Exclusive: The Bureau Sales inks deal with fledgling French distributor Mag Distribution.
French outfit The Bureau Sales has closed deals on Daphne at this week’s European Film Market (Efm) in Berlin.
The film has sold for France to Mag Distribution, the newly-launched distribution company set up by Richard Magnien, Emmanuel Agneray and Yann Gilbert.
The acquisition is part of the company’s debut slate which also includes Radu Jude’s 2016 Locarno premiere Scarred Hearts and Miwa Nishikawa’s Long Excuses, which premiered at Tiff last year.
Daphne has also sold to China with Bilibili. Previous deals closed on the title include Altitude for the UK and Cinemien for Benelux.
The film stars Emily Beecham as a 30-something woman living in London whose life enters a downward spiral after she witnesses a violent attack.
It marks the feature debut of director Peter Mackie Burns, who won a Berlin Golden Bear in 2005 for his short film Milk. [link...
French outfit The Bureau Sales has closed deals on Daphne at this week’s European Film Market (Efm) in Berlin.
The film has sold for France to Mag Distribution, the newly-launched distribution company set up by Richard Magnien, Emmanuel Agneray and Yann Gilbert.
The acquisition is part of the company’s debut slate which also includes Radu Jude’s 2016 Locarno premiere Scarred Hearts and Miwa Nishikawa’s Long Excuses, which premiered at Tiff last year.
Daphne has also sold to China with Bilibili. Previous deals closed on the title include Altitude for the UK and Cinemien for Benelux.
The film stars Emily Beecham as a 30-something woman living in London whose life enters a downward spiral after she witnesses a violent attack.
It marks the feature debut of director Peter Mackie Burns, who won a Berlin Golden Bear in 2005 for his short film Milk. [link...
- 2/14/2017
- by tom.grater@screendaily.com (Tom Grater)
- ScreenDaily
PARIS -- Gallic Institute for the Financing of Cinema and Cultural Industries gave its fourth annual IFCIC Prize for Young, Independent Production Co. to Yann Gilbert's La Mouche du Coche Films at a ceremony in Paris Wednesday night.
Created in 2004, the prize is worth 10,000 euros ($14,720). A jury presided by head of the IFCIC's council, Hughes R. Gall, and composed of industry professionals reached its verdict Dec. 5 and the award was handed out by Gaumont chairman Nicolas Seydoux late Wednesday.
La Mouche de Coche Films, which translates as "the fly on the notch," was created in 2000 and has recently produced feature films Christophe Loizillon's "My Camera and Me" and Cecile Telerman's "Tout Pour Plaire".
Catherine Castel's "48 Hours per Day" is currently in post-production and the young company is looking for financing for Cecile Telerman's second movie "La Faute des Meres".
Created in 2004, the prize is worth 10,000 euros ($14,720). A jury presided by head of the IFCIC's council, Hughes R. Gall, and composed of industry professionals reached its verdict Dec. 5 and the award was handed out by Gaumont chairman Nicolas Seydoux late Wednesday.
La Mouche de Coche Films, which translates as "the fly on the notch," was created in 2000 and has recently produced feature films Christophe Loizillon's "My Camera and Me" and Cecile Telerman's "Tout Pour Plaire".
Catherine Castel's "48 Hours per Day" is currently in post-production and the young company is looking for financing for Cecile Telerman's second movie "La Faute des Meres".
- 12/14/2007
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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