Variety: Indie’s ‘Dirty’ Trick

Duo to turn tome into laffer

By: Chris Gardner

The influence of Harvey Weinstein and Robert Redford on the indie film scene provided the intrigue in Peter Biskind’s 2004 “Down and Dirty Pictures: Miramax, Sundance and the Rise of Independent Film.” Now, helmer Ken Bowser and scribe Dean Craig are hoping the behind-the-scenes drama can provide enough fodder for a laffer.

Pair has teamed with PalmStar Entertainment to develop Biskind’s “Down and Dirty Pictures” in to a feature-length comedy, with Bowseraboard to direct and Craig signed to adapt.

PalmStar CEO and co-founder Kevin Frakes is producing. PalmStar chairman and co-founder Stephan Paternot will executive product with Tiwary Entertainment Group’s Sriram Das and Gary Kaplan.

Bowser directed a 2003 docubased on Biskin’s book “Easy Riders, Raging Bulls: How the Sex, Drugs and Rock ‘n’ Roll Generation Saved Hollywood.” He describes “Down and Dirty Pictures” as “outrageous” and “insane.”

Tome tracks the rise of independent film starting in the 1990s thanks to suck films as “Pulp Fiction” and “sex, lies, and videotape.” Weinstein and Redford, who figure prominently throughout the book, are credited with playing a key part in the success of the genre, though both are criticized for their personal dealings. A rep for Weinstein at the Weinstein Co. had no comment Tuesday.

” ‘Down and Dirty Pictures’ was so obviously a movie that I was a little amazed when we managed to snatch up the rights before the studios moved in,” Bowser said. “You couldn’t make these guys up. They’re like offensive linemen rampaging across the fields of Sundance sacking anyone who gets in their way, while the handsome movie star owner of the stadium smiles benevolently down on his charges. If that’s not a movie, I don’t know what is.”

Bowser has also done some work for “Saturday Night Live,” including helming “Saturday Night Live in the 80s: Lost & Found.” More recently , he wrote and produced a John Ford/John Wayne episode of “American Masters.” Craig wrote pics “Caffeine” and “Death at a Funeral.”

PalmStar opened shop last year. Shingle’s early credits include Theo Averginos “Fifty Pills,” which bowed at this year’s Tribeca Film Festival, and Pete Chatmon’s “Premium.”

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Variety: Bret Easton Ellis’ Lunar Park Optioned

By: Variety

PalmStar Entertainment has optioned Bret Easton Ellis’ latest novel, Lunar Park, says Variety.

'Lunar Park'

Lunar Park is Ellis’ most autobiographical work, in which the author-narrator is a narcissistic, self-pitying drug fiend who gets a shot at redemption when movie star Jayne Dennis, an old flame, offers to marry him. The deal is that he must now connect with Robby, the son he has shunned for 11 years.

Lunar Park will be the fifth of Ellis’ novels to be adapted to the big screen. Less Than Zero, American Psycho and The Rules of Attraction have all been released, and Glamorama is in development.

Variety: Dorian Missick, Zoe Saldana, Hill Harper

By: Justin Chang,
Dorian Missick (”Lucky Number Slevin”), Zoe Saldana (”Guess Who”), Hill Harper (”CSI: NY”), Frankie Faison (”In Good Company”), Tonya Pinkins (”Caroline, or Change”), Eva Pigford (”America’s Next Top Model”) and William Sadler (”The Shawshank Redemption”) have wrapped principal photography on “Premium.”

Produced by PalmStar Entertainment and Double 7 Film, urban romantic comedy stars Missick as a struggling actor fed up playing with stereotypical black roles. Pete Chatmon is writing and directing.

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