Monday, August 29, 2011

Fox taps Bumble Ward for PR post

Twentieth Century Fox has named pr vet Bumble Ward as exec VP of publicity of the studio's domestic theatrical marketing department, effective Aug. 30. Exec will report directly to president of domestic theatrical marketing and chief marketing officer Oren Aviv and Tony Sella, president of domestic theatrical marketing and chief creative officer. Ward will oversee all aspects of the studio's domestic publicity campaign, filling a gap left by Carol Sewell, who exited the position in May. Ward previously ran her own entertainment public relations, marketing and communications firm, Bumble Ward & Associates, which she closed in 2005 to pursue interests in writing and social media marketing. Prior to running her own company, Ward served as an exec at boutique pr firms "Clein + White Public Relations and Marketing, Dennis Davidson & Associates, Andrea Jaffe & Associates and Clein + Feldman. "Bumble has long been one of the industry's most respected publicity professionals and over the past several years she has become a top social media marketing specialist," said Aviv and Sella in a joint statement."Her wealth of experience in both traditional and cutting edge approaches will bring an exciting new dynamic to our publicity team, as we continue to innovate and evolve to maximize the opportunities presented by the rapidly-changing media landscape."Ward also served as a board member of BAFTA-LA and is an honors grad of Harris Manchester College, Oxford. Contact Rachel Abrams at Rachel.Abrams@variety.com

Watch X-Men: First Class

Friday, August 26, 2011

Cinemark buys Argentina screens

BUENOS AIRES - Cinemark Holdings has acquired 95 screens in Argentina from Hoyts General Cinema South Usa being the nation's leading exhibitor as box office sales grow. The Texas-based company stated it acquired the screens in 10 multiplexes in Buenos Aires, Cordoba and Salta to have an undisclosed sum. The vendor was Chilean resource management company Linzor Capital Partners, which bought the screens in 2007. This boosts Cinemark's screen count to 185 in 20 plexes in Argentina for any 39% share of the market. Cinemark Boss Alan Stock stated inside a statement the move is a component of the technique to expand in Latin America through purchases by building screens. Cinemark presently has a lot more than 1,250 screens in Latin America, one fourth of their worldwide total. The acquisition may come as B.O. in Argentina develops. Admissions are required to grow 7.9% to 41 million admissions this season -- the very best performance since 2004 -- from 38 million this year, while gross will grow 32% to $215 million within the same period, based on estimations. A strong economy -- it's growing at 6%-7% this season -- and rising wages are offsetting concerns about 22% annual inflation they are driving the development, assisted with a increase in three dimensional tests that carry greater ticket prices. Contact the range newsroom at news@variety.com

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Olivia Munn Explains Calling Justin Bieber A Billion-Dollar Mistake

LOS ANGELES, Calif. -- Olivia Munn might joke about Justin Bieber on the big screen, but in real life she considers herself a true fan. Im a Belieber, a 100 percent, the actress told Access Hollywood on Thursday at the junket for her new movie, I Dont Know How She Does It, where her character jokes about Justin Bieber being born to a single teen mom. Look, Justin Bieber was a mistake. Teenagers dont get pregnant on purpose, OK? the outspoken actress told Access. However, that mistake turned into a billion dollar idea! The 31-year-old actress joked that more future superstar babies from teen moms could help with our national financial problems. So, I think teenagers around the world, load it up! Olivia told Access. Lets make some Biebers! The economy needs a little boost. Lets make some Biebers! I Dont Know How She Does It with Sarah Jessica Parker, Greg Kinnear, Christina Hendricks and Busy Philipps hits theaters on September 16. Copyright 2011 by NBC Universal, Inc. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Disney Professional Still Tugging for 'The Lone Ranger,' With or Without Gore Verbinski

First it got shut lower, only then do we heard there is likely to be werewolves inside it, but despite everything that's happened, 'The Lone Ranger' may still be considered a possibility. Inside a recent interview with Deadline's Pete Hammond at Disney's D23 Expo, Disney chief Wealthy Ross gave his two cents about the status of the items might have been Disney's next large Western. Based on Ross, "I am wishing to get it done. I am certainly wishing. I believe it is a compelling story and nobody wants to utilize Jerry [Bruckheimer] and Johnny [Depp] a lot more than me, so we'll see results for yourself.Inch Besides Ross appear to consider 'The Lone Ranger' is not even close to dead, but he also unsuccessful to say director Gore Verbinski's title alongside producer Jerry Bruckheimer and The Actor-brad Pitt who had been slated to experience Tonto. Thinking about Ross' lengthy relationship using the director who helmed the very first three movies in Disney's 'Pirates from the Caribbean' franchise, you might think that Verbinski would earn a mention. Maybe we are just reading through into things, however it seems like Verbinski might have been one of the numerous stuff that brought to 'The Lone Ranger's' downfall. Mind to Deadline for that full story and interview with Ross. You do too think 'The Lone Ranger' could be best without Gore Verbinksi? [via Deadline] Photo thanks to Steve Granitz/WireImage.com

Saturday, August 20, 2011

How West Memphis Three's 'Paradise Lost' Doc Veered Into 'Overt Advocacy Journalism'

Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky were within the edit room on Wednesday putting the ultimate touches on the third film concerning the West Memphis Three once they got a phone call from defense lawyers letting them know they better reach Jonesboro, Ark.our editor recommends'Paradise Lost' Filmmakers Respond to Discharge of West Memphis Three West Memphis Three Set Free (Video)West Memphis Three: Natalie Maines, Eddie Vedder Get to Court (Report) "I was literally relaxing in a mixing room mixing the film and doing the colour correct," states Berlinger. "We'd a completed locked picture as well as on Monday may have a completed master in our movie. Therefore the timing of this can be a little odd, but great." Berlinger and Sinofsky showed up in Arkansas on Thursday in sufficient time for Friday's hearingthat finally freedJason Baldwin, Damien Echols and Jessie Misskelly, who've spent 18 years imprisonment for that 1993 killings in West Memphis, Ark., of three eight-year-old boys.Echols continues to be on dying row. And Baldwin and Misskelly were serving existence sentences. There is no DNA evidence, that was unavailable during the time of the trial, connecting these phones the killings. And also the situation hinged largely about the confession of Misskelly, that has been identified as borderline retarded. Berlinger and Sinofsky weren't permitted to film the hearing, though they did film the publish-hearing press conference. "To determine individuals three sitting together, it had been amazing," states Sinofsky. "Who might have predicted that on Wednesday we'd have that telephone call?" Their third film, Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory, will bow in the Toronto Worldwide Film Festival in September. They're not going to have enough time to place the brand new ending about the film, though they'll both take part in a publish-screening question and answer session. They might have the ability to obtain the new ending about the film over time for that New You are able to Film Festival in October, based on Berlinger. But when Paradise Lost 3 premieres on Cinemax in The month of january, it'll have its new, happy conclusion. "We'd an extremely well-crafted film that informs a particular story which contributes to it," states Sinofsky. "It is the ultimate ending." Paradise Lost 3 will recount the whole saga: in the busts in 1993 towards the growing movement, with the appeals process and also the discovering of recent evidence and concluding using the accused' release. "Our films previously happen to be charged with being really dark and conflicting," states Berlinger. "Therefore we finally come with an chance to perform a more happy ending along with a complete resolution." Berlinger and Sinofsky were notified towards the situation in 1995 by Sheila Nevins, leader of Cinemax Documentary Films. "She sent us just a little newspaper clipping [from the local West Memphis paper], in the times when individuals sent cuttings to one another," recalls Berlinger. The media and prosecutors had described the killings like a nasty satanic ritual and Berlinger and Sinofsky visited Arkansas using the notion they could be carrying out a film about demon-worshipping, disaffected youth. "We went lower there thinking i was creating a film about rotten teens," states Berlinger. "It had been a genuine River's Edge story," adds Sinofsky, mentioning to Neal Jimenez and Tim Hunter's 1986 film inspired through the true story from the murder of the 14-years old California girl with a psychologically disturbed 16-year-old boy. But because they questioned the accused, they grew to become believing that it had been actually the storyline of the gross miscarriage of justice. The 1996 film,Paradise Lost: The Kid Killings of Robin Hood Hillsides, broadcast following the convictions and introduced the situation national attention. Soon free airline Memphis Three, because they were named through the media, grew to become an underlying cause célèbre having a cadre of celebs includingJohnny Depp,Healing For Peter Jackson,Holly Rollins,Natalie MainesandEddie Vedderspeaking out and raising money for that defense. The very first film, states Berlinger, was "a piece of pure artistic journalism." Through the second film --Paradise Lost 2: Facts, launched in 2000 -- they'd veered into "overt advocacy journalism." Also it was a difficult journey for both males whose own lives progress while individuals from the charged continued to be delayed by incarceration. "I had been 32 years of age after i began these films, I'm now almost 50," states Berlinger. "With each positive milestone during my existence -- children, new films being launched -- I'd frequently think, my God these men continue to be imprisonment for something i understood deep during my heart they didn't do." "The impact from the three little boys dying was immense," states Sinofsky. "In those days my boy Alex, who's now 28, was comparable age. Both of us had children throughout the building of the flicks. We've got to understand the prosecution and also the defense lawyers and also the families. It grew to become vital that you us. We desired to see these men, who we thought were innocent, escape.Inch "It's been an amazing emotional journey for all of us and that i'm glad it's over," laughs Berlinger. "Because I truly didn't need to make a 4th film." Related Subjects Toronto Worldwide Film Festival The Actor-brad Pitt Eddie Vedder Cinemax Sheila Nevins

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

PBS' Brit-based fare takes on HBO's Stateside stuff

Julian Fellowes"Downton Abbey"PBSHighlight: Fans of a romantic persuasion might cite the long-awaited kiss between Lady Mary and Matthew, while those who prefer mind games would go with the ongoing rivalry between the crusty Dowager Countess and Isobel Crawley.Why he might win: Fellowes has already filled his mantel with prizes from across the pond, and the miniseries doubled the typical "Masterpiece Classic" audience when it aired in the States. Fellowes has Oscar pedigree, too, with "Gosford Park."Maybe not: There's another English aristocrat-servant saga on the ballot that might split the vote. Peter Gould"Too Big To Fail"HBOHighlight: Chagrined treasury secretary Henry M. Paulson admits, "We've been late on everything."Why he might win: Took a complex subject -- the 2008 financial meltdown -- and explained it with clarity plus a suspense appropriate to a disaster movie.Maybe not: Its scope might have been too big for some viewers and felt like homework to others.Todd Haynes & Jon Raymond"Mildred Pierce"HBOHighlight: Mildred finally says what we've all been thinking -- "To hell with Veda" -- though after watching her sacrifice so much for her insufferable daughter, one might think she'd escort her to Hades personally.Why they might win: Haynes and Raymond scored points with some for remaining true to the substance and scale of the James M. Cain novel and its portrait of a changing America in the 1930s.Maybe not: Miniseries had its vocal detractors, with critics complaining it was drawn-out, dull and ended with a thud.Steven Moffat"Sherlock: A Study in Pink"PBSHighlight: Cab driver challenges Holmes to play a game involving two pills -- one harmless and one containing poison.Why he might win: Cleverly modernized the "Sherlock Holmes" tales in a manner that appealed to both fan boys and the purists who still read books with bindings. Series won best drama at BAFTA.Maybe not: May be too geeky for some voters, who prefer their British dramas display more restraint.Heidi Thomas"Upstairs, Downstairs"PBSHighlight: Lady Maud Holland arrives with her Sikh manservant and a sense of privilege that could only belong to someone toting a pet monkey.Why she might win: Took a rather daunting challenge and crafted a worthy successor to the lauded original, delivering many diverting pleasures along the way.Maybe not: New "Upstairs" didn't inspire the devotion accorded to its predecessor or that other "Masterpiece" series, "Downton Abbey."ROAD TO THE EMMYS: THE WRITER Showrunners don't run from non-writing dutiesDrama | Comedy | Movies & Miniseries | Nonfiction | Variety, music or comedy series Contact the Variety newsroom at news@variety.com

Thursday, August 11, 2011

REVIEW: Jesse Eisenberg Keeps 30 Minutes or Less Ticking, But Barely

Jesse Eisenberg’s performance in 30 Minutes or Less is like a mirror of something you’ve seen before in a movie you’ve seen before: As an unambiguously unambitious pizza-delivery guy who’s forced to rob a bank, is he riffling through the deck and pulling out the same old cards, perhaps in a slightly different order? Or is he adding subtle variations to a type of character he’s played many times previously, biding his time until he can get another role like the perfectly calibrated one he played in The Social Network? It’s hard to tell with Eisenberg, who may be one of the most underwhelming good actors working today: Even when he wows us, as he did in The Social Network, he’s wowing us with a shrug. The shrug is there in 30 Minutes or Less, Ruben Fleischer’s follow-up to his exhilarating, sure-footed 2009 debut, Zombieland, but it’s a shrug without a country. Zombieland was a picture with a strong sense of place, a metaphorical call for compatriots to band together in tough times. 30 Minutes or Less is a crime farce that’s clever and funny in places, but mostly just shambling and crude. Eisenberg can’t quite find his place in it, and it’s easy to see why. Eisenberg plays Nick, an alleged grown-up who hasn’t yet figured out how to make the grown-up thing work. His best friend, Chet (Aziz Ansari), pinpoints the problem succinctly: “You? An adult? You had a Lunchables for dinner last night.” Nick has some minor problems, including that dead-end pizza-delivery job, and the fact that he has a huge crush on Chet’s twin sister, Kate (Dilshad Vadsaria), a development that greatly displeases Chet for numerous reasons. (Some of it has to do with simple brotherly protectiveness, but Chet is also freaked out about the idea of his best friend having sex with his own twin.) But Nick’s problems combust off the charts when a couple of rec-room lowlifes — when we first meet them, they’re blowing watermelons to smithereens using both crossbows and explosives — kidnap him and strap him into a bomb vest, informing him that they’ll treat him like a human watermelon unless he agrees to rob a local bank. The Mutt-and-Jeff schemers are played by Danny McBride and Nick Swardson; they need the money to start a tanning salon/prostitution ring. And that’s just one of the ways in which 30 Minutes or Less works too hard to be fun and crazy. For every line or gag that works, there are three or four more that seem to belong in a different movie altogether, either a darker one or a breezier one. Fleischer, working from a script by Michael Diliberti (who conceived the story with Matthew Sullivan), doesn’t have firm control of the movie’s tone: A movie can, of course, be both a black comedy and a crime caper, as 30 Minutes or Less tries to be. But Fleischer can’t navigate the movie’s shifting moods fluidly enough. We see real terror on Nick’s face when he looks down and sees that kaboom vest he’s strapped into. Then he’s back into hapless goofball territory again, but the transition is rough and forced. What’s more, Fleischer doesn’t seem to know what to do with all the attendant clutter of the story. A subplot involving a stripper and a street gangsta (Bianca Kajlich and Michael Pea, respectively) is necessary to resolve the movie’s plot mechanics, but it only makes the workings more cumbersome. There’s also the nagging fact that the basic concept of 30 Minutes or Less bears a strong resemblance to a real-life 2003 incident, in which pizza-delivery guy Brian Wells was forced to rob a bank with a bomb locked to his neck; Wells died when the device detonated. His family has publicly reproached the filmmakers, although representatives from the movie’s studio, Sony, claim that the writers were only “vaguely familiar” with the real-life case. The writers’ familiarity with the incident, and even their intentions, are beside the point. While it’s true that truth is stranger than fiction, it would have been easier for me to enjoy 30 Minutes or Less if it hadn’t taken the depraved craziness of its premise from a real-life horror show. Maybe, deep in his gut, something didn’t set right with Fleischer, either. His Zombieland was not only beautifully made; its mood was freewheeling and openhearted — it was a picture in which camaraderie saves the day. 30 Minutes or Less, on the other hand, appears to have been made to please some invisible audience: It’s much raunchier than Zombieland was, and its crudeness feels patched-on rather than organic. When a character defines the acronym OTPF — “over-the-pants-fingered” — it’s as if the words had been plunked, at the last minute, into a little cartoon voice balloon hovering over her head. There are some enjoyable, if vaguely unsettling, sequences in 30 Minutes or Less: When Chet and Nick stumble into the bank in their balaclavas, their ineptitude sets off a Rube Goldberg contraption of dark slapstick; their haplessness conjures shades of Dog Day Afternoon. But Fleischer doesn’t seem to know, ultimately, what effect he’s after, and the actors suffer for it. Ansari, with his warbly monotone, works wonders with even some of the movie’s lamest one-liners. I’m not sure why I laughed, or if I should have laughed, at Chet’s assessment of Nick’s car — “It’s like you got a Mustang and the Mustang got AIDS” — but I did. And yet he and Eisenberg seem to inhabit the movie only half-heartedly. I find Eisenberg fascinating to watch, particularly for the way words motor out of his mouth at some 90 miles an hour, even as none of his other body parts — save, maybe, his ever-shifting blue eyes — appear to be moving. And in the movie’s crucial moment, when he looks down and sees the danger he’s been strapped into, the terror in his eyes is believable and affecting. For once, the words don’t tumble out nearly so fast; his fear slows him down, and that by itself is terrifying. Eisenberg may be giving one of his stock performances here, but he still finds ways to let his character’s soul shine through. He’s working harder than he should have to, as if he were an actor with a figurative bomb strapped to his chest. Maybe that’s what happens when you’re a talented guy who’s not sure which way to turn next.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Glee Adds American Dreams' Vanessa Lengies

Vanessa Lengies Glee is adding another new cast member to its roster for Season 3. American Dreams vet Vanessa Lengies will recur about the Fox musical as Sugar, a spoiled new student referred to like a mix from a Nj housewife and former Glee guest star Molly Shannon, TVLine reviews. Friday Evening Lights star to woo Mercedes on Glee Although Sugar can't have a tune, a minimum of we all know Lengies can move because of her three seasons on American Dreams dancing on American Bandstand alongside star Brittany Snow. Lengies, 26, also plays Nurse Kelly Epson on TNT's HawthoRNe and guest-starred on Castle captured. Her casting follows those of Friday Evening Lights alum LaMarcus Mess, who'll play Mercedes' new boyfriend next season. Glee returns on Tuesday, Sept. 20 at 8/7c on Fox.

Saturday, August 6, 2011

Get Out Kaanapali Hawaii

Join the "Get Out!" crew for exciting travel and adventure on HDNet. Join Lindsay Clubine and her co-hosts as they take you to exciting locations to experience all of the local color, fun, and nightlife from famous cities around the world. From South Beach to the Bahamas, Get Out! traverses the globe looking for the hip, trendy, and cool, all in amazing 1080i high definition!

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

'Transformers: Dark From The Moon' Explodes Past $1 Billion Mark

Showing that does not the threat of global economic collapse will keep people from giant robot fights, worldwide box office receipts for Transformers: Dark from the Moon have finally surpassed $1 billion. Without doubt assisted through the more money introduced in by three dimensional ticket sales, the 3rd Michael Bay Transformers movie has made $338 million within the U . s . States along with a whopping $663 million worldwide. While Transformers: Dark from the Moon may be the first Vital Pictures film to ever break the $1 billion mark, it is the tenth movie to do this ever, that also makes it a place within the greatest-grossing films ever. Their email list, so as, goes: Avatar, Titanic, The The almighty from the Rings: The Return from the King, Pirates from the Caribbean: Dead Guys Chest, Toy Story 3, Pirates from the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides, Alice's adventures in wonderland, Harry Potter and also the Deathly Hallows Part 2, The Dark Dark night, and lastly, Transformers: Dark from the Moon, which edged out Harry Potter and also the Philosophers Stone because of its place. Not remarkably, six from the movies on that list were launched in three dimensional, permitting these phones enjoy the greater ticket prices connected with this format. Other fun details: » James Cameron supports the top two spots with Avatar and Titanic. » Only three films, Avatar, Titanic, and Alice's adventures in wonderland are stand alone films, and never a part of a set. » The only real movie out there to become launched just before the entire year 2000 is Titanic. » Three movies out there were launched this year: Pirates from the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides, Harry Potter and also the Deathly Hallows Part 2 and Transformers: Dark from the Moon. » The 2nd Transformers movie, Transformers: Revenge from the Fallen ranks in at No. 27, while the first is completely lower at No. 45. » Transformers: Dark from the Moon continues to be in theaters, and may rise even greater out there. Exactly what do you consider this area office performance of Transformers: Dark from the Moon? Do you consider its colossal success might lure Michael Bay and Shia LeBeouf to the home? Inform us within the comments section as well as on Twitter!

Play 'Guess the Cause of Death' With These New Images from Final Destination 5

Death continues to wreak fateful havoc in the lives of doomed young persons in next week’s Final Destination 5 (Death doesn’t like to be cheated… out of an opportunity to rake in more money!), but who knows what inventive, grotesque kills await? Play Movieline’s “Guess the Death” and take a stab (ding!) at predicting how each of the film’s cast members (including Emma Bell, Tony Todd, and David Koechner) will meet their maker, based on clues found in these five new stills. 1. Jacqueline MacInnes Wood as Olivia Death by Ludovico technique! Or, more likely: Lasik gone horribly wrong. 2. Nicholas D’Agosto as Sam Clutching the railing for dear life, Sam’s little heart gave out from the strain. 3. David Koechner as Dennis Say it ain’t so, Koechner! Most tragic comic-over-the-cliff death since Rob Riggle in Furry Vengeance? (Apologies for that spoiler alert if you’re still waiting to see Furry Vengeance.) (Condolences if you’ve already seen it.) 4. P.J. Byrne as Isaac Those acupuncture needles aren’t going to commit freak homicide themselves. ARE THEY?? 5. Tony Todd as Bludworth Death by… bees? CANDYMAN CANDYMAN CANDYMAN CANDYMAN CANDYMAN! Click for the full gallery of 20+ images from Final Destination 5, in theaters August 12.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Elliott Kozak dies at 80

Elliott Kozak, Bob Hope's producer for more than 30 years who also served at times as his agent and manager, died July 23 of complications after recent surgery in Tarzana, Calif. He was 80. Although he criss-crossed back and forth between work for Hope and for various talent agencies throughout his 65-year career, he was known primarily in the industry as the "go-to" person for anything Hope-related. Brooklyn-born Kozak began his career in 1945 at age 15 at the William Morris Agency mailroom in New York. Within three years he became a full-time agent in the TV variety department, booking "The Milton Berle Show" and "The Ray Bolger Show," among others. At one point during his time at WMA, Kozak did a favor for Colonel Tom Parker and got a young Elvis Presley an audition on "Arthur Murray's Talent Scouts," but Elvis and the band were quickly rejected. In 1959, on a tip from Berle, Kozak learned that Hope's longtime agent, Jimmy Saphier, was looking for someone to help book Hope's NBC specials, so he left for the West Coast to begin what would become a decades-long on-and-off relationship with Hope. In 1969, Kozak returned to William Morris for a three-year stint in the TV variety department in Los Angeles, helping to shepherd a young Michael Ovitz, as well as Kozak's assistant, future mega-manager George Shapiro. In the TV packaging department, Kozak packaged "Laugh-In" and booked "The Merv Griffin Show," among other shows. In 1972, Kozak returned to Hope again, this time partnering with Saphier, and became Hope's main agent after Saphier's death in 1974. Kozak was soon producing Hope's many NBC specials, coordinating his appearances and running his production office.In 1979, Kozak was hired to run ICM's TV variety department, to which he lured an array of A-list producers and directors, including Gary Smith & Dwight Hemion and Steve Binder. But his high-crowning achievement was an anniversary show that Motown's Suzanne de Passe brought him in 1982 and that he sold to NBC as a two-hour special and ICM package. "Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, Forever" won an Emmy for best TV special, as well as an NAACP Image Award and a Peabody Award, and became one of the highest-rated shows in television history.Following the Motown project, Hope asked Kozak to return for what would be his last run with the comedian in which he continued his prior duties, serving also as his manager. In 1991, Kozak opened up a West Coast office for Nashville's Buddy Lee Attractions, where he would remain throughout the 1990s. He was semi-retired beginning in 2000 and spent the last decade of his life booking personal appearances.Kozak is survived by his wife, Marie, a former executive secretary for General Artists Corp. (now ICM); sons Steven, clearance coordinator at "Tonight Show With Jay Leno" and Robert ; daughters Julie, wardrobe supervisor on "Extra," and Heather; and 10 grandchildren. A memorial service will be held Sunday, Aug. 7, at 2 p.m. at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater at the Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital in Woodland Hills, Calif. Contact Variety Staff at news@variety.com