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Indie Weekend Box Office: "The Savages' and 'The Diving Bell' Draw Big Crowds

Filed under: Comedy », Documentary », Drama », Foreign Language », Independent », Romance », Box Office », Cinematical Indie »

Siblings dealing with their dying father trumped a man who can only move one eyelid in a box office battle between two award-worthy independent films. On the face of it, just because of their subject matter, neither would seem likely to draw big crowds, but excellent critical response and festival buzz appear to have paid off.

The Savages opened last Wednesday in four theaters in New York and Los Angeles and earned a very good $38,250 per screen, according to estimates compiled by Box Office Mojo. Laura Linney and Philip Seymour Hoffman star as the siblings, with Philip Bosco as their father; Tamara Jenkins directed. Cinematical's Kim Voynar wrote: "There are no easy answers in dealing with aging and dying parents, and Jenkins doesn't try to give us one; she simply takes us into the story of her fascinating characters, and the integrity with which she handles it makes it ring true throughout."

The "one eyelid" movie, The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, opened at three locations in New York and Los Angeles; weekend receipts reflect a strong per-screen average of $25,100. When he saw it at Cannes, our own James Rocchi said he found himself "on the edge of tears more than a few times ... [it's] a movie well worth seeing, with images and lessons that strike with power and don't let go."

Four other indies opened in one or two theaters in New York and/or Los Angeles, and Leonard Klady at Movie City News has their estimated per-screen earnings: Jessica Yu's doc Protagonist ($4,920; read Christopher Campbell's review); Miles Brandman's "darkly comic" Sex and Breakfast ($3,850), Robert Stone's doc Oswald's Ghost ($1,830; read my review), and Francesco Lucente's drama Badland ($1,220).

At least four other indies also opened, but financial results have not yet surfaced: ice hockey bio-pic The Rocket, prison escape thriller Chronicle of an Escape, foodie/lesbian romantic comedy Nina's Heavenly Delights and Christian Slater-starrer He Was a Quiet Man.

Jessica Yu's 'Protagonist' Goes Into Limited Release Next Month

Filed under: Documentary », Independent », Distribution », Cinematical Indie »

To watch Jessica Yu's Protagonist is to open up a large trunk and find a collection of old and new mementos and stories -- ones that seem disparate, yet come together into an intriguing whole -- puppets, pictures, videos, news footage, doodles and more. It's the kind of movie that you can watch a bunch of times, and still find new bits and connections to talk about. (Check out James Rocchi's review here.) The documentary, which was picked up by IFC at Sundance, is now getting a limited national release on September 28 -- just after it opens in New York on the 26th.

Yu, who won an Oscar for her short film Breathing Lessons, took an interesting approach to the film. She was originally asked to create a documentary about Euripides, the Greek playwright, but it then turned into a doc about people whose lives mimic Euripidean tragedy. While it sounds heavy and unapproachable, she actually brought together 4 seemingly opposite lives, and showed how they were similar with both heart-tugging emotion and laugh-worthy levity.

The lives are those of Mark Pierpont -- a Christian man struggling to come to terms with his sexuality (to the point that he even tried evangelism), Hans-Joachim Klein -- a German radical who found himself immersed in terrorism, Joe Loya -- a man whose troubling youth led him to rob banks and Mark Salzman -- a teen who becomes obsessed with martial arts. Yu uses Greek thematic chapters to tell their stories, and puppets to reenact some of the subject's memories. What I particularly loved was how much Salzman's story gave levity to the film (along with some more serious subject matter), but still fit right in with the progression of the story. It's definitely worth the time, so you should go and check it out next month.

All the Movies That Got Bought at Sundance!

Filed under: Deals », Sundance », Cinematical Indie »

To most movie fans, Sundance is this far-off and distant place they can't visit because, well, it's a pretty damn expensive trip -- and who the heck wants to spend a week on a mountain in January and not ski? The second question I'm always asked upon my return home from Sundance (after "What good movies did you see?") is "What famous people did you meet?" But the third question is usually something like "So when will I actually get to see these movies that everyone's been chattering about for the last two weeks?" And so I decided to collect all the acquisition news from this past festival and offer it all up on one convenient platter. I'll keep the chatter to a minimum, but if you want more info on a particular film, please do partake of all the links below.


Thanks to Variety, Movie City News, THR's RiskyBiz Blog, and our own Cine-maniacs (particularly Jette and Karina) for all the info. [Have any updates, additions or corrections? Leave 'em in the comments section please!] Added Bonus: After the jump you'll find a list of movies that already had North American distribution set up before they arrived at Sundance!
 
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