‘Expendables 2′ Director Simon West Teams with Carnaby on Action-Comedy ‘Salty’

London-based Carnaby Sales & Distribution has boarded Simon West’s action-comedy “Salty” as worldwide sales agent. West’s credits include “Con Air,” “Lara Croft: Tomb Raider” and “Expendables 2.”

The production, which West describes as “The Hangover” meets “Get Him to the Greek,” is in final negotiations with an A-list cast and pre-sales have already been secured with distributors in several major territories, Carnaby said. Pic will start to shoot later this year.

The film follows an ageing rock star, and reformed sex addict, who is persuaded to take a holiday by his wife, a former supermodel. Things take a turn for the worse when she’s kidnapped by Thai pirates raising money to buy a new boat.

The screenplay, which is adapted from Mark Haskell Smith’s novel, is written by Haskell Smith (TV series “Star Trek Voyager” and “The Magnificent Seven”) and Toby Davies (“The Mitchell and Webb Look,” “Yonderland,” “Crackanory”).

Salty” is produced by Harry Stourton (“Lara Croft: Tomb Raider”) and Jib Polhemus (“Con Air,” “Lara Croft: Tomb Raider,” “Expendables 2”). Deal was struck by Carnaby’s joint CEOs, Sean O’Kelly and Andrew Loveday, with West, Stourton and Polhemus for Simon West Prods. “Salty” partnered with equity crowdfunding platform SyndicateRoom to offer retail investors the chance to own a stake in the film.

West said: “‘Salty’ is a wonderful mixture of comedy, action and exotic locations. Films of this type like ‘The Hangover’ and ‘Bridesmaids’ are perfect examples of how popular this genre can be. I am going to shoot this film in a style that will exude energy, fun and glamour.

He added: “The story should work on several levels. The ironic humor and witty dialogue will be very appealing to U.S. and English-speaking audiences but I also think the film will travel very well to all other markets. I intend to shoot elaborate and exciting action sequences very much in the vein of my previous films and like those projects I intend to cast the movie with the best acting talent out there.”

The Truth Commissioner begins shoot in Ireland

The Truth Commissioner, a political thriller set around the Northern Ireland peace process, has begun principal photography this week in Belfast and Dublin.

The adaptation of David Park’s 2008 novel, directed by Declan Recks (Eden), will film for five weeks across locations spanning Belfast and Londonderry in Northern Ireland as well as Dublin and other parts of the Republic of Ireland. Historic locations will include Derry-Londonderry’s Guildhall setting for the Bloody Sunday enquiry and Belfast’s Stormont Castle – seat of the Northern Ireland Executive.

The cast, led by Roger Allam (The Queen, The Thick of it), includes Sean McGinley, Tom Goodman Hill, Conleth Hill, Ian McElhinney, Bird Brennan and Barry Ward.

Carnaby International handle sales and took the upcoming title to Berlin’s European Film Market (EFM) last month.

Set in a post-Troubles Northern Ireland, the film follows the fictional story of Henry Stanfield (Allam), a career diplomat who has just been appointed as Truth Commissioner to Northern Ireland. Eager to make good as a peacemaker, the Prime Minster urges a commission following the South African model of Truth and Reconciliation. But, though Stanfield starts bravely, he quickly uncovers some bloody and inconvenient truths about those now running the country; truths which none of those in power are prepared to have revealed.

Made by Belfast-based production company BT9 Films for Big Fish Films and Samson Films, producers are David Collins, Eoin O’Callaghan and Kevin Jackson.

It is produced in association with Northern Ireland Screen, BBC Northern Ireland, The Irish Film Board and The Broadcasting Authority of Ireland.

The Truth Commissioner will be broadcast on BBC Northern Ireland later in the year.

Multiple Media pacts with U.S., U.K. producers on Canadian distribution

Flush with cash after selling a two-thirds stake to Quantum International Income Corp, Multiple Media Entertainment is ramping up its Canadian theatrical releasing arm.

MME has acquired the Canadian rights to Paul Bettany’s Shelter from Voltage Pictures, the producer of Dallas Buyers Club, and secured Canadian distribution for two titles from UK producer Carnaby International, Assassin and Casual Encounters.

The indie producer/distributor has also acquired the exclusive Canadian rights to Mangiacake, the first feature from Nathan Estabrooks, and starring co-writer Christina Cuffari.

MME plans to release Shelter, which stars Jennifer Connelly and Anthony Mackie, later this year, later this year theatrically and on VOD and digital platforms.

The distributor will also release Assassin, a film about a contract killer directed by J.K. Amalou and starring Martin Kemp and Gary Kemp, and Zackary Adler’s Casual Encounters, which stars Taran Killam, Brooklyn Decker and David Arquette.

Both films will be released by MME in English and French speaking Canada in 2015, with limited theatrical releases followed up with VOD and digital platform releases.

As with the Voltage Pictures deal, the first two titles from Carnaby International are part of a longer-term partnership and possible Canadian output deals.

MME will also release Mangiacake, former Canadian Film Centre grad Estabrooks’ debut feature that also stars Melanie Scrofano and Harmon Walsh.

Mangiacake will be released across Canada, including on VOD, pay-per-view, digital and TV.

Read more: http://playbackonline.ca/2015/02/27/multiple-media-pacts-with-u-s-u-k-producers-on-canadian-distribution/#ixzz3Sy16lT00

 

 

Writing, Selling & MAKING Thriller Screenplays

UPDATE: ASSASSIN can now be ordered HERE.

What are your three favourite produced Thrillers and why?

The granddaddy of the modern thriller: PSYCHO (1960). Many people classify it as a horror but it’s first and foremost a thriller. Look at the first half: Marion Crane steals the money, goes on the run, avoids the police or detection. Then this unreal plot twist happens: she is killed. The hunter (Norman Bates) now becomes the hunted. Add to this the richness of the themes explored in the film: schizophrenia, transvestism, loneliness, love, etc. etc.

There are so many lessons one can learn from this movie. The most important one is that explosions and wanton destruction doesn’t always maketh for a great thriller. The second one: if you want a great thriller, make sure you create a fantastic, nasty, unforgettable villain.

Of course, the last few minutes with the shrink explaining Norman Bates’ madness is a bit of a let down but one shouldn’t forget that it was added because Alfred Hitchcock had to fool the censors into thinking that his film was a serious study of schizophrenia to get it out.

THELMA AND LOUISE (1991). It’s a very clever film in a sense that it has a very strong feminist message but it’s also a hell of a ride. But beyond the sexual politics, it’s also a film that made you care about the characters. We love Thelma and Louise and we go along with their ride. Furthermore, the ending is… tragic. And that’s original as most thrillers choose the easy way out: our hero saves the world and lives happily ever after.

The great lesson from this film is we need to care about the characters. If we don’t, then we end up with an empty and imminently forgettable film.

NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN (2007). One of the best thrillers in recent years in my opinion. Great characters, convoluted plot. This film has all the prerequisites of the genre: murders, chases, cat and mouse games, etc. Like all good thrillers, it has characters we care about and a formidable, nasty villain in Anton Chigurh. It’s also a film which teaches you something that few writers remember to do when writing a thriller: set the story in an original location.

Many thrillers tend to be urban. So it was a stroke of genius to set this thriller against the desolate landscape of West Texas. A lesson also taught by PSYCHO: who could forget Bates Motel?

What are the most tired tropes/conventions of Thriller in your opinion?

Tropes and conventions MUST appear in every thriller to satisfy fans of the genre. If you don’t use them, you’re dead. Take the “chase”, probably a prerequisite in any thriller. The trick for a writer is to create an original chase. Something we’ve never seen before. On this point, check out the 7 minutes car chase in THE FRENCH CONNECTION (1971). Still thrilling 40 years later.

Another unoriginal trope is the hero readying for the final battle with the villain. What did the makers do to turn that trope on its head in THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS? Have the FBI turn up at the house of the killer and lead the audience to believe that Starling is on her way to interview a friend of the killer’s first victim. However, the FBI turns up at the wrong house and Clarice Starling ends up in the killer’s house. Great twist which makes you forgive the not so original cat and mouse game between Clarice and the serial killer …

Danny-Dyer-and-J.K.-Amalou

What sets Thriller apart from other genres in your opinion?

It’s probably the most universal genre one can find. It’s always very visual and it works on the most visceral human emotions: fear, excitement, adrenaline, etc. For these reasons, a thriller can play in any country around the world. It doesn’t even need subtitles. The experience is so visual that anybody can understand the film. And film is, first and foremost, a visual medium.
Also the great thing about thrillers is that you can easily marry them with other genres. So you can have comedy thriller, psychological thriller, horror/thriller, sci fi thriller, etc. etc.

Why do you think Thriller is such a popular genre for producers – and why do you think spec Thrillers are so thin on the ground?

As stated above, it’s a genre which travels well and it’s also very malleable. Spec thrillers might be thin on the ground because it’s a very difficult genre too. It has been done to death and it is hard to come up with original takes on the genre.

What elements or subgenres would you like to see more of in produced Thrillers? 

Definitely psychological thrillers. Where is the next PSYCHO or SILENCE OF THE LAMBS?

What can writers do to improve their chances of getting their Thriller scripts noticed?

In one word: originality. Mix the genre with another one. Create protagonists that we care about. Find never-seen-before takes on the genre conventions/tropes: chases, murders, cat and mouse games (if you can’t, bring these cliches into the story in an original, surprising manner.) Use settings not seen before. Oh and ALWAYS create a memorable villain.

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UPDATE: ASSASSIN can now be ordered HERE.

So JK’s new movie, a dark Brit Hitman Thriller called ASSASSIN, goes into production TODAY!  For updates on the production, follow ASSASSINFilm on Twitter or “Like” the page on Facebook.

 

Danny Dyer with Martin and Gary Kemp in The Assassin

On a break from his duties as the landlord of The Vic, Danny Dyer takes you on a journey through the murky London underworld when ASSASSIN is released on Blu-ray, DVD, and Digital Platforms on March 9th courtesy of Signature Entertainment.

From the producers of Rise of the Footsoldier and Fall of the Essex Boys, and starring Danny Dyer (Vendetta), Martin Kemp (The Krays) and Gary Kemp (The World’s End), ASSASSIN is the brutal, hard-hitting story of a former hitman out for revenge.

A story of the most corrupt crime bosses in the London underworld, and one man’s crusade to bring them to justice. A killer for hire (Dyer) breaks the rules of his profession when he falls for a beautiful young woman. But when the most notorious gangland brothers in London (Martin & Gary Kemp) hire him to kill his girlfriend’s father, his world breaks down and he must turn against his notoriously fearsome employers and their gang to save the woman he loves.

Don’t miss the chance to see Danny Dyer give a career defining performance when ASSASSIN is released on Blu-ray, DVD, and Digital Platforms on March 9th.

Hot projects on Screenbase

Hot projects on Screenbase this week include German-Canadian co-production In The Lost Lands, twin brothers Mohammed Abou Nasser and Ahmad Abou Nasser’sDégradé, spy-thriller Damascus Cover and documentary Tomorrow.

Spy thriller Damascus Cover

Big Book Media produces this new feature based on a novel by Howard Kaplan. The film stars Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Olivia Thirlby, John Hurt, Igal Naor and Jurgen Prochnow, while Daniel Berk directs.

Production started this week in Morocco. Carnaby International will handle international sales. Principal photography is scheduled to take place in Casablanca from February 5 to March 23. Local Moroccan production company H Films backed the project.

The plot takes places in the late 1980s and focuses on a veteran spy sent undercover in Syria to smuggle a chemical weapons scientist and his family out of Damascus.

View the full run down of titles here > http://www.screendaily.com/news/production/hot-projects-on-screenbase/5082859.article?blocktitle=UK-PRODUCTION-NEWS&contentID=40146

New DANNY DYER film trailer SEE IT HERE FIRST

Everybody be cool, okay? Can you be cool? Sure? Okay, right. Here’s the thing. DANNY DYER HAS A NEW FILM OUT AND WE HAVE AN EXCLUSIVE CLIP FROM IT, OOOMMMGGG *RUNS AROUND SCREAMING*.

It will come as zero surprise to anyone who has so much as even glanced at Holy Moly that we love, adore, and idolise Double D so it’s probably not an exaggeration to say that this is one of the proudest moments of our career.

Think it can’t get any better? Well, think again, Danny-loving friends. The film also stars Martin and Gary Kemp!

Watch the trailer here…

PRE-ORDER THE DVD:  http://www.amazon.co.uk/Assassin-DVD-Danny-Dyer/dp/B00OUD7TPW

Berlin: Jonathan Rhys Meyers Spy Thriller Finds International Targets

As the European Film Market in Berlin packs its bags for another year, London-based sales outfit Carnaby International has unveiled a slew of deals for upcoming Middle East espionage thriller Damascus Cover.

The film, now shooting in Morocco and starring Jonathan Rhys Meyers (The TudorsMission Impossible: III), has been picked up by Gulf Films for the Middle East, PT Prima Cinema for Indonesia, Flins y Piniculas for Spain, Discovery for the former Yugoslavia, Mountain Pictures for South Korea and Malaysia’s KRU Group.

Producer Big Book Media has also been joined by Xeitgeist Entertainment Group as an official investment and production partner, with Xeitgeist’s Joe Thomas taking on a producer role alongside Hannah Leader (Gosford Park) and Huw Jones.

Also starring John Hurt and directed by Dan BerkDamascus Cover is set in 1989 as the Berlin Wall falls amid a changing Europe. A veteran spy is sent to Syria undercover to smuggle a chemical weapons scientist and his family out, only to find himself marked for death after his mission unravels.

Carnaby boards two for EFM

Carnaby sales and distribution has picked up two new titles heading into the EFM.

Thriller The Truth Commissioner, set to begin production in March in Belfast and Dublin, is due to star Roger Allam, Julian Rhind Tutt andBarry Ward in the story of a career diplomat who must navigate complex history and feuding when he is appointed Northern Ireland Truth Commissioner.

The deal was secured today by Carnaby International’s CEO, Sean O’Kelly, together with Big Fish Films’ Eoin O’Callaghan.

Produced in in association with Northern Ireland Screen, The Irish Film Board, The Broadcast Authority of Ireland and BBC N. Ireland, the film is adapted from David Park’s novel and will be directed by Declan Recks.

David Collins, Eoin O’Callaghan and Kevin Jackson produce.

Also new to the slate is supernatural thriller, The Haunting of Borley Rectory, about one of the UK’s ‘most-haunted houses’.

Currently in pre-production, the film is to be produced by Steven M. Smith and Dan McSherry and will commence principal photography in the UK from June 2015. Tony Hickox will direct.

The deal was secured by Carnaby International’s joint CEOs, Andrew Loveday and Sean O’Kelly, together with Priceless Pictures’ Steven M. Smith and Dan McSherry.