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DAILY NEWS: indieWIRE: BUZZ for 08.26.02; Indican Acquires Three Titles


by Wendy Mitchell/indieWIRE

>> IndieWIRE: BUZZ for August 26, 2002

(indieWIRE: 08.26.02) -- indieWIRE presents its weekly column focusing on recent items on the radar in the indie film community. Submit your news items to .

INDUSTRY MOVES

Jon Fitzgerald is on board as the new executive director of the Santa Barbara International Film Festival. Fitzgerald previously was the director of the Slamdance and AFI film festivals. He also runs the indie production company Marine Street Films.

NEWS CHATTER

WHAT'S IN A NAME? Jeff Hill, formerly of Falco Ink, has named his new public relations venture the International House of Publicity, although he's not using the four-letter abbreviation that could get him in trouble with a certain pancake chain. Hill says he does in fact love pancakes, and the name also honors his "midwestern background." His staff includes the charmingly monikered Kitty Bowe Hearty, a former magazine writer, plus part-timers Beth Binnard (ex-Good Machine) and Millys Lee, an old colleague from Hill's Clein + White days. Currently in the House: "All or Nothing," "Far From Heaven," "Bloody Sunday," "All the Queen's Men," "Nicholas Nickleby," and "Morvern Callar." Now, let's bring on those pancake breakfasts!

Likewise, former Good Machine-r Ted Hope, along with partners Anthony Bregman and Anne Carey, have found a name for their new production company: This is That. (a.k.a. "TIT"). Just don't let these folks name your first-born.

JERSEY GIRLS WANTED: Filmmaker Kevin Smith is using his View Askew website to recruit extras for his next film, "Jersey Girl." Extras will share screen time with a cast including Ben Affleck, Jennifer Lopez, Liv Tyler, and George Carlin. Smith promises extras the opportunity to "see how a movie (or, God forbid, a bad movie) gets made, up close!" and the chance to "get treated like cattle at your own expense." Submissions are due August 31 -- for details visit the View Askew website.

TRAVELING AGAIN: While the indieWIRE staff was decidedly mixed about "World Traveler," we all agree that it does star Billy Crudup. A series of special screenings of "WT" started on Friday at the Screening Room in downtown NYC, and they will continue through Thursday. On Wednesday and Thursday night screenings will feature Q&As with director Bart Freundlich and Mr. Crudup. Who knows, perhaps you'll also spy Bart's main squeeze (and one of the stars of "WT"), Julianne Moore?

SALMA BEHIND THE CAMERA: Salma Hayek is doing her best to put schlock like "Fools Rush In" far behind her: First, there's her excellent starring role in "Frida," which should have everyone noticing her chops as a serious actress (despite the gratuitous boob shots). Also, Hayek will make her directorial debut and also executive prodcue "The Maldonado Miracle" for Showtime. The film, based on a Theodore Taylor novel about a small town grappling with a religious miracle, stars Peter Fonda, Mare Winningham, and Ruben Blades.

TROMA TOUR: The latest Troma party was held, appropriately enough, in NYC's Hell's Kitchen. The Troma gang held a bash last week to welcome home the Troma tour bus from its "Tromaville on Tour" stint on the Vans Warped Tour. The team celebrated with a concert, and the stars of "Citizen Toxie: The Toxic Avenger 4" were on hand.

A DATE IN BERLIN: Set your calendars, the Berlin International Film Festival has set its 2003 dates for February 6-16. The Bear awards ceremony is slated for February 15. Math majors will notice that this year's fest will run 11 days, one day shorter than recent fests.

GUILLEMET LANDS IN MIAMI: South Beach-ers will welcome a new Miami immigrant, Nicole Guillemet, on Wednesday at a party at Japanese restaurant Doraku. Guillemet, left Sundance to become the new director of the Florida International University Miami Film Festival, has been working in Miami since July.

SPOTTED: Director Mira Nair at Thursday's HBO screening and party for her new film, "Hysterical Blindness." She was just in from a trip to Africa where she said that she planted 28 trees. Joining her from the film were the always stunning Gena Rowlands and the always interesting Juliette Lewis. Ethan Hawke stood in for his wife Uma Thurman (star of the film) -- she was said to be in China filming the latest Quentin Tarantino film, "Kill Bill." Hawke later tore up the dance floor with "Hysterical" co-star Callie Thorne during the after-party at Eugene on 24th St., as the photographers snapped away. (Following last night's HBO premiere, the movie will air tonight on HBO2 and through the end of September on various HBO channels, check HBO.com for schedules.)

QUOTABLE

"Bob Evans is one of the most fascinating men who ever lived in the 20th century. Without a question. And the more time I've spent with him, the more confident I am to make that statement." -- Brett Morgen, co-director of "The Kid Stays in the Picture," on Robert Evans, as quoted in the San Francisco Examiner.

ASK DR. INDIE (send questions to )

Q: "With all this buzz about "Hairspray: the Musical" being a hit on Broadway, I was curious what other cult indie films made in the late '80s/early '90s would indieWIRE like to see brought to the Great White Way?"

A: What about Linklater's "Slacker" as the anti-"Rent"; layabouts in Austin are too lazy to get up and do their own dance numbers? Or perhaps a nice assembly-line routine from "Roger & Me" or a debutante ball spoof for Whit Stillman's "Metropolitan"?

STAY TUNED

Later this week in indieWIRE: Jack Cocker's report from the Edinburgh Film Festival and Joe Leydon's Insider column. [Wendy Mitchell, with a report from Eugene Hernandez]

>> Indican Acquires "On_Line," "Young Unknowns," "Down & Out..."

(indieWIRE: 08.26.02) -- Indie distributor Indican Pictures has acquired three films for theatrical release: "On_Line," a cybersex saga starring Josh Hamilton; Katy Jelski's "The Young Unknowns," described as "a 'Less than Zero' for the 2K generation" starring Leslie Bibb; and Kurt Voss' "Down & Out With the Dolls," about an all-girl rock band.

"On_Line," which played at Sundance 2002 and Berlin 2002 among other fests, will arrive in theaters early in 2003.

Indican also announced that it is starting a home video line, with VHS and DVD products in stores in 2003. The first four home-video titles will be "Hybrid," "Shaye & Kiki," "Wetonkawa Flash," and "Pariah." [Wendy Mitchell]

>> FRIDAY's indieWIRE ALERT: Paul Speaker Exits Madstone Amidst Restructuring, New Yorker Team To Head Distribution

(indieWIRE: 08.22.02) -- President and COO Paul Speaker has departed Madstone, the New York-based "digital film studio" formed in 1999 by former investment banker Chip Seelig and veteran film executive Tom Gruenberg. The move comes amidst a restructuring of several key departments and upper-management, changes detailed by Seelig in a conversation with indieWIRE today. The exec also addressed the outfit's efforts in its expanding exhibition chain. [Matthew Ross]

READ THE COMPLETE STORY @ indieWIRE.com.

>> THURSDAY IN indieWIRE DAILY NEWS: IFC Closes Next Wave; Goldwyn Grabs Controversial Mexican Hit; IFP Sets Doc Line-Up

(indieWIRE: 08.22.02) -- IFC Entertainment has shut down its finishing-funds company, Next Wave Films.

READ THE FULL STORIES @ indieWIRE.com.