BBC Worldwide & Reliance enter into movie co-production & distribution deal
BBC Earth, the global natural history brand for BBC Worldwide, and Indian entertainment giant, Reliance Big Entertainment, are to partner on three motion pictures. All three films will be distributed by Reliance’s international film sales and financing subsidiary, IM Global. The deal was jointly announced today by BBC Worldwide’s Managing Director of Global Brands, Marcus Arthur and IM Global Founder and CEO Stuart Ford.
The first theatrical feature to be co-produced under the relationship will be the $65m 3D live action feature Walking With Dinosaurs 3D inspired by the BBC’s landmark Walking With Dinosaurs brand. The picture will be co-directed by Pierre De Lespinois of Los Angeles and Alaska based 3D studio Evergreen Films and BBC Earth’s Neil Nightingale (formerly the Head of the BBC Natural History Unit). BBC Earth and Evergreen Films will be working with Academy Award winning animation house Animal Logic (Happy Feet) and leading animation producer Jinko Gotoh (9, Finding Nemo) on the film.
The second co-production between the parties will be the $25m documentary feature Africa 3D which will be filmed alongside ‘Africa’, the BBC’s forthcoming major landmark television series. Africa 3D will also be in partnership with Evergreen Films.
Global distribution for both films will be handled by indie sales and financing powerhouse IM Global, which will begin international sales on Walking With Dinosaurs 3D at the forthcoming American Film Market in Santa Monica. At AFM, IM Global will also launch worldwide sales of BBC Earth’s documentary feature Life which is in post-production and will be released theatrically during 2011.
Life is an imaginative and vividly captured series of stories from the animal kingdom that follows the full cycle of animal life to the birth of the next generation. Co-Directed by Mike Gunton (Yellowstone, Life on Air) and Martha Holmes (The Blue Planet, Life in the Freezer) and produced by Magic Light Pictures’ Martin Pope and Michael Rose, the film is inspired by the award winning TV series of the same name which has been broadcast in 50 countries and in the U.S. garnered more than 75 million viewers. BBC Earth’s previous feature film Earth grossed $119 million worldwide when it was released theatrically in 2007.
Walking With Dinosaurs broke new ground when it was first broadcast in 1999, accumulating over 700 million viewers worldwide and followed by three subsequent specials. The franchise has since spawned over 70 licensed publications, consumer and educational products around the world including a live arena show that has grossed more than $200 million in the past three years. The narrative of the feature tells the heartwarming story of a migrating dinosaur family, torn apart and then reunited during the Cretaceous period 70 million years ago. The film will use groundbreaking LIDAR (Light, Detection and Ranging) technology to combine live action and animation in new ways, as well as groundbreaking 3D camera and pre-vis systems to create never before seen levels of invisibility between the live action and CGI worlds.
Marcus Arthur, BBC Worldwide’s Managing Director of Global Brands, said, “By partnering with Reliance Big Entertainment we have the opportunity to realize a long held ambition of making BBC Earth 3D feature films. Earth demonstrated the huge appetite of audiences for quality natural history filmmaking and the 3D experience of Walking with Dinosaurs and Africa will allow audiences to immerse themselves in our incredible content as never before.”
The deal was negotiated over several months by BBC Worldwide’s Managing Director, Global Brands Marcus Arthur and BBC Earth Director Amanda Hill across from IM Global CEO Stuart Ford and his board colleague Deepak Nayar on behalf of Reliance and IM Global. Miles Ketley, a partner in London law firm Wiggin & Co negotiated on behalf of BBC Worldwide and Reliance/IM Global were advised by Jackie Hurt a partner in London law firm Olswang.
New Zealand Bats Against Pakistan In The Third ODI
November 9, 2009 by Trend PK
Filed under World News
New Zealand Bats Against Pakistan In The Third ODI: ABU DHABI: New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori won the toss and opted to bat in the third and final one-day international against Pakistan at the Abu Dhabi Stadium here on Monday.
New Zealand Bats Against Pakistan In The Third ODI:ABU DHABI: New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori won the toss and opted to bat in the third and final one-day international against Pakistan at the Abu Dhabi Stadium here on Monday.
The three-match series is tied at 1-1 after Pakistan won the first match by 138 runs on Tuesday before New Zealand came back by winning the second by 64 runs on Friday.
New Zealand remained unchanged from the last match but Pakistan left out middle-order batsman Mohammad Yousuf to bring back teenager Umer Akmal, who played the first match.
After the one-day series the teams will move to Dubai where they play two Twenty20 matches on November 12 and 13.
Squads:
Pakistan: Younus Khan (capt), Salman Butt, Khalid Latif, Umer Akmal, Shoaib Malik, Kamran Akmal, Abdul Razzaq, Shahid Afridi, Saeed Ajmal, Umar Gul, Mohammad Aamir
New Zealand: Daniel Vettori (capt), Brendon McCullum, Aaron Redmond, Martin Guptill, Ross Taylor, Scott Styris, Jacob Oram, Neil Broom, Tim Southee, Shane Bond, Kyle Mills
Umpires: Bruce Oxenford (AUS), Nadeem Ghouri (PAK)
Tv Umpire: Zameer Haider (PAK)
Match Referee: Andy Pycroft (ZIM)
University Of Alaska Anchorage
November 9, 2009 by Trend PK
Filed under World News
University Of Alaska Anchorage: I grew up in Alaska. I didn’t know there were dinosaurs up here, and I admit my perception of dinosaurs has been largely formed by the movies.
University Of Alaska Anchorage:I grew up in Alaska. I didn’t know there were dinosaurs up here, and I admit my perception of dinosaurs has been largely formed by the movies. That changed at this weekend’s Rock and Mineral Show, which ended Sunday night.
We’ve seen the skeletons, looked at the big teeth, and watched the movies with giant lizards roaming tropical lands, so you might not expect to find dinosaurs in Alaska. And for many years scientists agreed: it was too cold.
In 1961 a dinosaur bone was found near the Colville River on the North Slope. It was thought to be a mammoth bone, and it wasn’t until the mid-1980s that they figured out what they had. Since then, thousands of dinosaur bones have been discovered.
“And what’s so exciting about Alaska is we have more dinosaurs, high-latitude dinosaurs in our state than all the other high-latitude localities combined,” said University of Alaska Anchorage geologist Anna Pasch.
During the Cretaceous period, average temperatures in Alaska ranged between 30 and 60 degrees — warmer than today, but by no means tropical. Finding dinosaurs in Alaska helped create a revolution of sorts in the way paleontologists thought about dinosaurs.
“These were very, very hotly debated questions in the sixties, whether they were hot or cold blooded,” Pasch said. “And now there is no question that dinosaurs were very active, and they had to have mechanisms to survive in colder environments.”
Since that first discovery, a dozen different types of dinosaurs have been found in Alaska, including the tooth of a T-rex. Though the names are familiar, polar dinosaurs were a little different from those who roamed the tropics. Their eyes were bigger to accommodate the lack of light and there’s evidence that they hibernated.
more info:http://www.ktuu.com/Global/story.asp?S=11467127

