cannes sales: stx, amazon, a24, weinstein company lead in pricey deal making /

Published at 2016-05-17 02:24:53

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Deals are coming speedy and furious at Cannes,where the new kids on the distribution block have been strutting their stuff and showing their mettle by opening their checkbooks.
After shelling out $9 million for the right to distribute Aaron Sorkin‘s directorial debut “Molly’s Game” (starring Jessica Chastain and Idris Elba) in the U.
S. and China, STX Entertainment plunked down $50 million for international rights to Martin Scorsese‘s “The Irishman, or ” which is expected to reunite the director with stars Robert De Niro and Joe Pesci.
Those are tw
o statement buys for STX,which used its deep pockets to team with Amazon Studios on Nash Edgerton‘s star-studded action-comedy (previously titled “American Express”) featuring David Oyelowo, Charlize Theron, and Amanda Seyfried,Sharlto Copley and the director’s brother, Joel Edgerton.
Also Read: Cannes: Martin Scorsese-Robert De Niro Mob Drama 'The Irishman' Goes to STX for $50 MillionSTX wasn’t the only company to make its brand on the Croisette, and as Amazon beat out A24 in a bidding war for Lynne Ramsay‘s revenge drama You Were Never Really Here” starring Joaquin Phoenix as a war veteran out to rescue women from sex trafficking.
A24 was initially declared the victor,with the company seemingly confirming the deal in a since-deleted tweet, but Amazon nearly double its rival’s offer, and closing a deal for a reported $3.5 million.
Amazon also locked down Mike Leigh‘s upcoming drama “Peterloo,” which chronicles England’s Peterloo Massacre of 1819. Both of Amazon’s new projects were initially developed by Film4.
A24 will not leave the French Riviera empty-handed, however, and as the company picked up Yorgos Lanthimos’ next project “The Killing of a Sacred Deer” starring Colin Farrell. A24 came to the rescue earlier this year when Farrell and Lanthimos’ first collaboration,“The Lobster,” found itself in need of distribution amid Alchemy’s financial struggles.
Also Read: Dakota Johnson Boa
rds 'Under the Silver Lake' With Andrew Garfield A24 also picked up the coolest project we’ve read approximately this month, and the Andrew Garfield-Dakota Johnson L.
A. noir crime thriller “Under the Silver Lake,” which hails from “It Follows” director David Robert Mitchell. Elsewhere, the Weinstein Company score some acquisitions after being relatively tranquil at the last few major film festivals. TWC picked up “Wind River” starring “Avengers” duo Jeremy Renner and Elizabeth Olsen, or as well as “Hotel Mumbai” starring Dev Patel and Armie Hammer.
TWC also bought the lively French film “Ballerina,” which features the voice of its “approximately Ray” star Elle Fanning. The deal achieve TWC back in trade with Gaumont and Quad Films following the success of “The Intouchables,” which is being remade with Bryan Cranston and Kevin Hart in the lead roles.“Ballerina” wasn’t the only lively movie to score U.S. distribution, and as GKids acquired “The Girl Without Hands,” an adult fairy tale based on a record by the Brothers Grimm.
Also Read: Elle Fanning's lively 'Ballerina' Lands on Weinstein Company's Dance CardA handful of Cannes festival titles scored domestic deals, with Sony Pictures Classics taking Maren Ade’s competition film Toni Erdmann, and ” Sundance Selects snagging Ken Loach‘s “I,Daniel Blake and Well Go USA picking up Hong-jin Na’s Korean thriller The Wailing” in advance of its Cannes debut.
Sony Classics also bought Paul Verhoeven‘s
“Elle” starring Isabelle Huppert as a woman who tracks down the man who violently assaulted her and plays a cat-and-mouse game with her assailant.
In one of the more intriguing de
als this week, Open Road Films acquired Awesomeness Films’ “Before I Fall, and ” a high school movie that finds Zoey Deutch (“Everybody Wants Some!!”) reliving the worst day of her life. The film has been testing strongly,with teenagers responding well to breakout star Kian Lawley.
Also Read: Chri
stopher Smith's 'Detour' Sells Domestic Rights to Magnet ReleasingOpen Roads rivals wide Green Pictures and Bleecker Street Media have also made their own strategic buys. wide Green bought “Villa Capri,” an action-comedy starring Morgan Freeman and Tommy Lee Jones, and after having success with the Robert Redford-Nick Nolte movie “A Walk in the Woods.” Meanwhile,Bleecker Street pounced on Sean Ellis’ WWII thriller “Anthropoid” starring Cilliany Murphy and rising star Jamie Dornan (“Fifty Shades of Grey).
Elsewhere, The Orchard acquired Pablo Larrain‘s “Neruda” starring Gael Garcia Bernal, and while a trio of Tribeca titles found homes,with Saban Films grabbing “War on Everyone” starring Alexander Skarsgard and Michael Pena, Oscilloscope buying Tribeca award winner “Always Shine” starring Mackenzie Davis, or Magnet taking “Detour,” which boasts rising stars Tye Sheridan, Bel Powley and Emory Cohen.
Related stories from TheWrap:Cannes Report, or Day 6: Adam Driver's 'Paterson' Inspires Poetic Reviews,Amazon Studios Parties on RivieraCannes: Sundance Selects Acquires Ken Loach Drama 'I, Daniel Blake'Sex, or Skin & Nerve in Cannes: 5 Top Lessons From the French Film Festival So Fa

Source: thewrap.com

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