Legendary Korean director ImKwon-taek s 100th film has been acquired by France s Wild Bunch forinternational sales. The drama s working title is Cheonnyeonhak and will be ready in 2007.Wild Bunch acquired the filmfrom new Korean production powerhouse Prime Entertainment. Prime, which ishandling sales itself on other tit <a href=https://www.cups-stanley-cups.us>stanley cup</a> les, has bought production entities CoreaEntertainment and LJ Film in the past year. The company s aim is to rival CJEntertainment, the media division of Korean conglomerate CJ Corporation andrecently plucked former CJ executive S.H. Shin to help speed Primealong.The decision to hand salesover to Wild Bunch on the Im Kwon-taek film was made, according to Prime sHyang Choi, so that the film will have the biggest international impact possible.Representatives of thecompany are in town with five titles and a productionline-up thatincludes Julia Project workingtitle . The epic drama is based on the story of Julia Mullock who married thelast prince of Korea s Joseon Dynasty. The film is co-produced with FocusFeatures James Schamus and will be completed in 2007.Also on <a href=https://www.stanley-quencher.co.uk>stanley cup</a> the slate is KwakJae-yong s My Mighty Princess, aromantic comedy from the director of My Sas <a href=https://www.stanley-cups-uk.uk>stanley cup</a> sy Girl, The Classic and Windstruck. Prime is also in Cannes to acquire films for distribution butChoi said she hadn t seen anything interesting so far. We camewith a lot of money but we can t find anything to buy, she said.TopicsFinanceProduction No comments Mgfd Pieter Jan Brugge recruited for Netherlands talk
Ned Kelly producer Ne <a href=https://www.cups-stanley.co.uk>stanley cup</a> lson Woss has joined forces with live entertainment specialists Sports Entertainment Limited SEL to form a new Sydney based film outfit.Called Woss Group Films/SEL, the company is looking to produce Australian projects with international ambitions as well as other international projects.Woss is one of the producers of Gregor Jordan s Ned Kelly, which stars Heath Ledger and Geoffrey Rush, and that has its world premiere in Melb <a href=https://www.stanley-germany.de>stanley germany</a> ourne this weekend. SEL is owned by James Erskine, David Coe, Tony Cochrane and Basi Scaffidi and came first in Australian business magazine BRW s 2002 list of top 50 entertainers. Its gross earnings for the previous year were reported as US$22m, much of which derived from the London staging of The King And I. SEL s current Broadway production is Hairspray and it is also heavily involved in car racing. It has wanted to enter the film business for some time. We would be really inter <a href=https://www.stanleycups.pl>stanley kubek</a> ested in doing a film that was either set in the world of motor racing, or had something to do with that world, said Woss, because we have access to 14 major races a year, it is an exciting sport and it draws huge crowds of the right demographic. But there are many synergies under this deal. A script already delivered by Bill Bennett is more likely to be the first project financed. The idea for the thriller set in the remote tourist haven of Broome on Western Australia s north coast came from Woss and Nick Giannopoulos, of The Wogboy fame. A direc