• Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Youtube
  • Instagram
  • Skype
Phone : + 33 1 58 51 42 95
Reel Suspects | International Sales & Coproductions
  • Home
  • On Sale
  • Projects
  • Newsletter
  • About
  • Contact
  • Downloads
  • Search
  • Menu Menu

Tag Archive for: Reel Suspects

Breaking Nws : THR // ‘We Are the Flesh’: Film Review

February 2, 2017/in NEWS/by Matteo Lovadina

‘We Are the Flesh’: Film Review

A startling debut viewing present-day Mexico through a violent, surreal lens. TWITTER
1/13/2017

Two siblings take refuge in an increasingly bizarre hideout in Emiliano Rocha Minter’s horror-show allegory.

An innocent brother and sister find shelter with a madman in Emiliano Rocha Minter’s We Are the Flesh, a debut whose quotient of sex and gore lives up to its English title. A violent allegory whose literal plot is largely up for grabs, it grows increasingly surreal as it goes, delving into a psychological state that greets societal collapse with more glee than despair. Viewers expecting a garden-variety horror flick will likely recoil, but those seeking new voices in Mexican cinema may well hail Minter’s effort. Repulsive as it is, this is a vision art houses would be wrong to ignore.

Noe Hernandez (Miss Bala) plays the devilish older man, who is squatting in a large abandoned building, violently destroying its furniture for firewood as he escapes whatever horrors — is it apocalypse, war, or merely poverty? — await outside. The siblings, eventually referred to as Fauna (Maria Evoli) and Lucio (Diego Gamaliel), make their way in, and he eventually agrees to let them stay — putting them to work, without explanation, on a large cardboard-and-packing-tape structure.

That convoluted space seems to have a life of its own, growing more convincingly cavelike as the unnamed man begins to christen it with transgressive acts. He coerces the brother and sister to start a sexual relationship (first observed in the hot pinks and yellows of thermal-imaging photography, then with pornlike frankness); later he will initiate a cannibalistic orgy with sacrilegious overtones.

While Evoli and Gamaliel negotiate their characters’ wavering acceptance of this environment, Hernandez supplies a mad conviction to match the director’s own: Staring into space with a demented kind of beatific smile on his face, he may be hiding from the end of the world, but seemingly intends to celebrate it as well, announcing that “this place is the last monument of a rotten society.”

About that society: Late in the picture, the protagonists capture a Mexican soldier, whose throat they slit ceremonially; that’s as explicit as the film gets in its reference to a real-world country awash in extreme violence and corruption. A producer’s note in press materials refers to ancient Aztec myths combining creation and destruction. Such myths lose most of their shock value when encountered in archaeological museums and textbooks; We Are the Flesh attempts, with some success, to resuscitate their horrors for our own terrifying times.

Distributor: Arrow Films
Production companies: Piano, Detalle Films, Sedna Films, Estudios Splendor Omnia, Simplemente
Cast: Noe Hernandez, Diego Gamaliel, Maria Evoli
Director-screenwriter: Emiliano Rocha Minter
Producer: Julio Chavezmontes
Director of photography: Yollotl Alvarado
Production designer: Manuela Garcia
Costume designers: Ana Maya Farthing-Kohl, Teresa Alvarado
Editors: Yibran Assuad, Emiliano Rocha Minter
Composer: Esteban Aldrete

In Spanish with English subtitles

Not rated, 79 minutes

https://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/WEA05.jpg 768 1024 Matteo Lovadina http://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/logo-def.png Matteo Lovadina2017-02-02 01:41:342018-05-29 09:45:24Breaking Nws : THR // ‘We Are the Flesh’: Film Review

Breaking News : Variety // Sweden’s Goteborg Festival Opens With ‘Tom of Finland,’ Celebrates the Best in Scandinavian Film, and Beyond

February 2, 2017/in NEWS/by Matteo Lovadina

Sweden’s Goteborg Festival Opens With ‘Tom of Finland,’ Celebrates the Best in Scandinavian Film, and Beyond

COURTESY OF PROTAGONIST PICTURES

JANUARY 26, 2017 | 01:04PM PT

On Jan. 27, as Finnish director Dome Karukoski’s “Tom of Finland” opens the 40th Göteborg Intl. Film Festival at the Swedish city’s Draken cinema, the whole province will participate, not just the 700 filmgoers in the theater.

“To celebrate the anniversary the whole ceremony, including the film, will be shown in 40 cinemas around Göteborg,” says the festival’s artistic director Jonas Holmberg, who is responsible for the program of 450 films from 84 countries that will unspool before the fest’s Feb. 6 wrap.

“What I love about Göteborg is the combination of a large, devoted audience and a high-profile, artistically ambitious program,” Holmberg says. “We will also continue to develop our market platform, the Nordic Film Market.”

Among the world premieres are U.K. director Elizabeth E. Schuch’s “The Book of Birdie,” Swedish director Manuel Concha’s “Blind Alley,” Icelandic director Erlingur Ottar Thoroddsen’s “Rift,” and “Eternity,” the new film by Vietnamese director Tran Anh Hung, who is also a jury member this year.

Belgian filmmaking brothers Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne will receive the festival’s Honorary Dragon Award. Their latest film, “The Unknown Girl,” will unspool along with a retrospective of their work. Danish writer-director Lone Scherfig will be honored with the Nordic Honorary Dragon Award.

The festival’s three special focus sidebars this year are on religion and faith; films from the Lapland (or Sápmi) region; and virtual reality.

“I am particularly proud of the film selection about the role of religion and faith in society,” says Holmberg. “It is an incredible controversial topic, particularly in Europe and the Middle East, and here filmmakers from widely varying backgrounds offer new perspectives of both perennial religious issues and current political occurrences. We hope it will bring a lot of thought and debate, also at the seminars [that] are part of [the selection].”

Films dealing with religion and faith include Egyptian director Mohamed Diab’s “Clash,” Russian director Kirill Serebrennikov’s “The Student,” and U.S. director Ori Sivan’s “Harmonia,” which interprets the Book of Genesis in a concert-hall setting.

The festival has also organized guided tours to the Göteborg Cathedral, the city’s mosque and synagogue.

“Sámi films are currently hotter than ever,” says Holmberg, so new productions from the Arctic area of Lapland in northern Sweden, Norway, Finland, and Russia will unspool in the festival’s second Focus: Sápmi. Swedish-Sámi director Amanda Kernell’s “Sámi Blood” will have its Swedish premiere at the festival after its successful run in Venice and Thessaloniki.

“2016 was the first year when filmmakers started using virtual reality technology artistically,” Holmberg says. “We have collected some of the highlights to give the audiences a chance to see what is really going on inside those glasses.”

The festival will also debut the Nordisk Film & TV Fund Prize, worth $22,000, for the best Nordic script for a TV series.

“Göteborg introduced its TV Drama Vision platform before others, so it was obvious to choose the festival as a partner,” says the fund’s chief executive Petri Kemppinen.

https://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/BIRDIE_STILL_001-1.jpg 768 1024 Matteo Lovadina http://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/logo-def.png Matteo Lovadina2017-02-02 01:39:242022-10-19 14:56:37Breaking News : Variety // Sweden’s Goteborg Festival Opens With ‘Tom of Finland,’ Celebrates the Best in Scandinavian Film, and Beyond

Breaking News : Variety // Genre, Thrillers Stage A Comeback in France

January 13, 2017/in NEWS/by Matteo Lovadina

Genre, Thrillers Stage A Comeback in France

John Hopewell

JANUARY 13, 2017 | 12:42AM PT

2017 UniFrance Rendez-Vous a platform for a clutch of thrillers, genre movies from a new generation of filmmakers

PARIS – Daouda Coulibaly’s Mali-set “Wulu,” Sebastian Marnier’s “Faultless”and Thomas Kruithof’s “The Eavesdropper” form part of a gaggle of crime thrillers and sci-fi/fantasy movies unspooling at the 19th UniFrance Rendez-Vous with French Cinema, France’s annual national film showcase.

In volume, they do not represent the most numerous film type at that market; that crown belongs to comedies, accounting for 32 of the 76 movies screening there. But some of the crime thrillers are among the best-reviewed films at Rendez-Vous.

“Who doesn’t love a good sociopath? In novelist-director Sébastien Marnier’s feature debut “Faultless,” he conjures up a doozy,” Variety wrote, calling “The Eavesdropper” (aka “Scribe”) “a timely political thriller told with flair” and “Wulu” “an auspicious debut.”

These suspense titles are joined at the Rendez-Vous by “Seuls” (“Alone”), a bold departure for French cinema, a fantasy teen survival thriller from “IT Boy” director David Moreau, and “Toril,” Laurent Tessier’s rural drug-trade thriller.

The films come on the heels of three Cannes standouts: Alice Winocour’s “Disorder,” with Matthias Schoenaerts (“Rust and Bone”) as a ex special-ops bodyguard suffering PTSD; Houda Benyamina’s Golden Globe-nominated gangster movie “Divines”; and Julia Ducournau’s campus cannibal movie “Raw.”

And at November’s American Film Market, Paris-based production house Vixens announced a new slate of elevated genre movies, including “Rosemary’s Baby”-ish “Housewife,” Turkish director Can Evrenol’s follow-up to his hit “Bakin”; H.P. Lovecraft adaptation “Beyond the Wall of Sleep,” the second feature from Christophe Deruo; and Vixens’ first French-language movie, Martin Scali’s crime drama “Un Prince.”

Though the number of such titles out of the 200-plus features France produces each year is not huge, it does suggest that genre, especially crime thrillers, one of the country’s greatest film traditions, is making a niche comeback.

“‘Raw’ is a masterpiece. There are great young filmmakers with a strong viewpoints and vigorous takes on the genre,” Kruithof said.

The comeback comes thanks to an exciting new generation of directors, producers and sales agents now linked with some of France’s top players – Gaumont, Wild Bunch, Haut et Court – and is in spite of often adverse market and funding conditions.

Made 50 to 80 years after Marcel Carné, Henri-Georges Cluzot and Jean-Pierre Melville were at the top of their game, this new wave naturally moves the tradition on. The trio of Cannes standouts were all directed by women, conspicuously absent from the good and great of French policiers, film noir, heist and gangster movies of the past.

France’s new thriller wave is often set in timely contemporary contexts. “The Eavesdropper,” Kruithof’s feature debut sold at the Rendez-Vous by WTFilms, unspools during the buildup to to presidential elections in France. It stars François Cluzet as a mild-mannered bookkeeper hired by a shadowy head of a political espionage network working for a populist far-right politician who aims to make France great again.

“Alone,” though reminiscent of U.S. ’80s teens movies, features a gaggle of fast-talking French teens, and a new French cityscape of hypermarkets, highways and plush hotels.

“Wulu,” produced by and sold at the Rendez-Vous by Indie Sales, charts the inexorable rise of a sharp-witted Malian from bus driver to drug-courier kingpin. It has been called a Malian “Scarface.” But unlike Pacino’s character, “Wulu’s” anti-hero is always unhappy. He earns enough cash to buy a villa and hobnob with rich, but loses his soul.

Genre in France is a push phenomenon, supported often passionately by a new generation of directors, few of them older than 40.  The movies reveal some largely unknown young directors in command of their craft and able to elicit tremendous performances from their star leads.

But French genre production, especially of straight horror films, also faces huge challenges.

Horror’s status in France is a “disaster,” says Matteo Lovadino at Reel Suspects, a Paris-based sales agency specializing in genre and fantastic cinema. Institutions steer clear of financing straightforward genre both in production and distribution, he said, citing the case of Lithuania’s “Vanishing Waves,” which did not receive French state support for theatrical distribution in France. Straightforward horror genre cannot play primetime free-to-air genre – though thrillers and sci-fi titles have more of a chance – which reduces revenue opportunities for their distributors, he added.

This isn’t new. A French splat pack – Alexandre Aja (2003’s “High  Tension”), Alexandre Bustillo and Julien Maury (2007’s “Inside”), Pascal Laugier (2008’s “Martyrs”) – made a clutch of extreme-gore movies which delighted French fan boys, caught critics’ attention, but largely bombed at the box office.

“There was a wave of great genre directors. But Aja and that generation realized they couldn’t make those [films] in France. Most left for the States,” Gregory Chamber at WTFilms recalled. “Now there’s a new wave of directors trying to get back to genre.”

The question is what business models France’s new genre practitioners can adopt, allowing directors to grow their careers with ever most ambitious projects.

One is to attempt to open up to new audiences. In “A Perfect Man,” a blocked writer played by Pierre Niney claims authorship of a novel left behind by a dead man. The movie brought in “a younger, more female crowd,” said Thibault Gast at 24 25 Films, producer of “A Perfect Man” and “The Eavesdropper.”

Another strategy is to rack up international sales. “The Eavesdropper” has sold to Japan (At Entertainment), the U.K. (Arrow), Latin America (California), Spain (A Contracorriente Films), Italy (Europictures), Scandinavia (Njuta), Switzerland (JMH), Canada (TVA) and multiple other territories.

Financing can also be structured to avoid depending totally on the French market. Vixens aims to produce three genre movies a year, said co-founder-producer Gary Farkas: one shot in English in the U.S. and co-financed by U.S. equity, such as David Raboy’s upcoming “The Giant”;  European co-productions, such as “Housewife,” co-produced with Turkey and Denmark’s Space Rocket Nation; and French features, but which are “genre/art films with a strong message,” such as “Un Prince.”

The last two titles qualify as French movies, easing sales to French pay-TV operator Canal Plus. The U.S.-shot movies and co-productions are “low-budget, high-concept, director-driven,” the low budgets limiting risk and making them more attractive to equity investors, Farkas added.

Vixens can also tap monies from French distribution, international sales and funds such as the CNC French film board’s Aide aux Cinemas du Monde.

Farkas said “Un Prince” is a crime drama in the vein of “A Most Violent Year” and Jacques Audiard’s 2005 “The Beat That My Heart Skipped.”

24 25 Films and WY Prods, the companies behind “A Perfect Man,” are teaming with Gaumont to produce “Burn Out,” the second feature from from “Man’s” Yann Gozlan. WTFilms and Haut et Court are joining forces for zombie movie “The Night.”

It only takes one or two films to reverse a trend, the saying goes. Genre, thrillers traditionally play well on VOD.

“Business is changing a lot. All bets are off, in a way. It’s more difficult to know what will work or not. So people are open to taking more risks again,” said Chambet.

https://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/BHC2.jpg 768 1024 Matteo Lovadina http://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/logo-def.png Matteo Lovadina2017-01-13 10:50:592022-10-19 14:56:37Breaking News : Variety // Genre, Thrillers Stage A Comeback in France

Breaking News : Variety // Dain Said’s ‘Interchange’ to Open Singapore Film Festival

November 18, 2016/in NEWS/by Matteo Lovadina

Dain Said’s ‘Interchange’ to Open Singapore Film Festival

Patrick Frater

Asia Bureau Chief

(C) APPARAT

SEPTEMBER 20, 2016 | 08:00PM PT

“Interchange,” a noir fantasy thriller by Malaysia’s Dain Iskandar Said, will be the opening film of the Singapore International Film Festival.

The film premiered last month in Locarno and traveled to Toronto. The Singapore screening on Nov. 23 will be its premiere in Asia. The SGIFF runs until Dec. 4.

“’Interchange,’ combines Said’s skill for genre story-telling with a distinct Southeast Asian flavor to produce a unique thriller that could not have originated from anywhere else,” said Yuni Hadi, executive director of SGIFF. “Choosing it as SGIFF’s opening film shows our commitment to celebrating our own voices, highlighting the capability of our creative industry, and welcoming a wider audience to the promise of Southeast Asian cinema.”

The story which is part detective thriller, part shamanistic fantasy, is inspired by real events a century ago when a Norwegian explorer traveled through central Borneo and took photographs of tribal women bathing in a river. The cast includes Malaysian TV personality Shaheizy Sam, (“Songlap”) Indonesia’s Nicholas Saputra, rising star Iedil Putra and Indonesian actress Prisia Nasution (“Sang Penari”.)

“Interchange” is the third feature by Said, who previously directed “Bunohan: Return to Murder,” which won eight awards at the 25th Malaysian Film Festival and was selected as Malaysia’s entry for Oscars.

https://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/INTbanner.jpg 565 1310 Matteo Lovadina http://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/logo-def.png Matteo Lovadina2016-11-18 16:08:222022-10-19 14:56:37Breaking News : Variety // Dain Said’s ‘Interchange’ to Open Singapore Film Festival

Breaking News : Variety // Locarno: ‘Interchange,’ ‘The Last Family,’ ‘Glory’ Close Sales (EXCLUSIVE)

August 22, 2016/in NEWS/by Matteo Lovadina

As fest hits final straits, sales multiply after Linde, Keitel, Pullman and Corman add U.S. heft to proceedings

“Interchange,” “The Last Family” and “Glory” led early sales announcements at an ever more hectic Locarno Festival where “Moka” and “Paula” drew positive critical plaudits –  boding well for break-out sales as top Locarno titles segue from the Swiss Alps to Toronto.

Harvey Keitel, Bill Pullman and Roger Corman collected career awards, lending an U.S. edge to an event which largely focuses on European arthouse and world cinema. The most significant industry presence was, however, that of Participant CEO David Linde who talked about his career as an independent producer and emphasised his belief – and that of Participant founder Jeff Skoll – in further growth in international markets as an estimated 5 billion people, largely in Asia and Africa, will come online for the first time in the next 5 years.

Attendance at Locarno’s Industry Days, which ran Aug. 6-8, came in at around 1,100, on a par with 2015, after sustained rapid growth since their inauguration in 2009.

Further expansion may now come outside the festival. Already consolidating as Europe’s biggest big fest industry exec think tank, via its Step-In panels and work group discussion platforms, Locarno confirmed this week its fifth Locarno Industry Academy International, after events at Locarno itself, New York’s Lincoln Center, Mexico’s Morelia Fest and the Cinema do Brasil Boutique Cinema mini-mart.

Targeting sales, distribution and exhibition execs – a market focus which runs through Locarno industry events – the fourth Locarno International Academy will unspool Nov. 7-11 during Greece’s Thessaloniki Festival, the country’s main movie event.

Negotiations on many main Locarno Piazza Grande titles – Frederic Mermoud’s drama-thriller “Moka,” sold by Pyramide Intl, and The Match Factory-sold “Paula,” a bio of trail-blazing German painter Paula Modersohn-Becker, both of which drew upbeat reviews – will only really kick in as buyers return to their offices and will stretch well beyond Toronto. Others Locarno movies, such as Films Distrbution’s “Stefan Zweig: Farewell to Europe” and the Beta Cinema-sold “Vincent and the End of the World,” still have to run the critical gauntlet at Locarno or at least engender international reviews.

So major industry news at Locarno cuts other ways: Sales on select fest players, often screening in its first days; Locarno title sales agent pick-ups; production announcements; acquisitions on titles at Venice or Toronto, as sales agents seek to position new bets at Locarno before the biggest of pre-fall fest markets.

In this sense, news was legion. As this year’s Locarno headed towards its final straits early Wednesday, Paris-based  Reel Suspects confirmed that “Interchange,” a supernatural nourish procedural with sci-fi elements from Malaysia’s Dain Iskander Said had closed Spain at Locarno with Luis Bellaba’s Film Buro Producciones Internacionales. Reel Suspects has also licensed Switzerland (Preasens Film) and Taiwan (Deltamac). GSC Movies handles domestic theatrical distribution in Malaysia. Germany is in negotiation; “Interchange” is sparking “a lot of interest in France,” Reel Suspects’ Matteo Lovadina reported.

https://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Interchange-07.jpg 800 1280 Matteo Lovadina http://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/logo-def.png Matteo Lovadina2016-08-22 11:37:522017-04-19 09:17:39Breaking News : Variety // Locarno: ‘Interchange,’ ‘The Last Family,’ ‘Glory’ Close Sales (EXCLUSIVE)

Breaking News : Screen // Reel Suspects to run ‘Amok’ at Cannes, announces ‘Vampyres’ sales

May 9, 2016/in NEWS/by Matteo Lovadina

Reel Suspects to run ‘Amok’ at Cannes, announces ‘Vampyres’ sales

21 April, 2016 | By Melanie Goodfellow

EXCLUSIVE: UK’s Soda Pictures has picked up remake of cult classic Vampyres.

Paris-based Reel Suspects has acquired Macedonian director Vardan Tozija’s crime-drama Amok [pictured] about an introverted, abandoned teenager who goes on to lead a gang of violent, feral lost boys.

“It’s a really powerful film, a Macedonian version of theCity of God. It came to me through my network and I’ve been following it since the project stage,” says Reel Suspects CEO Matteo Lovadina, who is aiming for a Toronto international premiere for the film.

The picture stars first-time actor Martin Gjorgoski as Phillip, a rough, marginalised teenager, who is forced to participate in a terrifying encounter by a corrupt policeman while in the care of social services.

Irrevocably damaged, he is hell-bent on seeking violent revenge on society, enlisting the other “lost boys” in the tough juvenile adoption centre he calls home.

Skopje-based film and TV production outfit Dream Factory Macedonia produced the film. The company’s previous credits include Monument To Michael Jackson, which premiered at Karlovy Vary in 2014 and won the jury award at the Santa Barbara International Festival, and Tozija’s short film The Man In The Habit Of Hitting Me On The Head With An Umbrella.

Vampyres Sales 

In other Reel Suspects news, Lovadina announced a string of sales on Victor Matellano’s erotic horror remakeVampyres, starring cult British Hammer Films actress Caroline Munro alongside Christian Stamm, Veronica Bacorn and Marta Flich.

The title has sold to Japan (New Select), the UK (Soda Pictures), South Korea (Alto Media), Taiwan (Moviecloud), Scandinavia (Njuta Films) and Munich-based Donau Films has acquired it for Germany and Austria.

A remake of Joseph Larraz’s 1974 English-language cult classic of the same name, the picture revolves around two vamps who lure men to their dark manor with the promise of group sex and then massacre them.

Reel Suspects will market screen both Amok and Vampyresat Cannes.

Other titles on its Cannes slate include Babak Jalili’s Radio Dreams, which won the top Tiger Award at the International Film Festival Rotterdam this year, and Mexican Emiliano Roche Minter’s We Are The Flesh.

The latter has also been generating strong buzz since world premiering at Rotterdam and gaining the endorsement of compatriot directors Gonzalez Iñarritu, Alfonso Cuaron and Carlos Reygadas

It will screen in Cannes as one of the Blood Window Galas, the joint initiative between the Marché du Film and Ventana Sur showing a selection of horror films from Latin America in late night screenings.

https://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/AMO03.jpg 800 1280 Matteo Lovadina http://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/logo-def.png Matteo Lovadina2016-05-09 00:41:152022-10-19 14:56:23Breaking News : Screen // Reel Suspects to run ‘Amok’ at Cannes, announces ‘Vampyres’ sales

Breaking News : Variety // Cuaron and Gonzalez Iñarritu-endorsed Mexican debut to screen at Cannes’ Blood Window

May 4, 2016/in NEWS/by Matteo Lovadina

Cannes: Reel Suspects Rolls Out ‘We Are the Flesh’ Sales (EXCLUSIVE)

By John Hopewell, 

Elsa Keslassy

  • 2
COURTESY OF REEL SUSPECTS

MAY 4, 2016 | 05:37AM PT

Cuaron and Gonzalez Iñarritu-endorsed Mexican debut to screen at Cannes’ Blood Window

PARIS — Paris-based Reel Suspects has kicked off major territory sales on Emiliano Rocha Minter’s “We Are the Flesh,” one of the most talked-about of Mexican feature debuts in recent years.

Counting with the rare distinction of endorsement from not only “The Revenant’s” Alejandro Gonzalez Iñarritu, who talked the film up on a Mexuco press tour, but also “Gravity’s” Alfonso Cuaron, plus co-production by Carlos Reygadas (“Post Tenebras Lux”), “We Are the Flesh” has closed the U.K./Ireland, which plans a theatrical run, Germany, where distributor Donau Films will release it at the end of the year, and France, where it has been acquired by Blaqout. Moviecloud has acquired rights for Taiwan.

“We are thrilled to bring this startling and fresh debut to UK audiences. With its stunning visuals, provocative subject matter and assured direction, we are sure that it will connect with film fans on a variety of platforms,” said Arrow’s Francesco Simeoni.

He added: “With this film Emiliano Rocha Minter shows he is certainly an incredible emerging talent.”

“We Are the Flesh” is “a film that can’t leave you untouched. It’s a love or hate relation that surges between the audience and Emiliano’s vision. Being screened in Cannes will certainly put more attention on Emiliano’s work and we are sure to close further deals during the Marché,” commented Reel Suspects CEO Matteo Lovadina.

World premiering at the Rotterdam Fest, and seemingly set at its get-go in some kind of starved, ruinous post-Apocalypse world, the drama, which is lead produced by Julio Chavezmontes production-distribution company Piano, with Moises Cosio’s Detalle Films, has an ageing satyr-man offer food to a teen sister (Maria Evoli) and brother (Diego Gamaliel) if they transform his building into a womb-like cave. He then pressuring them to abandon any inhibitions, indulging in acts of incest, bloodlust, rape, murder, onanism and cannibalism.

Iñarritu told Mexican newspaper Reforma that “We Are the Flesh” “is a very personal, very powerful film that deeply impressed me. Emiliano Rocha is part of a new generation [of filmmakers] with a potent talent and voice.”

“I loved this film. ‘Tenemos la Carne’ takes over our waking thoughts, like a recurring dream we try to forget, because we are fearful of finding out it may be a memory,” Cuaron wrote in a quote to support the film.

L.A.’s Paradigm Talent Agency signed up both director Rocha Minter and lead actress Maria Evoli. L.A.-based production-management company Benderspink has also signed on as Rocha Minter’s manager.

FILED UNDER:

  • Cannes Film Festival
  • Emiliano Rocha Minter
  • Reel Suspects
  • We Are the Flesh
Want to read more articles like this one? .
https://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/WEA05.jpg 768 1024 Matteo Lovadina http://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/logo-def.png Matteo Lovadina2016-05-04 14:19:302022-10-19 14:56:22Breaking News : Variety // Cuaron and Gonzalez Iñarritu-endorsed Mexican debut to screen at Cannes’ Blood Window

Breaking News : VARIETY – Berlin: Reel Suspects Rolls Out Sales on ‘Demon’ (EXCLUSIVE)

March 5, 2016/in NEWS/by Matteo Lovadina

John Hopewell

Chief International Correspondent@john_hopewell

COURTESY OF REEL SUSPECTS

FEBRUARY 9, 2016 | 02:21AM PT

Inspired by the Polish tradition of dybbuk, Wrona’s movie closes major territories

PARIS – Making good on upbeat festival reception, Paris-based Reel Suspects has rolled out sales on “Demon,” a title made sadly all the more famous by the tragic abrupt death of its director, 42-year-old Marcin Wrona, a week after its screening at September’s Toronto Festival.

In early major-territory deals, Matteo Lovadina’s Reel Suspects has licensed Germany/Austria (Donau Films), Scandinavia (Njuta Films), Brazil (Supo Mungam), Australia (SBS), and Central Europe (HBO).

ICM sold U.S. rights to the Orchard, which will release “Demon” Stateside in 2016. Donau Films will give “Demon” a theatrical run through the Drop Out Cinema Network in May 2016.

Starring Itay Tiran (“Lebanon,” “Beaufort”), Agnieska Zulewska and Tomasz Schuchardt, “Demon” turns on a man who is given a piece of land as a wedding gift from his bride-to-be’s father to build a house and raise a happy family. As he prepares the land, he unearths the bones of human bodies beneath the new property. Strange things begin to happen, changing the happy couple’s lives forever.

“What’s most important to me in this film is the tale of spirituality, which is now very difficult to access or it has completely changed its face. What we tried to achieve in this film was for the wedding guests to be confronted by something supernatural. They don’t know how to act on it or how to communicate with it,” Wrona explained.

“We have used grotesque horror in our film, but our aim wasn’t to copy Japanese or Spanish or American horror films — they have their own demons; we wanted to use ours.”

“Demon” could be a misleading title, he recognized.

“In fact, we meant the dybbuk not a demon. But since the latter is rather forgotten nowadays we decided to use a contemporary word that most of our wedding guests would use. Dybbuk was very present in Poland when the Jewish community here was still very numerous. Once they left the land so did the dybbuks. Demon is different than dybbuk.”

Wrona added: “Dybbuk doesn’t have to be scary. It’s a returning soul that returns not to scare away but rather to remind us of respect for tradition. I wanted to touch the mystic aspect of the Jewish-Polish lives and hence the idea to cast an Israeli actor in our film.”

“Demon” is a Polish-Israeli co-production by Magnet Man Film and Transfax Film Productions, spoken in Polish, English and Yiddish.

“We are proud to work on this film that is having a great festival career, playing in both generalist and genre film festivals: Toronto, Cottbus, Haifa, Warsaw, Stockholm, Trieste, Bordeaux, Tallin but also Sitges, Fantastic Fest, Fantasy Filmfest, and many others,” said Lovadina.

Austin’s Fantastic Fest and Sitges, near Barcelona, are, respectively, the biggest and highest-profile genre events in the U.S. and Europe.

Lovadina added: “‘Demon’ has also attracted distributors, and we hope to continue expanding territories during the European Film Market.”

“Magnet Man,” Wrona’s student debut, won him multiple prizes, including the best student film at Tribeca. Bowing at 2010’s San Sebastian Festival, “The Christening,” his second feature, proved a firm fest favorite, and broke out to sales.

https://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/DEM02.jpg 767 1024 Matteo Lovadina http://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/logo-def.png Matteo Lovadina2016-03-05 09:07:212022-10-19 14:56:21Breaking News : VARIETY – Berlin: Reel Suspects Rolls Out Sales on ‘Demon’ (EXCLUSIVE)

Breaking News : SCREEN – Reel Suspects teams with ‘Broken Circle Breakdown’ producer

January 27, 2016/in NEWS/by Matteo Lovadina

Reel Suspects teams with ‘Broken Circle Breakdown’ producer

25 January, 2016 | By Geoffrey Macnab

EXCLUSIVE: Paris-based sales outfit adds Rotterdam premieres and sales manager.

Matteo Lovadina’s Paris-based sales outfit Reel Suspects has added two titles to its slate, both set to premiere at International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR) later this week.

The first is Paloma Aguilera Valdebenito’s debut feature,Out Of Love, screening in IFFR’s Bright Future strand.

The film is the latest production from Dutch outfit Topkapi and is produced by company principals Frans van Gestel, Arnold Heslenfeld and Laurette Schillings.

The psycho-drama, about an intense relationship, is supported by the Netherlands Film Fund, Mediafund, CoBO, NTR (part of De Oversteek), Netherlands Film Production Incentive, MEDIA Programme of the European Union. Pim Hermeling’s September will release in the Netherlands.

Dutch-Chilean writer-director Valdebenito was nominated for best short film at the European Film Awards for her 2009 short Stay Away.

Topkapi are also the Dutch producers on Felix van Groeningen’s Sundance entry Belgica and partnered on van Groeningen’s Oscar-nominated The Broken Circle Breakdown.

The second new pick-up from Reel Suspects is Babak Jalali’s US/Iranian coproduction Radio Dreams.

Produced by Marjaneh Moghimi, the IFFR world premiere features Lars Ulrich from heavy rock band Metallica in the supporting cast.

The film follows an eccentric Iranian writer at a San Francisco radio station as he struggles to bring togetherMetallica and Afghanistan’s first rock band. The cast is led by Mohsen Namjoo, Ulrich and Kabul Dreams.

Reel Suspects is handling world sales excluding North America.

New hire

On the eve of IFFR and Berlin’s European Film Market (EFM), Reel Suspects also confirmed a new appointment.

Former Richmond French Film Festival coordinator, and ex-Acajou film assistant producer Leslie Semichon has joined the outfit as sales manager.

https://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/OUT06.jpg 768 1024 Matteo Lovadina http://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/logo-def.png Matteo Lovadina2016-01-27 08:17:032022-10-19 14:56:20Breaking News : SCREEN – Reel Suspects teams with ‘Broken Circle Breakdown’ producer

Breaking News : Variety – Inarritu, Reygadas Back Emiliano Rocha Minter’s ‘We Are the Flesh’ (EXCLUSIVE)

January 25, 2016/in NEWS/by Matteo Lovadina

Inarritu, Reygadas Back Emiliano Rocha Minter’s ‘We Are the Flesh’ (EXCLUSIVE)

COURTESY OF REEL SUSPECTS

JANUARY 25, 2016 | 12:01AM PT

Reel Suspects sells post-apocalypse horror fantasy which world premieres at Rotterdam Fest

John Hopewell

Chief International Correspondent@john_hopewell

“The Revenant” director Alejandro Gonzalez Iñarritu and Carlos Reygadas, whose 2002 debut “Japan” brought down the flag on a new generation of filmmakers that have revolutionized filmmaking in Mexico, are backing horror thriller “Tenemos la carne” (We Are the Flesh), a flagship title from another new wave of Mexican producers and directors.

Broadening its portfolio of envelope-pushing genre titles, Matteo Lovadina’s Paris-based sales company Reel Suspects has acquired world sales rights to “We Are the Flesh.” It will world premiere Feb. 2 at the Rotterdam Fest’s Bright Future section, with Inarritu and Reygadas taking a “present” credit. Post-production work was carried out at Reygadas’ Splendor Omnia ranch-facility nestling in the Mexican hills one-hour’s drive south of Mexico City. Reygadas, Splendor Omnia’s Natalia Lopez and Splendor Omnia take co-producer credits.

Mexican Emiliano Rocha Minter’s first feature, “We Are the Flesh” is set in a post-apocalypse Mexico, where a brother and sister, Lucio and Fauna, wander a ruined city for years in search of food and shelter. They find their way into one of its last surviving buildings, where a man makes them a dangerous offer to survive the outside world. As they help him transform the building into a womb-like cave, a disquieting sexual relationship emerges, along with a dynamic in which darker instincts do their destructive work.

“We Are the Flesh” is billed as a reaction to – and product of – a culture in which cruelty and lust are linked in a shocking way, as well as a poignant and provocative analysis of Mexico.

“We are very thrilled to work on Emiliano’s first feature that perfectly embodies the rise of a new wave of Mexican cinema,” Lovadina said.

He added: “We Are The Flesh’ is bold and provocative, raw and meaningful, playing with cinema genres in a very modern yet unseen way. I am sure the public will be mesmerized. Festival programmers and buyers will be intrigued by Emiliano’s visual style and direction.”

Rocha Minter broke through to attention – and revealed his technical chops and use of genre tropes with his third short, “Inside,” screened at 2013’s Rotterdam Festival, a B&W suspense-laden drama in which two young men friends dig a hole in the ground in a forest.

As his 24 thanks in IMDB suggests, Inarritu has a long history of encouragement, advice or aid to fellow Mexican and Latin American filmmakers whether Alfonso Cuaron, Guillermo del Toro Reygadas or on Sundance player “The Last Elvis,” from Argentina’s Armando Bo,Inarritu’s co-scribe on “Birdman” and “Biutiful.”

Inarritu and Reygadas’ public enthusiasm for “Flesh” also links them with “Flesh” producers Julio Chavezmontes and Moises Cosio, lynchpin figures in a new second Mexican industry wave which broke through a near decade after Inarritu’s debut, 2000’s “Amores Perros.”

Debuting as a producer with “Halley,” from Sebastian Hoffman, and the lead-producer on “Flesh,” Piano’s Chavezmontes’ Mexico City producer-distributor Piano also produced “”Echo of the Mountain,” Nicolas Echeverria’s 2014 Guadalajara winner, exec produced by Michael Fitzgerald, who produced John Huston’s “The Dead.”

Chavezmontes is currently firing up an ambitious slate of movies, including Hoffman’s “Tiempo Compartido,” a step-up-in-scale follow-up to “Halley,” plus Daniel Graham’s “Opus Zero,” which will star “an important American actor,” and with Reygadas, 2012 Cannes best director winner for “Post Tenebras Lux,” again on board, this time as associate producer.

A producer on Atom Egoyan’s “Remember,” Alejandro Jodorowsky’s Cannes 2013 Directors’ Fortnight hit “The Dance of Reality” and a co-producer of Samuel Jackson-starrer “Kite,” Detalle Films head Cosio teamed in March 2015 with Gerardo Gatica and Alberto Muffelmann to launch Latino indie conglom Panorama Global.

“We Are the Flesh” is co-produced by French director Yann Gonzalez, helmer of Cannes Critics’ Week Special Screening “You and the Night.” Simplemente’s Rune Hansen and Monica Reina serve out of Mexico as associate producers, as does Celia Iturraga.

https://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/WEA04.jpg 768 1024 Matteo Lovadina http://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/logo-def.png Matteo Lovadina2016-01-25 10:11:352022-10-19 14:56:20Breaking News : Variety – Inarritu, Reygadas Back Emiliano Rocha Minter’s ‘We Are the Flesh’ (EXCLUSIVE)
Page 8 of 9«‹6789›

Pages

  • Company Logo
  • Company Profile
  • Contacts
  • Distribution
  • Downloads
  • Home
  • Newsletter
  • Privacy Policy
  • Projects

Categories

  • ACTION
  • COMEDY
  • FANTASY
  • HORROR
  • NEWS
  • THRILLER
  • Uncategorized

Archive

  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • December 2021
  • October 2020
  • January 2020
  • December 2019
  • October 2019
  • September 2019
  • July 2019
  • May 2019
  • January 2019
  • October 2018
  • June 2018
  • May 2018
  • April 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • December 2017
  • November 2017
  • September 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • November 2016
  • August 2016
  • May 2016
  • March 2016
  • January 2016
  • November 2015
  • August 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • October 2014

    WE MEET ONLINE

    © Copyright 2014-2025. Reel Suspects
    • Home
    • Distribution
    • Company Profile
    • Contacts
    Scroll to top
    This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish.Accept Read More
    Privacy & Cookies Policy

    Privacy Overview

    This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
    Necessary
    Always Enabled
    Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
    Non-necessary
    Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
    SAVE & ACCEPT