Wednesday, 10 September 2008

Mayhem reigns in Toronto's "Midnight Madness" films

TORONTO () - Forget red carpets and polite Hollywood stars. Mayhem reigns at the Toronto pic festival's "Midnight Madness" movies that kicked off, literally, with an early Friday morning screening of "JCVD" in which aging action hero Jean-Claude Van Damme pokes fun at his own calling.





The Toronto festival is unitary of the world's top movie gatherings and Brad Pitt, George Clooney, Tilda Swinton and even youth Dakota Fanning will be in town walking up the glamourous red carpet at gala affair screenings.





But at midnight, the glitz is packed up and moviegoing gets down to dark, bloody, and outlandishly risible films that help limit the range of most 300 films overall at the festival.





In the past, Midnight Madness has launched Hollywood hits such as Sacha Baron Cohen's clowning "Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan" and horror flick "Saw", which spawned several sanguineous sequels.





Studio executives prey on the upbeat material for their adjacent big hits, and the buzz around "JCVD" is pretty strong.





Van Damme plays himself, an international action hero who's down on his chance and loss through a custody conflict. His ageing body makes it hard to kick butt, and he's in money hassle.





He heads endorse to his hometown to escape life, but is taken surety in a heist-gone-awry and has to fight his way out. Sure, there's high-flying kicks, but Van Damme won fans here for a monologue he delivers addressing his personal demons.





Known as the "Muscles from Brussels," Van Damme was non among the predominantly male audience in the early morning hours on Friday, and he apologized via a brief video message.�






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Monday, 1 September 2008

Harry Potter - Warner Bros Sues Indian Studio Over Hari Puttar Film

Warner Bros studios has taken legal action against an Indian studio which plans to release a film entitled Hari Puttar - A Comedy Of Terrors.

The Hollywood giant has recently commenced proceeding against Mirchi Movies, of Mumbai, over the film in question, feeing its name is excessively similar to that of the Harry Potter franchise.

"We have recently commenced transactions against parties involved in the production and distribution of a movie entitled Hari Puttar," Warner Bros spokeswoman Deborah Lincoln told The Hollywood Reporter.

"Warner Bros values and protects intellectual property rights.

"However, it is our policy not to discuss publicly the inside information of whatever ongoing litigation."

Hari Puttar - A Comedy of Terrors, tells of a ten-year-old boy wHO moves to England with his parents and becomes involved in a plot of ground concerning a secret silicon chip and is set for a September 12th tone ending in India.

Munish Purii, the chief executive of Mirchi Movies, aforementioned he was unable to offer significant comment as the case is sub-judice.

However, he added: "We registered the Hari Puttar claim in 2005, and it's unfortunate that Warner has chosen to file a case so close to our film's release.

"In my opinion, I don't reckon our claim has any similarity or links with Harry Potter."

Warner Bros late confirmed that the acquittance of Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince, the sixth film in the dealership, has been delayed by eight months until July 2009.

The motion picture will now spearhead Warner Bros' lineup of summer films.





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