Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Kenneth Branagh to helm Henning Mankell's "Italian Shoes" picture

Variety


Yellow Bird steps out with 'Italian Shoes'

Kenneth Branagh to helm Left Bank project

 
LONDON -- Swedish shingle Yellow Bird, the outfit behind the original "Millennium" movie trilogy, is in development with Andy Harries' Left Bank Pictures to make a feature pic of Henning Mankell's "Italian Shoes," set to be helmed by Kenneth Branagh.
 
Yellow Bird producer Marianne Gray, whose shingle spawned the Swedish-language version of "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo" and the other two titles in the "Millennium" series, confirmed the news to Variety on Wednesday.

"Italian Shoes," based on the tome by Swedish crime scribe Mankell and adapted by Richard Cottan, follows the tale of an elderly man -- a former surgeon -- who is reunited with an old flame whom he had abandoned many years ago.

When he discovers she is dying of cancer, she asks him to fulfil a promise that he made to her nearly 40 years ago -- to take her to a pool in the middle of the northern forests where he had spent a day with his father when he was young.

Mankell, Yellow Bird and Left Bank previously worked together on the English-language adaptation of crime-thriller series "Wallander" for the BBC.

Left Bank received £32,375 ($50,197) in development funding for "Italian Shoes" in June from the British Film Institute.

The project is a good fit for Yellow Bird as the company's philosophy is largely to find content from books and series of books for film and television.

The outfit, which retains a first-look deal on Mankell's books, also hopes to make a feature pic based on his World War I-set tome "Depths."

Gray also said that Yellow Bird was in talks for a U.S version of Norwegian scribe Jo Nesbo's new TV series "Occupied."

The shingle recently made a feature version of the author's tome "Headhunters" for the big screen, which is being adapted into a U.S. version by Summit Entertainment.

Gray, who was in Blighty to deliver the keynote speech at Film London's fifth Production Finance Market, spoke to an audience in London's Tower Bridge Hilton Hotel about the shingle's activity in the marketplace, including its co-production pacts.

Gray said that increasing financial and creative opportunities in the European marketplace is resulting in a huge eagerness from U.S. industryites to want to work with Europeans.

"They are telling me international is the new DVD," she told Variety. "It's hard times everywhere with the global economy, and I think people really understand now that projects have to be successful outside of the U.S. and not just in the U.S. in order to survive and be profitable.

"I think when you work in the U.S. it's hard to understand how it works in other markets and how different it is. But I think that people are more open also to working in Europe and actually setting projects in Europe."

Film London's Production Film Market, which takes place Oct. 19-20, will see more than 60 producers present projects with almost $338 million of production value.

Of the 57 financiers attending, there are leading private equity firms, financiers, sales companies, distributors and TV execs.

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