The honorary vice president of FIPRESCI has been a contributor to Screen for 15 years.Long-standing contributor Dan Fainaru is to become critic-at-large for Screen International, a roving role which caps his 15-year relationship with the title.Based in Israel, Fainaru has been a film critic for over 55 years and is honorary vice president of FIPRESCI. He has served as critic for Screen across the ful <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.de>stanley cup</a> l range of international film festivals since he joined the tile.His critic-at-large role wil <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.uk>stanley cup</a> l afford him the opportunity to assess and review titles outside the driver of Screens daily coverage at festivals.Formerly the director of the Israeli Film Institute, Fainaru edits Israels only film magazine, Cinematheque.Screen Inter <a href=https://www.stanleywebsite.us>stanley website</a> nationals reviews editor Fionnuala Halligan said: Dans knowledge and taste is unrivalled, and I am looking forward to working with him in this new capacity as he becomes an ambassador at large for Screens busy reviews desk. Screen International continues to produce comprehensive reviews coverage from international festivals and to publish e-dailies and print daily magazines at festivals around the world.Critics Tim Grierson, Lee Marshall, Allan Hunter, Jonathan Romney, Charles Gant, Wendy Ide and chief critic Fionnuala Halligan continue to anchor that coverage, with national coverage provided by Lisa Nesselson in France, James Marsh in Hong Kong and Sarah Ward in Australia, amongst others.TopicsIsraelUK/Ireland No comments Xysg Via Digital reaches half million subscribers mark
The Stockholm based production company plans to turn Swedish writer Kristina Ohlssons trilogy into three 90 minute TV movies.Nice Drama -the Swedish drama arm of the Nordic independent production alliance Nice Group 鈥?has acquired the film rights to Kristina Ohlssons trilogy of best-selling crime novels, Unwanted, The Daisy and Guardian Angels.It plans t <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.com.de>stanley cup</a> o turn the trilogy into three 90-minute TV movies or 6 x 45 mins , with co-production partners from Sweden and Germany.Shooting is scheduled for 2013-2014, with the first film of the trilogy possibly released theatrically.A rising star of the Nordic Noir crime genre, Kristina Ohlsson was, until recently, a coun <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.us>stanley cup</a> ter-terrorism officer at OSCE the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe .Her best-selling <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.us>stanley website</a> trilogy, which has been published in 23 countries, centres around Fredrika Bergman, an investigative analyst who has joined the police from an academic background and has unconventional ideas on how to solve crime.Patrick Nebout, CEO of Nice Drama, said: Kirstina Ohlsson has written three brilliant books, with complex and credible characters, strong plots and Stockholm as the backdrop. As we have seen from the likes of The Killing, this kind of realistic crime has powerful international appeal. We believe these books are strong rights and we are grateful to Kristina to entrusting them to us. Nice Drama is also developing a feature film project based on the Swedish best seller The Centenarian Who Climbed Out The Win