April 29, 2005
Thats right!! Let the audience decide!!

Soderbergh, 2929 See Same-Day Film/DVD Release

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Director Steven Soderbergh and 2929 Entertainment, a media company owned by entrepreneurs Mark Cuban and Todd Wagner, on Friday unveiled a unique pact to make digital movies for simultaneous release in theaters, on television and on DVD.

The same-day distribution challenges long-held practices for Hollywood studios that first place films in theaters, hoping for solid box office revenues, then sell them months later on DVD or videocassette and offer them to TV broadcasters.

Studios and theater owners are concerned that altering the practice would cannibalize theater box office sales, but Wagner told Reuters it is time to explore new ways to get movies to audiences when and where they want them.

"Consumers should have the choice of how they want to consume movies," he said.

Under the deal between 2929 and Oscar winner Soderbergh -- whose work ranges from low-budget features to blockbusters like "Ocean's Eleven" -- the director would make six movies using high-definition digital technology. The first, a murder mystery titled "Bubble," is currently in production.

2929 would release the movies in its Landmark Theaters cinema chain, which operates 58 houses nationwide geared toward art, foreign-language and independently-made films.

The films also would be available on 2929's high-definition cable TV channel, HDNet Movies. The Dallas-based company said it is still in talks for home video and DVD distribution.

EMBRACING CHANGE

While HDNet reaches roughly half of all U.S. homes, it has yet to gain strong viewership, and Wagner said much of the reasoning behind the pact is to test simultaneous releasing.

"If you embrace (the tests), you can find new revenue models, but you aren't going to think of them if you aren't willing to experiment," he said.

For instance, he said it may be possible that filmmakers could share video and TV revenues with theater owners if the theater owners do not protest simultaneous releases.

The DVD market has been so strong in recent years that some filmmakers want to tap it faster to recoup the cost of making and marketing films. The studios have narrowed gaps between releases, too, but have not done a simultaneous distribution.

Last year, Atlanta-based Convex Group Inc. released a holiday film, "NOEL," in 10 cities and on the same day in a disposable DVD via online retailer Amazon.com Inc. .

One week ago, 2929 released a documentary it backed, "Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room," simultaneously in theaters and on HDNet Movies.

Wagner said it was too soon to know exactly how the strategy panned out for "Smartests Guys," but he added that the movie's per screen average was a hefty $25,000.

"That tells me it hasn't cannibalized any audience yet," he said.

Posted by Dan at 07:41 PM
R.I.P.

'Lou Grant' Actor Dies at 86

LOS ANGELES (Zap2it.com) Mason Adams, whose distinct voice became familiar to millions before he gained fame for the "Mary Tyler Moore" spin-off "Lou Grant," died Tuesday, April 26 at the age of 86.

The Emmy-nominated actor, who also voiced numerous radio roles and commercials, died of natural causes in his Manhattan home, report news sources.

Adams was born in Brooklyn, New York on February 26, 1919. He received a master's degree in Theater Arts and Speech from the University of Wisconsin and later taught at New York's Neighborhood Playhouse.

Although he had what one colleague described as a "non-actor's face," Adams used his gravelly, friendly voice to advantage. He began working in radio in the 1940s, playing the title role in the soap opera "Pepper Young's Family." He was also heard on the "Batman" serials, "Golden Age," on the "CBS Mystery Theater" series and as the nefarious Atom Man on the "Superman" serials.
He finally gained recognition as Charlie Hume on CBS' "Lou Grant" sitcom, earning three consecutive Emmy nominations beginning in 1979.

Adams continued to do voice work and can still be heard as the pitchman in Cadbury Eggs and Smuckers commercials, the latter which always concluded with the tagline: "With a name like Smuckers, it's got to be good."

His film work includes parts in "F/X," "Son in Law" and "Houseguest." During his later years, he continued to act on stage, with one of his final roles in Arthur Miller's "The Man Who Had All the Luck" in 2002.

Posted by Dan at 12:14 AM