October 1st, 2008 at 8:25 pm

The third episode is here with:
- Body of Lies by Ridley Scott with Russell Crowe and Leonardo Dicaprio
- Notorious BIG
- The Religulous documentary
- Bollywood
- The Quantum of Solace theme
- Jack Black
- A Tale of Two Sisters remake
- And Megan Fox in How to Lose Friends and Alienate People
Check it above the blog.
Later!
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Tags: body of lies, bollywood, bourne identity, hollywood, how to lose friends and alienate people, jack black, james bond, kung fu panda, leonardo dicaprio, megan fox, notorious big, quantum of solace, religulous, ridley scott, russell crowe, tale of two sisters Posted in News
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June 18th, 2008 at 2:36 pm

We should’ve seen this one coming. ‘Bollywood coming to Hollywood‘ + ‘Spielberg wants to reinvent DreamWorks‘ = this post? Apparently DreamWorks’ Steven Spielberg, David Geffen and Jeffrey Katzenberg are in talks with the Indian Reliance Group to invest in their studio.
The big three have been discontent with the Paramount deal for a long time and have been talking to several competing parties. Now it seems like Spielberg and co. will get $500-$600 million from Reliance to become independent yet again.
DreamWorks’ parting from Paramount is pretty much confirmed by now and both don’t seem to mind (at all). But will they really end up in Indian arms? And start the injection of Indian movie capital into Hollywood while the US studios are keeping the money in their pockets?
May 19th, 2008 at 9:18 pm

Indian billionaire Anil Ambani has announced a series of Hollywood deals worth $1 billion, the biggest ‘invasion’ by an Indian company to date. His entertainment studio Reliance Big has made deals with production companies of people like Tom Hanks, Brad Pitt, George Clooney and Nicolas Cage. Ambani expects to generate 30 scripts, with about 10 movies going into production.
India still has one of the fastest growing film markets. And while they sell twice as many tickets as in Hollywood, the low prices keep the Indian companies from making ‘Hollywood money.’ But the market is growing fast. It grew 25% in 2007 compared to 2006 and is expected to grow 18% per year the next five years. This is why studios like Disney are already setting foot in Bollywood, before it will take over Hollywood as the number one market.