January
20, 2003
A
Tale of Two Salmas
|
Sundance's
Golden (Globes) Hangover
Two
obsessive compulsions dominate this period of the year. So, with the
Golden Globes out of the way, the second wave of Sundance business starts
today (Monday), as the mini-majors with Globe-al interests (which seems
like all of them lately) report to the mountains (or back to the mountains)
for some unfinished business.
Lions Gate's Jamie
Foley-directed con man movie, Confidence, with Dustin
Hoffman and Ed Burns, premiered Sunday night and Lions Gate
is looking for a partner for American distribution, a la Paramount's
takeover of Narc.
Pieces of April
is probably the hottest title from the festival this year and Harvey
Weinstein is due to hit the snowless streets of Park City today.
He was the high-price guy last year, buying InDigEnt's Tadpole
for a reported $5 million. No one else has come close to that figure
in recent years at Sundance - it was more than three times what Miramax
paid for Oscar nominee In The Bedroom - so expect InDigEnt to make a
sale to him or to use him for leverage to close a deal soon.
Salma Hayek
is expected to keep her décolletage covered and her assets warm as she
presents her directorial debut, The Maldanado Miracle, this afternoon
at Eccles. Hot title American Splendor premieres tonight at The
Library, right after Camp - the anticipated "Fame Meets Gay Meatballs"
- from director Todd Graff. Many festival lovers will be anxious
to see the latest Neil LaBute film, The Shape of Things,
even if it does already have distribution. It's the late show at Eccles
tonight.
Tuesday night,
the new film from The Polish Brothers, Northfork, hits Eccles
Center.
Wednesday, the
most anticipated activity is the party for the likely-to-sell Party
Monster, which premiered on Saturday. Wednesday night is also the
first opportunity for festivalgoers to check out the sold-right-before-the-show
Masked and Anonymous from Seinfeld co-producer Larry
Charles.
And Thursday night
Ernest Dickerson's Showtime film, Good Fences, premieres,
hoping to get enough positive buzz to push its way into a theatrical
release. The 227th Phillip Seymour Hoffman film of the year, Owning
Mahowny, premieres as well.
Pick-up
Scoreboard:
Lion's Gate: The Cooler
Fox Searchlight: Thirteen
Par Classics: The United States of Leland, The Singing Detective
In Serious Play: Pieces of April, dot the i, The Station Agent, Party
Monster
--
by David Poland