Thursday, 26 June 2008

Anchor Bay ups duo

Ray Gagnon, Brian Daley get promotions





Ray Gagnon has been promoted to executive vp worldwide sales at Anchor Bay Entertainment.


Gagnon, who has spent more than two decades in the home entertainment industry, joined Anchor Bay in December 2003 as head of the indie's domestic sales efforts. He previously was senior vp worldwide sales at DreamWorks SKG.


Also at Anchor Bay, Brian Daley has been promoted to senior vp worldwide business operations.



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Thursday, 19 June 2008

RPO and Joy Marquez

RPO and Joy Marquez   
Artist: RPO and Joy Marquez

   Genre(s): 
Dance
   



Discography:


Shout And Fight   
 Shout And Fight

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 2




 





Corrie's David just 'wants to be loved'

Wednesday, 11 June 2008

'Nailed' dodges bullet with funding deal

David O. Russell film to resume filming Wednesday





David O. Russell's political comedy "Nailed" will resume filming Wednesday thanks to a late-breaking financing deal with Comerica Bank and the film's financier, Capitol Films. Key cast members, including Jake Gyllenhaal, Jessica Biel and Catherine Keener, were en route to the South Carolina set Tuesday to begin shooting the next day.


But the ultimate future of the film from the economically troubled Capitol remains uncertain.


Sources say the Comerica financing, secured Monday, will help the film meet its projected $25 million budget and additional costs from a week of missed shooting days and union penalties. But some of the filmmakers aren't sure if the funds will last through postproduction.


Capitol's head of business affairs, Ray Reyes, said the company's fund deal with Comerica was based on "other guarantees" and was closed without a bond.


"We do plan on bonding the film, and actually there's work to be done on that, under a much more manageable scenario," Reyes said. "We can hopefully close the bond after we have completed principal photography and without the pressure of shutdowns hanging over our heads."


Reyes had hoped to close the deal with Comerica on May 27, so that filming could start up again May 29. But he said Monday that it had taken longer than expected to get the deal together. He declined to say how much the financing was for or what the projected budget now is for the film.


As of Monday, Reyes said, the film was funded, payroll companies received deposits and SAG, IATSE and the Teamsters members were in the clear to start back to work.


The shoot is set to end June 22 and, according to one of the producers, must finish by then to keep its principal cast members. "One more shutdown will kill the movie, not to mention cause hair loss and ulcers, and Capitol knows that," the exec said, adding that the production does not yet have all the financing to finish the film.


Reyes said there are two weeks left of filming in South Carolina before the production moves to Washington for a small amount of work.


Russell is known for creating a chaotic atmosphere to stir up creative juices on his sets, but the day-to-day uncertainty seems to have fulfilled this role without much effort on his part.


"Contrary to Internet rumors, David has been an absolute dream, literally the glue that's held the film together," said Persistent Entertainment's Matt Rhodes, who is producing the film with partner Judd Payne, Red Wagon Entertainment's Douglas Wick and Lucy Fisher and Capitol's Kia Jam.


The production switched to a Thursday-Monday production schedule following the Memorial Day weekend holiday.



Gregg Goldstein reported from New York; Leslie Simmons reported from Los Angeles.



See Also

Wednesday, 4 June 2008

Two things our writers love this week

Food



Viet Wah



I recently took a friend on her first tour of Viet Wah, the Vietnamese supermarket at 1320 S. Jackson St. that specializes in inexpensive meats and produce, Asian sauces and other ingredients. For $11, I brought home a bag of Vietnamese sandwich rolls, a large squeeze-bottle of Sriracha chili sauce, two bananas, a pound of fresh red peppers for pickling, a package of Vietnamese rice pancakes for making summer rolls and two gorgeous bunches of fresh pea vines for sauteing (for which I paid $2.78 vs. the $5.99 they'd likely cost in a traditional supermarket — if I could find them). For more Little Saigon deals, go to www.seattletimes.com/allyoucaneat.



Nancy Leson, Seattle Times food writer



DVDs



"Intelligence"



The best series you've never watched — especially if you dug the smart and sprawling saga of HBO's "The Wire." Set in Vancouver, the action revolves around the tenuous alliance between standup-guy dealer Jimmy "the weed king" Reardon (Ian Tracey) and ruthlessly ambitious Organized Crime Unit head Mary Spalding (Klea Scott). Both have more to worry about from within their own ranks than each other, most notably Spalding's underling Ted "the nasty bastard" (a surprisingly evil Matt Frewer, of all people). From "Da Vinci's Inquest" creator Chris Haddock (available now on DVD from Acorn, $59).



Mark Rahner, Seattle Times DVD writer








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