jacques Doillon's "Raja," Jan Jakub Koski's "Pornography," Johnnie To's "PTU"), these films lack U.S. distribution, and by all accounts, the New York Film Festival is likely to be their last shot at a deal.

A number of notable films from last year's NYFF selection (...) never turned up in arthouses after their New York festival premiere. However, all hope is not lost. Some films find a commercial home during or after the festival: in recent years, small distributors like Kino International, New Yorker Films, Palm Pictures, and Zeitgeist Films have all stepped up to acquire NYFF's more challenging fare, such as "Chihwaseon," "Unknown Pleasures," "Beau Travail," "Springtime in A Small Town," "Careful," and "Irma Vep."

But the New York Film Festival is not about business. Rather, it's a highly selective, high-art showcase for the city's cine-elite; it's not, never has been, nor ever will be an industry feeding frenzy like Cannes or Toronto. But this is its most cherished asset for New York's critics and industryites. "They're not as harried as they are at Toronto, Cannes or Sundance," says Susan Norget, a publicist repping "Good Morning, Night" and "Free Radicals" for French sales company Celluloid Dreams. "The lean selection gives them enough time to contemplate what they've seen."

While acquisition execs admit they've already seen most of the main program's 23 feature films at prior festivals, there's one major wild card that can "throw such bizarre English on a film," says John Vanco, president of Cowboy Pictures: the New York Times Review. "All of a sudden, there's this weird, marginal movie with this front-of-the-section rave review [in the Times.] It's like, 'God damn, if you're on the fence, that may be enough to persuade you [to buy it]," he says.

Indeed, Zeitgeist Films' Emily Russo admits that a positive Times review for Arnaud Desplechin's "My Sex Life Or How I Got Into An Argument" (NYFF '97) helped the company decide to acquire the film.

Mark Urman, head of distribution at ThinkFilm, which announced its acquisition of Laurent Cantet's "Time Out" at the festival in 2001, says he will likely be catching two of NYFF's available titles that he missed at Cannes. "If those films to get an encouraging New York Times review, one would have to look more closely at them," he says. "I don't rule out the possibility [of an acquisition], but at this point, they are not easily going to settle into a distribution situation."

Still, Celluloid Dreams' head of sales Pierre Menahem is wagering on a positive New York Times review to propel skeptical buyers. "We make sure that all the distributors based in New York see our film and read the New York Times review," he explains. "If this review is good, then it makes it impossible not to sell it to the U.S."

That's exactly Menaham's strategy for "Good Morning, Night" and "Free Radicals" -- two of the most potential titles among the available eight. "Good Morning, Night," according to publicist Susan Norget, will be an easy sell to the discerning New York critics that can help foster a deal. "Bellocchio is one of Italy's greatest living filmmakers," she says. "He really has a solid background, so that's one of my entry points. And this film deals with a kidnapping that most Americans don't know much about, but it has compelling subject matter, with a particular timeliness."

(...)

Sometimes, however, selection in the NYFF alone can be enough for sales agents "to start a mini bidding war if several buyers are interested," explains Celluloid's Menahem. (...)