Film premiere and headlines spilling from a trio of fests in full swing (Venice), just starting (Telluride) and queued up (Toronto) have indie exhibitors and distributors the most hopeful since Covid hit that a stream of new films could fire up the arthouse market.
Tod Fields’ Cate Blanchett-starrer Tár (debuted to a six-minute standing ovation in Venice), Timothée Chalamet in Luca Guadagnino’s Bones And All (also just screened on the Lido), and Empire of Light with Olivia Colman, set to world premiere at Telluride, and a raft of others are slated for fall theatrical release. A deluge of specialty films from Sundance and Cannes will also move into U.S. cinemas later this month.
“Arthouse theaters are behind where they were in 2019, but I think this fall things will come racing back. These festivals have the goods,” said John Vanco, GM of New York’s IFC Center.
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The arthouse market was already challenged pre-Covid but the trickle of new films, with many fast-tracked to digital, and scattershot marketing heightened woes. A steadier flow of content alongside a just-approved Covid vaccine offers this slice of the market another shot, if red carpet festival fanfare can translate into some noise and dollars when films open in theaters instead of feeling like two different planets.
Meanwhile, the informal end of summer, Labor Day weekend, features a hastily organized promotion by NATO that will see theaters across the country, including many arthouses, offer $3 movie tickets for all shows and discounted concessions in a bid to thank moviegoers and jolt moviegoing. With no big releases skedded, Sony is offering Spider Man: No Way Home redux. Universal and Imax are presenting Jaws on 285 screens. Event distributor Fathom presents Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan at 985 theaters, Sunday only, for its 40th.
Specialty-plus openings (over 1,000 screens) are led by Focus Features’ Honk For Jesus. Save your Soul. at 1,879 locations (and on sister streaming service Peacock). The comedy/satire written and directed by Adamma Ebo was executive produced by Jordan Peele and stars Regina Hall and Sterling K. Brown. It world-premiered at Sundance. Deadline review here.
Hall plays Trinitie Childs, the proud first lady of a Southern Baptist megachurch forced to close suddenly over a scandal involving her husband Pastor Lee-Curtis Childs (Brown). The couple looks to rebuild their congregation and reconcile their faith by any means necessary. Produced by Daniel Kaluuya, Rowan Riley, Amandla Crichlow, filmmaker sibling due Adanne Ebo and Adamma Ebo, Kara Durrett, Jessamine Burgum, Matthew Cooper, Hall and Brown.
Roadside Attractions presents family drama Gigi & Nate on 1,185 screens. It had initially planned for 1,000 but boosted the screen count to make up for the $3 Saturday tickets. “We like the idea of participating. The movies is really for a broad audience and that is a price sensitive audience,” said Howard Cohen, the distributor’s co-president. “We are still in pandemic recovery mode.” The film by Nick Hamm is is written by David Hudgins and stars Charlie Rowe, Marcia Gay Harden and Jim Belushi. Based on the true story of Nate Gibson, a young man who suffers a near-fatal illness and is left a quadriplegic. Moving forward seems impossible until he meets his unlikely service animal and emotional savior, Gigi, a capuchin monkey (the big-screen debut of Allie as Gigi). Roadside has done a number of films in what Cohen calls the “feel good” space, appealing to a large swathe of the country. Stories and word of mouth on these can sometimes neutralize critics (who are giving the film a 23% on Rotten Tomatoes).
Specialty openings: IFC Films presents WW2 thriller Burial written and directed by Ben Parker on 24 screens. Starring Charlotte Vega, Tom Felton and Harriet Walter. Set in the waning days of World War II as a small band of Russian soldiers is tasked with delivering the crated remains of Hitler back to Stalin in Russia. En route, the unit is attacked by German “Werewolf” partisans and picked off one by one. An intrepid female intelligence officer (Vega) leads her surviving comrades in a last stand to ensure their cargo doesn’t fall into the hands of those who would hide the truth forever.
IFC Midnight’s horror/thriller Saloum opens on two screens — the IFC Center and Alamo Drafthouse in downtown LA as well as on streamer Shudder. Jean Luc Herbulot’s Toronto Film Festival’s Midnight Madness selection was written by Herbulot and Pamela Diop, and produced by Diop. Deadline review here.
Shot down after fleeing a coup and extracting a drug lord from Guinea-Bissau, legendary mercenaries known as the Bangui Hyenas – Chaka (Yann Gael), Rafa (Roger Sallah) and Midnight (Mentor Ba) — must stash their stolen gold bounty, repair and refuel their plane and escape back to Dakar, Senegal. They take refuge at a coastal holiday camp, but Chaka has brought them there for a reason, with devastating consequences.
Strand Releasing presents Peter von Kant at 10 locations including the IFC in NY and Laemmle Theatres and American Cinematheque in LA.
The comedy by François Ozon opened Berlin, Deadline review here. Peter Von Kant (Denis Ménochet), a successful, famous director, lives with his assistant Karl (Stefan Crepon), whom he likes to mistreat and humiliate. Through the great actress Sidonie (Isabelle Adjani), he meets and falls in love with Amir (Khalil Ben Gharbia), a handsome young man of modest means. He offers to share his apartment and help Amir break into the world of cinema in this all-male re-imagining of The Bitter Tears Of Petra Von Kant, Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s 1972 story of three women locked in a toxic triangle.
Warwick Ross and Robert Coe’s Tribeca winner Blind Ambition from Samuel Goldwyn film opens in five theaters. The documentary follows four friends who beat the odds to become South Africa’s top sommeliers after escaping starvation and tyranny in their homeland of Zimbabwe. Driven by relentless optimism, a passion for their craft and a sense of national pride, they form Zimbabwe’s first national wine tasting team and set their sights on the coveted title of World Wine Tasting Champions.
Zietgeist Films and Kino Lorber open Eva Vitija’s documentary Loving Highsmith in NYC, expanding next weekend. A look at the life of celebrated American author Patricia Highsmith based on her diaries and notebooks and the intimate reflections of lovers, friends and family. Focusing on Highsmith’s quest for love and her troubled identity, the film sheds new light on her life and writing. Most of Highsmith’s novels from Strangers on a Train to The Talented Mr. Ripley were adapted to the big screen. Carol, a partly autobiographic novel, was the first lesbian story with a happy ending to be published in 1950s America. But Highsmith led a double life. Only in her unpublished writings did she reflect on her private life. Excerpts from these notes voiced by Gwendoline Christie are interwoven with archive material.
Blue Fox Entertainment presents Régis Roinsard’s French drama Waiting for Bojangles on ten screens. A young boy, Gary, lives with his eccentric parents, Camille and Georges, and an exotic bird in a Parisian apartment. Each night, Camille and Georges dance lovingly to their favorite song, Mr. Bojangles. At home, life is fun, fantasy and friends, but as Gary’s mesmerizing and unpredictable mother descends deeper into her own mind, it is up to Gary and Georges to keep her safe. Starring Romain Duris, Virginie Efira and Grégory Gadebois.
Lionsgate opens The Wire Room by Matt Eskandari in 20 locations and on demand. Written by Brandon Stiefer. With Kevin Dillon, Bruce Willis, Oliver Trevena, Texas Battle, Cameron Douglas, Shelby Cobb. Willis plays a Homeland Security agent who runs the Wire Room, a high-tech command center surveilling the most dangerous criminals. New recruit Dillon must monitor arms-smuggling cartel member Eddie Flynn and keep him alive at all costs.
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