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Filming starts, at last, on much-delayed "Hobbit" movie

Published by in Uncategorized on March 20th, 2011 | Comments Off

WELLINGTON |
Sun Mar 20, 2011 11:07pm EDT

WELLINGTON (Reuters) – Filming began on Monday on the long-awaited “Hobbit” movies, ending years of delay due to funding problems and a labor dispute which nearly saw the project shifted out of New Zealand.

The two films are being directed by New Zealand native Peter Jackson, 49, who made the hit Oscar-winning “Lord of the Rings” trilogy.

Filming will take place at Stone Street Studios in Wellington and at a number of locations around New Zealand, with the exact whereabouts a closely guarded secret. The first of the two movies will be released in December 2012 and the second is expected a year later.

The movies have been beset by a succession of problems, most notably the threat last year by Time Warner Inc unit Warner Bros. to move production overseas because of fears unions would impose a boycott to back demands for a collective contract.

The government last year changed labor laws to keep the estimated $500 million production and increased tax breaks for Warner Bros, citing the damage that might be done to the country’s small film industry.

Before that, issues around the funding of the films saw original director Guillermo Del Toro quit in 2010.

The final challenge came from Jackson’s hospitalization earlier this year for emergency surgery for a perforated ulcer.

“The Hobbit” is based on the adventures of Bilbo Baggins, a hobbit who lives in the land of Middle-earth and goes on a quest to find treasure guarded by a dragon.

The book, first published in 1937, is the precursor to the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy, which also takes place in Middle-earth.

The cast for the movies includes Oscar winner Cate Blanchett, Ian McKellen, Orlando Bloom, Ken Stott and Martin Freeman as Bilbo Baggins.

(Reporting by Adrian Bathgate; editing by Elaine Lies)

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Google guesstimates release dates for movies and games

Published by in Uncategorized on March 18th, 2011 | Comments Off

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You can already do plenty of calculations and conversions right in Google’s search box, and it looks like the company’s now made it even smarter still. Searching for the title of an upcoming movie or video game plus “release date” will now instantly give you Google’s best guess for when the title will actually be released, which is apparently based on how often it’s been mentioned on certain websites. So far, we’ve only been able to get it to work with movies and games, although it seems pretty likely that it will soon expand to other areas as well — maybe even gadgets? Try it out yourself and let us know if you find anything.

[Thanks, Mario]



"Boondock Saints" director exploring video game

Published by in Uncategorized on March 18th, 2011 | Comments Off

By John Gaudiosi

Fri Mar 18, 2011 8:50pm EDT

AUSTIN (Hollywood Reporter) – “The Boondock Saints” director Troy Duffy was in Austin this week to connect with his fans at SXSW. After releasing two movies theatrically, the next step for the franchise would be to enter the video game space.

“We’re thinking of making a video game out of ‘Boondock’ and I went and listened to these guys pitch me the game and they had already done some programing,” said Duffy. “They had already built part of the game and I got to play it.”

Duffy said the game industry has come very far from his own days as a gamer, back when he was playing “TRON” at the arcade.

“Gamers are so far removed from what I know that I wouldn’t even know how the hell to play them,” said Duffy. “The demo the developer put together for ‘Boondock’ seems like real-time…realistic action. You’re looking at real characters…you can see sweat on their brows. The technology is out of this world.”

When it comes to a video game version of the film franchise, the two things that are most important for Duffy is to maintain the gritty and rough look for the game world’s environments and to allow fans be able to play as any of their favorite characters.

“The ‘Boondock’ fan base wants to have a beer with the MacManus brothers and then pick up a weapon and fight,” said Duffy. “With a video game you can increase that kind of intimacy, where they can actually be the brothers and hang out and do some shooting and have some fun. That communal aspect of the game is very important to me.”

Back in January of 2000, filmmaker Duffy released “The Boondock Saints,” an independent movie starring Willem Dafoe, Sean Patrick Flanery, Norman Reedus, Billy Connolly, and David Della Rocco. The NC-17 film generated about $30,000 at the box office, but once the movie hit home video, a cult gathering followed.

The director was able to assemble most of the original cast and complement them with new actors like Peter Fonda, Brian Mahoney and Julie Benz for the 2009 sequel, “The Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day.” The R-rated sequel earned over $30 million at the box office.

“Video games are a way not only to expand beyond what you see in the movies as far as story and characters, but they’re a new way for your fan base to commune with one another and get even deeper into the whole brand,” said Duffy. “There are gamers now playing multiplayer games together online from different states in the same game world.”

Duffy said it’d be at least a year before “The Boondock Saints” go virtual in any game, once he makes the decision to expand the franchise in that direction. He already has one actor on board.

“I think this game’s a great idea,” said Della Rocco, who played Rocco in both films. “It seems like they make a lot of games out of movies, including older films like ‘Scarface.’”

(Editing by Zorianna Kit)

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Zediva mashes up Netflix and Redbox for $1.99, four hour-window DVD streaming rentals

Published by in Uncategorized on March 16th, 2011 | Comments Off

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Netflix and Redbox have been the new hotness in rentals for the last few years but both have significant drawbacks. With Redbox, it’s the box and the morons who are constantly standing in front of it paging through every single movie in the thing and for Netflix’s Watch Instantly it’s a lack of new releases available for instant viewing. Now there’s a new startup, Zediva, that takes on both of those issues by sticking with DVDs, but instead of shipping them to customers or placing them in kiosks, just streams them on demand from one player, to one viewer (unlike Netflix, sometimes movies are “rented out” if there are no copies available at the moment — renting a flick gives you control of the DVD player, with fast forward and reverse, for four hours) for $1.99 a rental or 10 for $10.

Apparently it’s been in beta for a year but is now available to all and is currently offering new release DVDs the same day they go on sale by simply purchasing them at retail. There’s no HD content yet but it claims Blu-ray titles will be offered soon. The Associated Press talked to a copyright lawyer who points out the case of a hotel that implemented a similar system but was sued into oblivion before calling Zediva “cute, but illegal” so if you decide to check it out, we’d recommend getting through that 10-pack of rentals with haste.



Zediva taps loophole, offers new movies online (AP)

Published by in Uncategorized on March 16th, 2011 | Comments Off

SUNNYVALE, Calif. – A California startup is making new hit movies such as “The Fighter” available for instant viewing online through a loophole: It lets customers rent a DVD and a player that are actually located in the Silicon Valley.

By doing this, Zediva Inc. wants to circumvent the usual, sometimes lengthy waiting period that movie studios impose on Netflix Inc. and other companies that offer streaming of movies to Internet-connected TVs, laptops and other gadgets.

Companies are legally allowed to rent physical copies of DVDs without permission from the movie studios, the way libraries are allowed to freely lend out books. Internet streaming rights, however, generally require separate payments, and studios have typically been reluctant to license newer movies for fear that would cut into DVD sales.

Zediva believes it can get around those restrictions by tying Internet streaming to a physical DVD kept at the company’s data centers.

“We are renting DVDs just like any DVD rental service,” said founder Venky Srinivasan, who came up with the idea for Zediva while traveling and missing access to his DVD-by-mail service. “It’s the same as what has been done for the past 30 years.”

Still, it is a bold move and could face legal challenges.

The Motion Picture Association of America, which represents the major movie studios, declined to comment. Sony Pictures had no comment and other studios did not immediately return messages for comment.

Copyright lawyer Bob Garrett, however, called the service “cute but illegal.” He said there’s a clear difference between brick-and-mortar movie rental stores and Zediva’s online service because Zediva is transmitting programming over the Internet. That requires a separate copyright permission.

He said there is a “long line of cases” that do essentially the same thing, though using different technologies, as Zediva. In one instance, a hotel in California was taking DVDs or video tapes and playing them in a machine at the front desk, and transmitting movies up to individual hotel rooms on demand.

“The court said it was a violation of public performance right,” Garrett said.

In another case, the hotel gave guests the physical DVD player and movie to take up to their room. That was not a violation.

“The difference is the transmission” he said. “That’s what converts it into a public performance.”

Zediva, which says it has spent two years developing its technology, is charging $1.99 per movie. The company promises viewers the same kinds of controls they would enjoy with a DVD player at home, including pausing, rewinding and subtitles.

Customers have control of the DVD they rent for four hours and are allowed to pause the movie for no more than an hour within that time. If they don’t want to watch it in one sitting, they can return it and continue watching it for up to 14 days at no charge.

Only one person can rent a DVD at one time, meaning that if Zediva bought 20 copies of a movie, only 20 people can watch it simultaneously. Still, Zediva saves money because it could serve many more customers with the same physical copy of a DVD than a company that has to mail out a DVD and wait for its return.

Srinivasan would not say how many users signed up for Zediva on Wednesday. The company has been testing the service with a few thousand people for a year. He also would not say how many copies of a DVD the company buys, only that it forecasts demand.

“If there is more demand for a particular title, we get more,” he said, adding that although the company plans for peaks, there could be times when a movie is not available.

Currently, Apple Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. offer movie rentals online, but movie studios pick which titles are available and share revenue. Netflix Inc. offers Internet streaming of movies as part of monthly subscription packages, but generally only for older movies for which Netflix has negotiated rights. Movies can take months or years, if ever, to become available on Netflix for Internet streaming.

More recent movies tend to be available only on DVD, and in those cases Netflix and others have reached deals with some movie studios to wait 28 days after the DVDs first go on sale before offering them to customers. (There’s no delay if the rental company hadn’t reached a deal with the studio releasing the movie in exchange for perks such as bulk pricing or streaming rights on other movies.

If the service takes off and survives any legal challenges, it could compete with Netflix and others that have to abide by the delays.

On Wednesday morning, it had Danny Boyle’s “127 Hours” available to stream — a movie that Netflix users won’t be able to rent even physical copies of until March 29. Other new movies, such as “The Fighter” and “The American,” were also listed, though these two were rented out.



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