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fredag 30 december 2011

Summit Entertainment For Sale!

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"Twilight" studio Summit Entertainment is still deep in negotiations with two potential buyers, but won't reach an agreement with either before the end of 2011.

The Santa Monica firm remains in talks to sell itself to fellow studio Lions Gate Entertainment and private equity firm Colony Capital, a co-owner of Miramax, people familiar with the matter but not authorized to speak publicly said.

Executives at Summit had hoped to close a deal by the end of the year because of certain tax and financial advantages, two of the people said, but that has virtually no chance of happening by Saturday.

Instead, talks with both parties have slowed down during the holiday season and are expected to pick back up next week. Summit is likely still looking to close a deal as soon as possible, as it is currently in a good position with one more "Twilight" sequel yet to be released and a significant pile of cash that, one knowledgeable person said, will be distributed to investors in the event of a sale.

Both Lions Gate and Colony are said to be offering about $350 million to $400 million to acquire Summit, along with the assumption of roughly $200 million in debt.

If Lions Gate were to take control, Summit chiefs Rob Friedman and Patrick Wachsberger are expected to run the merged studio's motion picture group, sources close to the negotiations said. If Colony, which is led by billionaire investor Tom Barrack, were to be the winning bidder, Summit would likely be merged with Miramax. In that scenario, it's likely that Friedman and Wachsberger would run the combined company, possibly alongside Miramax CEO Mike Lang.

RELATED:

Summit management considering buyout of 'Twilight' studio

Lions Gate, Summit homing in on key details for proposed merger

Summit Entertainment, Lions Gate said to be back in merger talks

Source LATimesBlog

onsdag 30 november 2011

Scans from "Golden Big" Mag (Italy)

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tisdag 29 november 2011

boxofficemojo:On Saturday, 'Breaking Dawn' passed $200 million, and the 'Twilight' franchise reached $1 billion in domestic earnings:



Collider: Christopher Heyerdahl Talks About Breaking Dawn

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During this recent exclusive phone interview with Collider, Christopher Heyerdahl talked about how he came to be a part of Hell on Wheels, what he enjoys about playing such a complex and complicated character as The Swede, that he’s developed the character through extensive research both in books and in his own Norwegian heritage, and the challenge of shooting the Western concurrently with his SyFy series Sanctuary. He also talked about playing the ancient Volturi vampire Marcus in the Twilight Saga films, the deleted scene from The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 that he hopes will end up on the DVD, what audiences can look forward to with Breaking Dawn – Part 2, and what it’s been like to have the support of genre fans. Check out what he had to say after the jump.

Photobucket Do you have as much fun playing a member of the Volturi in the Twilight films, as it seems like you do?
HEYERDAHL: Yeah, we do. I suppose it will be on the DVD, but there was a scene that was cut from Breaking Dawn – Pt. 1. We originally book-ended the movie. At the beginning of the film, everyone received their invitation. It was a series of vignettes of the invitations to the wedding because the Volturi, of course, must be invited. Our reaction to the receiving of this lovely little invitation was very camp and great fun. I’ll look forward to seeing that on the DVD. But, they’re a good bunch.

How was Bill Condon to work with, as a director?
HEYERDAHL: We talked a lot about being a little more camp, and how every vampire story needs a bit of camp. So, we very happily played it camp.

When you became a part of the Twilight films, did you have any idea what you were getting yourself into?
HEYERDAHL: I had a pretty good idea. I was made aware of the books by my nieces, and my wife is a high school teacher, so she, of course, was in the middle of that, watching it go down, in and around schooltime. So, I had a good feeling that it was going to be a very popular event. Certainly, having seen Twilight, I knew there was such a strong movement with the films themselves. But, having seen the reaction to the books, it was a pretty safe bet that it was going to be a popular venture. It’s been a lot of fun. I love the vampire genre, and being able to play the oldest vampire, and certainly one of a band of old-timers, representing the old ways, was fun. And being a part of a project like that, where you get to witness how the new guard of actors in the business deal with the huge challenge of enormous popularity. I don’t think it’s easy for anyone, but I think that they are surviving it quite well.

What can audiences look forward to with Breaking Dawn – Pt. 2, in regard to your character and the Volturi?
HEYERDAHL: That’s always a difficult question to answer because I don’t want to put out any spoilers, but everyone’s read the book, so I think it’s relatively safe. There are some things that have come into the story, that are alluded to in the book, but aren’t necessarily expressed in word. They’re expressed in idea, in the book. Some of those things will be brought to fruition, visually, which was a lot of fun. It’s always fun to see a thought or an idea come to fruition. It’s almost like going into the mind of a character. You get to go along there, which is a wonderful thing for film. On stage, you can never really go into the mind of a character. You just follow along with a scene. Whereas with film, you can actually dive right inside. So, some of those events have been brought to life.
You definitely see a lot more of us. For the lovers of the Volturi, that’s going to be a positive thing. We certainly come in with our large wooden spoons and stir it up. I don’t think anyone will be disappointed by where the Volturi goes, and the aftermath. We really are a fun group of evil-doers. The interesting thing is that you’ve got this wonderful, complicated triumvirate of so-called brothers, who each have a different agenda, and you get to watch them try to ignite or ignore or tease or play with each other. You can only imagine that, when you’re hanging out for thousands of years, you’re going to get to know your partners quite well. A lot of times, each one of them tries to poke their fingers into their neighbor’s hornet’s nest to watch what happens. A little bit of that goes on, and there’s a lot of subtle pleasures that come out. You just get to see those relationships brought out a little bit more, in the second half. It’s good fun.

You’ve been on just about all of the favorite shows of any sci-fi fan, along with being in the Twilight films. What’s it been like to have the support of genre fans, with as dedicated and loyal as they are?
HEYERDAHL: The great thing about genre fans is that they’re not afraid to say who they are. A lot of other fandoms keep it a little bit closer to the chest. Genre fans are right out there. I went down [to Atlanta] to do Dragon*Con, which for the genre fans is the biggest fan-run convention out there, and there’s a huge parade where everyone is flying their flags and there’s so much support. Atlanta just comes out to observe. It’s pretty hard not to get involved and get swept along, literally and figuratively, by these massive amounts of people in this huge parade. It’s quite an amazing event.
So, being supported by a group of people like that is certainly a lot better than not being supported because they’ll let you know that as well. There are a lot of straightforward truths that have come out of a fandom like that. People in that fandom are very honest about how they feel. Because of that, shows rise and fall purely based on fandom, much more so than viewership, like with other shows. Fandom can keep something alive, and fandom can take it down. There’s a lot of power there, so because of that, there’s an enormous amount of, hopefully, mutual respect. So, I’m down with that fandom. 

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söndag 27 november 2011

‘Twilight’ Keeps Shining With $42M Second Weekend


LOS ANGELES, CALIF. -- The latest “Twilight” movie has plenty of daylight left with a second-straight win at the weekend box office.
“The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn — Part 1” took in $42 million domestically over the three-day weekend and $62.3 million in the five-day Thanksgiving boom time from Wednesday to Sunday. That raised its domestic total to $221.3 million, while it added $71.5 million overseas, lifting its worldwide total to $489.3 million.
Debuting at No. 2 was the family flick “The Muppets,” with $29.5 million for the three-day weekend and $42 million over the five-day holiday haul.
Three other family films rounded out the top-five for the three-day weekend: “Happy Feet Two” at 3 with $13.4 million; “Arthur Christmas” at No. 4 with $12.7 million; and “Hugo” at No. 5 with $11.4 million.
AH

(Photos + Videos) Julia Jones Interview At Helsinki BD Premiere - Finland (Nov, 17)

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blogit.stara.fi Via TTS

onsdag 23 november 2011

(Video) Taylor Lautner on His Most Challenging Scene and Jacob's Massive Transformation

The actor opens up to THR.com editor Joseph Kapsch about the penultimate film in the franchise, which opened to a whopping $283.5 million over the weekend.


Moviegoers watched Taylor Lautner put his impressive martial arts and stunt skills to work in Lionsgate's action thriller Abduction. And Twihards have been wooed by his ripped physique as uberpopular werewolf Jacob Black in The Twilight Saga series. But it was Breaking Dawn -- Part I's pivotal "imprinting scene" that the actor admitted was one of the most challenging scenes he's tackled.
"It was tough, it was probably the most challenging for me because first, you have to get a hold of what imprinting is and what it means," Lautner told The Hollywood Reporter ahead of the film's massive $283.5 million worldwide opening over the weekend. "And thankfully, we had [Twilight book series author] Stephenie Meyer on the set all the time, so trust me, we had a lot of conversations with her about that."
"Once I grasped that, then it became, 'What does it look like?' and I mean, I was giving a X on the wall and I had to walk in the room and look at this X, make eye contact with it and imprint, whatever that means, whatever that looks like," he said. "So on the day it was tough and required a lot of imagination but I am really happy with the outcome and I need to thank [director] Bill Condon for that one."
Lautner added that Jacob goes through a massive transformation in Breaking Dawn -- Part 1.
"The whole thing with Jacob in this movie is the journey that he goes on from the beginning to the end," he said. "He starts out the movie as the same Jacob we always known, but throughout the journey, I mean, he is forced to become a man and deal with maturity issues and make choices and he is torn between his own family, the wolf pack and his new family, the Cullen and he has to do the right thing."
Lautner's interview at the Four Seasons in Beverly Hills came the heels of THR's exclusive report that he would be starring in an independent movie directed by Gus Van Sant.
Though he and his team played coy on any further details with the press during rounds that week -- saying "it was still in very, very early stages" -- the actor was good sport, even laughing when THR brought up plans for the project.
The actor's first effort as a solo leading man, Abduction, underwhelmed at the box office over the summer. The new project would almost certainly take Lautner’s career in a new direction. He is said to be determined to work only with top directors and writers from now on as he strives to define himself as an actor.

fredag 18 november 2011

EW: Kristen Stewart on 'Breaking Dawn' wedding song: "I just became instantly emotional"

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Dedicated Twilight fans might recognize the song that plays during the long-awaited wedding between Edward (Robert Pattinson) and Bella (Kristen Stewart) when they see Breaking Dawn this weekend (if they haven’t seen it already; the film made over $30 million in midnight screenings Thursday night). It’s a special ‘wedding version’ of the Iron & Wine song, ‘Flightless Bird, American Mouth’ that played during the prom scene in the first Twilight movie way back when in 2008.
“Before we even started shooting the first Twilight with [director] Catherine Hardwicke, I was rehearsing with Rob and we were sort of dancing around this room, trying to do this scene,” Stewart tells EW. “I put on Iron & Wine’s ‘Flightless Bird, American Mouth’ and I just became instantly emotional. Rob couldn’t handle it — it got weird! But I was like, ‘oooh, this is perfect.’”
Stewart says that they ended up playing the song for her on-set when they filmed the actual scene, and the rest is Twilight history. Listen for parts of the song to play during the long-awaited love scene too: “I think our composer played with it and you hear the melody throughout the film,” says Stewart.
For more on Breaking Dawn –including the stars’ takes on the honeymoon, birth scene, and keeping things PG-13 – pick up the new issue of Entertainment Weekly, on sale now.


EW

Pics & Video: Twilight Boys in Zooey Magazine

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zooeymagazine
Via TT / BellasDiary

Video + Photos From Berlin Press Conference

HQ
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Tweets Thanks ChrisiMusic4
Question to producer Wyck: There are petitions, so the next part comes earlier in the cinemas. Is there any chance for the fans?
Answer: No, sorry, this is unfortunately impossible. (Big grin)


Question to Rob and Taylor: What is your favorite song from the Twilight soundtrack?
Taylor: A Thousand Years by Christina Perry!
Rob: Oh, is there a song that (I don't remember the title?), oh crap ... (laughter in the hall)


Question for Rob: When your first CD comes out that you're recording together with Taylor? (much laughter in the hall!)
Rob: Hmm, I do not know because I have very great respect! So far there are no plans to ..


Question to Rob and Taylor: Are you actually afraid of something?
Taylor: I'm terrified of sharks! Rob said: Well, it's easy to avoid, right? (much laughter!)
Rob: I'm afraid of nerve invasion ... No, I'm not afraid of anything (lacht!)


Question: The fans must now wait a whole year until the final part comes out. Why so long?
Reply from director Bill Condon: The production is incredibly complex, but the fight scenes. The stars are involved in other film projects, they have great opportunities to realize now.


Earlier question: Question: to Rob: What was it like to shoot someone in another movie?
Rob: that was fun (lacht!), a pretty bloody affair but ... ;-)


Erlier Question: Do you expect with this huge success of the Twilight saga?
Rob: No, this is madness! We are totally surprised how great everything has become. Our fans are incredibly passionate and enthusiastic. It's great to be back here and to present the fourth part.

Source Source | Source | Via Rplife
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