Future of Film: Even Bigger Screens and, Yep, Cinema Selfies

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A panoramic theater opens in L.A. on Sept. 19 as other new tech includes live audience interaction onscreen

This story first appeared in the Sept. 12 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine.
As exhibitors try to fend off competition from ever-bigger home theater systems, movie houses may soon take their cues from the '50s. Back then, to counter the arrival of TV, Hollywood retaliated by offering bigger — and wider — images onscreen, culminating in Cinerama. That panoramic theater configuration, which faded out by the end of the '60s, left behind the landmark Cinerama Dome on Sunset Boulevard. But a new generation of even more ambitious theaters — possibly even including cinema's first holodeck — is waiting in the wings.
Barco, the Belgian digital cinema projector manufacturer, already has unveiled what it calls "Escape," a configuration that uses a digital cinema screen in front of an audience with two more screens on the sides of a theater to create one wrap-around image. The first Escape theaters — which will include the Cinemark 18 & XD at the Promenade at the Howard Hughes Center in Los Angeles — will open Sept. 19, showing a special edition of Fox's new young adult thriller The Maze Runner. Though no movie has yet been shot to take full advantage of Escape's three-screen setup, Escape theaters showing The Maze Runner will project the live-action movie on to the center screen, and the side screens will feature additional visual effects — extending the reach of the movie's maze, for example.
"We believe entertainment needs to continue to evolve with a more immersive experience," says Ted Schilowitz, who bills himself as Barco's "CinemaVangelist" and also works as a futurist for Fox. "The home experience is getting good; very often peoplemight not want to go out of the house. Cinema needs to show a difference and create a feeling that's magic."
Movie screens will continue to morph into ever-wider configurations as well, predicts The Fraunhofer Institute for Integrated Circuits, a German research firm. "There will be more panorama screens; it's already happening in Germany," says Siegfried Foessel, who oversees the company's moving-picture technologies department, which is developing a 360-degree camera system that was used to shoot the final of the FIFA World Cup in Brazil. That footage will be shown in a special 360-degree OmniCam theater installation planned for the FIFA World Football Museum in Zurich. Meanwhile, startup Jaunt is developing a 360-degree camera for use in virtual reality.
High-tech interactivity also may play a role in the next generation of theaters. Avatron Development USA is creating special venues, comprised of high-tech attractions, that could begin arriving in cities across the country as early as 2017. They would include a theater where a 3D movie is projected onto a 360-degree dome-shaped screen and real-time facial replacement would be used to project audience members into the action.
"You'd have a wristband that identifies who you are, and if you elect to, your body and face can be scanned, allowing the attractions to include you in them and allow you to interact with them," explains Academy-Award winning VFX supervisor Joel Hynek, who is heading the creative team working on the project."It will be the closest we'll come to being on the holodeck."
Read more from The Hollywood Reporter's "Future of Film" special report:

Real-Life Rocky to be Subject of New Biopic

Courtesy of Frank Publicity
Rocky Marciano

The movie about undefeated heavyweight champion Rocky Marciano is being made with the cooperation of the boxer's family

The real-life inspiration for Sylvester Stallone's Rocky Balboa is set to be the subject of a new biopic.

Rocky Marciano's estate, including his brother Peter and son Rocky Marciano Jr., are working with City of Peace Films and director Dustin Marcellino on 49-0/The Brockton Blockbuster.

The film is set to be directed by Marcellino — whose directorial debut The Identicalstarring Ray Liotta and Ashley Judd, hits theaters Friday — and will be written by the Marcellino family, longtime fans of Marciano.

“Rocky Marciano was my great grandfather’s all-time favorite fighter, which was passed down to all of us in the Marcellino family." Marcellino said in a statement. "The Marcellinos and the Marcianos have truly become family during the development of this project, and we are honored to tell this generation about a man, a son, a brother, a husband and a father who rose up out of the streets of Brockton to change the world in his generation."

Marciano was the only undefeated heavyweight champion in history.

“My father is still counted as one of the greatest heavyweight fighters of all time, and if he were alive today he would be proud that we are working to bring the true story of his life to the big screen," Rocky Marciano Jr. said in a statement. "I am thrilled that the Marciano family; together with City of Peace films, is working on a movie that will tell the story about my father...the real Rocky story."

The film is set to shoot in Marciano's hometown of Brockton, Mass.

Alex Kurtzman's Production Company Inks Three-Year Deal With Universal

AP Images/Invision
Alex Kurtzman

Focus Features president of production Jen Brody will be joining Secret Hideout

Universal Pictures has signed a three-year production agreement with Alex Kurtzman's newly-formed company Secret Hideout, the studio announced Tuesday.

Kurtzman's company will focus on developing filmmaker-driven projects with an eye towards franchise and multi-quadrant films. The company will retain its current offices and expand into additional offices on the Universal lot.Kurtzman will be joined at Secret Hideout by current Focus Features president of production Jeb Brody and current president of K/O Paper Products Bobby Cohen, who will both serve as producers alongside Kurtzman.
Kurtzman is currently working with Chris Morgan on the re-launching of Universal's classic movie monster franchises. He'sdirecting the reboot of The Mummy slated for release in June 2016, and is also producing the fantasy adventure seriesDragonology, based on the children’s book series for Universal.
Kurtzman is also working with Roberto Orci on producing several projects including the adaptations of Anne Rice’s novels in The Vampire Chronicles series with Imagine Entertainment, both for Universal. He's repped by CAA and attorney Michael Gendler.
Brody joins Secret Hideout after three years at Focus Features, where he currently serves as president of production. At Focus, he was involved in the films Dallas Buyers Club, Anna Karenina, The Place Beyond the Pines and Bad Words. Brody will continue to oversee production for Universal Pictures and Focus Features’ Fifty Shades of Grey. 
Cohen served as president of K/O Paper Products, and produced Now You See Me, People Like Us andCowboys & Aliens. He previously president of Red Wagon Entertainment where he worked as an executive producer on such films as Jarhead and Memoirs of a Geisha.
Kim Rosen will also join Secret Hideout as the head of digital and interactive. Rosen previously worked with Kurtzman as a development executive for K/O Paper Products for the last three years.
 
 

Future of Film: Producers Opt for Foreign Talent, Far-Flung Locations to Boost Box Office

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Paramount Pictures
Li Bingbing with Stanley Tucci in 'Transformers: Age of Extinction'

International revenue is dwarfing domestic dollars

This story first appeared in the Sept. 12 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine.
If the past points the way to the future, then audiences abroad are going to decide more and more the movies that Hollywood makes. During the past five years, the domestic box office managed only a modest increase — from $10.6 billion in 2009 to $10.9 billion last year. But international sales surged — from $18.8 billion in 2009 to $25 billion last year — as foreign ticket buyers accounted for a commanding 70 percent of the total box office in 2013.
When it comes to attracting crowds overseas, action movies, fantasy films and computer-animated films enjoy an edge. "They tend to be the same kind of movies we've made in the past; it's just that they are grossing more," says producer Lorenzo di Bonaventura, whose Transformers: Age of Extinction is 2014's biggest worldwide grosser with $1.065 billion. If there's a common denominator, he says, it's escapism: "[getting] transported out of your everyday existence."
"You have to have something that gets across different cultures and languages, that hits common themes that have been pared down a bit," says ICM Partners' Chris Silbermann. Potential foreign returns factor into greenlight decisions the way DVD sales once did. "Before, you used to think, 'What is the best story we can tell?' — and then try and sell it. Now you're thinking about what is the best story we can sell before you've even made the thing," saysScott Frank, writer-director of A Walk Among the Tombstones.
Studios aren't abandoning comedies (though jokes that are too culturally specific don't always translate abroad) or dramas (which can't be guaranteed to offer all that much escapism), but they don't reward them with the larger budgets that go to the potential worldwide tentpoles.
But there's a creative silver lining: As if to counter the blandness that could result, American filmmakers are beginning to take a larger view of the world. Justin Lin, who successfully rebooted theFast & Furious franchise in 2009 by emphasizing multiethnic casting, is now, among his other projects, developing Chinese-language co-productions with the hopes of wooing a global audience. And thoughTransformers may have headed to Hong Kong so that it would have wider access to the Chinese market once released, Michael Bay also saw it as an opportunity to film in a locale he hadn't used before and to recruit actors like Li Bingbing.
Says di Bonaventura, "If you're a fan of Hong Kong movies, a lot of the people we cast you'd recognize. Part of what was fun for us was beginning to understand the Chinese film business and its creative community."
Suggests Frank, "Appeal­ing to foreign markets is no different than product placement. We will try anything we can to try to maximize the money coming back."
Read more from The Hollywood Reporter's "Future of Film" special report:

Future of Film: 4 Experts Predict How Moviegoing Will Change in 10 Years

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Dan Steinberg/Invision for The Hollywood Reporter/AP Images

"Movie theaters are dying" — but mixologists, masseuses and manicurists might be part of the new viewing experience

A version of this story first appeared in the Sept. 12 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine.
John Sloss, entertainment lawyer/producer
All the distinctions that exist in terms of windowing and designations to pay for content will collapse. There will be two designations: One will be viewing at home, and one will be viewing in public. I think that the length designations will also disappear. Stories will be the length that serves them. All the vestiges of the 20th century that limited the inherent flexibility of film will go away." 
Nicholas Negroponte, co-founder, MIT Media Laboratory
Insofar as film equals sound plus moving images to tell a story, the biggest change will be who writes the story. For sure the technologies for audio and video will change with a few breathtaking advances in areas like holography and direct images on your retina. But the really big one will be in rendering the narrative. Here is what I mean:
We used to believe that the medium was the message, that if you told the story in print, in film or on radio, the interaction between form and substance was such that story-telling was done by people well versed in each medium — three different interpretations. Therefore, when books are turned into movies, they are, to some degree, different stories.
Now imagine that, rather than writing, recording or filming a story, you model the situation in a computer. That model is like the DNA of the story from which multiple forms can be rendered. Want to see it as a movie? Want to hear it while driving? Want to read a book about it? In each case, when you choose, it is automatically rendered in that medium, with the skill sets of great directors, wonderful actors, postproduction excellence — but no people, just computers." 
David O. Russell, writer/director
I have seen many young aspiring filmmakers from all the boroughs of New York City, of all races and colors and backgrounds, and also from Los Angeles, where the cinema high school has just begun a program, and I believe there will be stories that have heart and soul in contexts and worlds we cannot imagine until we see them. And then they will move and inspire us. They will combine humanity and place and time and narratives we have not seen or felt. Which in some ways will be maybe slightly different from what we know, but that slight difference will be significant — and there will be ways that are very different."
Faith Popcornfuturist and CEO, BrainReserve
In the future, there will be seismic changes. Bored with Hollywood dictating cinematic culture (the same millionaire directors, the same overexposed actors, the same predictable storylines), like-minded fans will connect and create their own vision, either a completely original work or a riff on, say, rom-coms or Star Wars. The accessibility of tech makes it all possible for us to produce — and own. The intellectual property of our own tales will be ours to use and repurpose in new innovative ways. We’ll see them screened and voted upon (like The Voice), with the winners getting widespread release. It will be an entirely new business model. You've heard about Fan Fiction? Get ready for Fan Film, in which self becomes film studio. 
Movie theaters are dying. As consumers hide out in their at-home binge-cocoons, devouring entire seasons of HBO and Netflix programming, theater owners will partner with hotels to create binge retreats. These will be fab private dens you can rent for a few hours or days to binge-watch whatever you like. It'll be all about decadence: Food will be catered and gourmet. Mixologists, masseuses and manicurists will be on-call. People will be unplugging from home and work, and plugging in to entertainment, fantasy and luxury.
In the future, fantasy adventure (our craving for exotic experiences) and technology will demolish the old-school movie screen. We'll have completely immersive experiences. In a decade, Imax and even Oculus Rift experiences will seem as outdated as a Walkman. Films won’t be events you go see in the theater for two hours, they’ll be gamified and will unfold in real-time all around you. You pay for a time-slot, tune in your technology, and literally become one with the action. Endings and events will be changed as you go, smells, tastes, sensations will all be experienced live. Casts will be comprised of your own avatars — you will be the star. It’ll be a totally user-centric landscape that encompasses our EGOnomics trend: a personalized way for users to offset the effects of our digital, depersonalized society."

'Nice Guys' With Ryan Gosling, Russell Crowe Arriving Summer 2016

AP Images
Ryan Gosling, Russell Crowe

A private eye and a leg-breaker try to solve the case of a missing girl

Nice Guys, Warner Bros.' detective thriller starring Ryan Gosling and Russell Crowe, will arrive in summer 2016.

Iron Man 3 
helmer Shane Black is directing the film, which is set in 1970s Los Angeles and follows a private eye (Gosling) and a hired leg-breaker (Crowe) who must work together to solve the case of a missing girl and the seemingly unrelated death of a porn star.Warners, which picked up the film in July, has slated it for release on June 17, 2016.
Black and Anthony Bagarozzi wrote the screenplay for the project, which will begin production in the fall.
Joel Silver is producing under his Silver Pictures banner withKen Kao of Waypoint Entertainment; Hal Sadoff and Michael Malone are serving as executive producers. Waypoint is co-financing, and BLOOM is handling international sales.
Nice Guys will share its release date with two animated family films: Finding Dory and How to Train Your Dragon 3.

'Game of Thrones' Swordsman Reportedly Cast in 'Star Wars: Episode VII'


Courtesy Everett Collection

Miltos Yerolemou played Arya Stark's sword teacher in the first season of the hit HBO show

He came to attention on one of the biggest TV shows of all time and is now set to star in one of cinema’s biggest film franchises.
London-based Greek-Cypriot actor Miltos Yerolemou, most widely known as Arya Stark’s sword teacher, Syrio Forel, in the first season of HBO’s Game of Thrones, has reportedly been tapped to appear in Star Wars: Episode VIIaccording to a report by the BBC.
Nothing is known about his role, but speculation has been rising online that his experience handling a sword could well be transferred to a lightsaber. The Hollywood Reporter reached out to both Disney and Yerolemou's reps for comment or confirmation of the casting without response.
Yerolemou has recently been filming the drama Wolf Hall for the BBC, and he has also appeared onstage with the Royal Shakespeare Company, playing Bottom in a production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream that came to California earlier this year.
Should Yerolemou’s Star Wars casting be confirmed, he would become the second Game of Thronesactor, alongside Gwendoline Christie, to make the leap from Westeros to a galaxy far, far away.

Last week, production of Star Wars: Episode VII resumed at Pinewood Studios in the U.K., having been stalled following Harrison Ford’s on-set injury in June.