Portal will feature eight ‘screens’.
Colombian theatrical distributor Cineplex has set the first two premieres for the launch of its virtual cinema portal CineplayMAX, offering online screenings of features across Latin America and, in some cases, the world.
The portal will have eight ‘screens,’ with titles available at launch to include two premieres and five features that have recently appeared in cinemas.
Films that have previously been in cinemas will screen on the portal in the usual transactional VoD (TVoD) window 45-60 days after theatrical release. Titles will be geo-blocked for markets where Cineplay does not have the rights or has made a prior deal.
Colombian theatrical distributor Cineplex has set the first two premieres for the launch of its virtual cinema portal CineplayMAX, offering online screenings of features across Latin America and, in some cases, the world.
The portal will have eight ‘screens,’ with titles available at launch to include two premieres and five features that have recently appeared in cinemas.
Films that have previously been in cinemas will screen on the portal in the usual transactional VoD (TVoD) window 45-60 days after theatrical release. Titles will be geo-blocked for markets where Cineplay does not have the rights or has made a prior deal.
- 7/31/2020
- by 31¦John Hazelton¦0¦
- ScreenDaily
Our queen Kim Kardashian may have been born and raised in SoCal, but she still has Armenian blood running through her veins. The reality star has been super outspoken about how important her Armenian culture is to her, and no matter how famous she's gotten, she's never lost sight of who she really is. When it came to celebrating her birthday in October 2017, Kim gathered all of her family and friends at Carousel in La. The Armenian restaurant has been a favorite of her family's since she was a little girl, and she was thrilled to receive an "Armenian style" white cake with her photo on it for the special occasion. A post shared by Kim Kardashian Snapchats...
- 3/14/2018
- by Emy LaCroix
- Life and Style
Arlen Schumer Dec 30, 2018
You have crossed over into a dimension of perfect TV. The annual Twilight Zone New Year's Eve Marathon is here. We look at how it all began.
It's a New Year’s Eve tradition that has outlasted Dick Clark, and like the ball dropping in Times Square, as eagerly anticipated...by Twilight Zone fans, that is!
The New Year’s Eve Twilight Zone Marathon on Syfy (where it has been running the past couple of years after several decades on regional syndicated stations), kicks off on December 31st and runs until January 2nd at 4 am. If you're looking for favorite episodes, the full schedule can be found here.
Twilight Zone fans tend to break down the series’ 156 episodes into “good ones” and “bad ones,” the inevitable wheat/chaff ratio resulting from churning out any weekly television series (and an anthology one at that), a format Serling honed...
You have crossed over into a dimension of perfect TV. The annual Twilight Zone New Year's Eve Marathon is here. We look at how it all began.
It's a New Year’s Eve tradition that has outlasted Dick Clark, and like the ball dropping in Times Square, as eagerly anticipated...by Twilight Zone fans, that is!
The New Year’s Eve Twilight Zone Marathon on Syfy (where it has been running the past couple of years after several decades on regional syndicated stations), kicks off on December 31st and runs until January 2nd at 4 am. If you're looking for favorite episodes, the full schedule can be found here.
Twilight Zone fans tend to break down the series’ 156 episodes into “good ones” and “bad ones,” the inevitable wheat/chaff ratio resulting from churning out any weekly television series (and an anthology one at that), a format Serling honed...
- 12/30/2013
- Den of Geek
TORONTO -- Jealousy's a killer, albeit not in any of the conventional ways, in the new import from South Korea's Kim Ki-duk. Like an O. Henry tale with a nasty modern edge, Time is more accessible than some of the filmmaker's more extreme work, and should fare better at the box office.
Ji-woo's girlfriend Seh-hee has a pathological fear of losing him to another woman. She worries so much about his having grown tired of her body that in one sad scene she encourages him to imagine she's someone else when they make love. Going a good deal further, this pretty girl eventually decides to transform herself physically. Vanishing mysteriously from Ji-woo's life, she has her face remade in a gory plastic surgery so she can meet Ji-woo again (after the scars heal) in a fresh new package.
But a six-month recovery period is a long time for a jealous woman to wait, and as Ji-woo works through his heartbreak -- intending to stay faithful to the girl who left him, but occasionally stumbling -- Time uses some slasher-flick-style POV camerawork to suggest he is being stalked. If the sick theme of commercialized "aesthetic surgery" isn't unsettling enough, we begin to suspect that Time is becoming an outright horror film.
Shades of Vertigo, Ji-woo eventually falls in love a second time with the same woman. It takes Seh-hee (now going by the name See-hee) a while to realize what the audience immediately understood: She's in a no-win situation -- she will feel betrayed if her old love moves on, and rejected if he stays true to his vanished love. Her attempts to solve this problem inevitably make it worse.
For a film with quite a few itchy moments -- including the stick-in-the-brain image of a woman wearing what amounts to a death mask of her former face -- Kim brings more warmth and humor into Time than he has in some of his best-known work. Motifs centering on familiar locations help: an island filled with strange sculptures serves as an oasis where nascent romantic sentiments can transfer innocently from one object to another; the cafe that Ji-woo haunts becomes the setting for so many comic altercations that one wonders why he and Seh-hee aren't banned for life.
While providing an obvious if scathing critique of the modern world's obsession with beauty at all costs (even her plastic surgeon admits to Seh-hee "I don't know if I can make you any prettier"), Kim finds ageless causes for what some see as a byproduct of capitalism. Seh-hee isn't made mad by fashion magazines featuring airbrushed models; she just looks to them for an answer when overtaken by the primal fear of losing a love that isn't in jeopardy. Kim has found an entertaining vehicle for one of the oldest tragedies known to man, and executed the scenario with finesse.
TIME (SHI GAN)
No U.S. Distributor
Kim Ki-duk Film
Credits:
Director: Kim Ki-duk
Writer: Kim Ki-duk
Producer: Kim Ki-duk
Executive producer: Michio Suzuki
Director of photography: Sung Jong-moo
Production designer: Choi Keun-woo
Music: Noh Hyung-woo
Editor: Kim Ki-duk.
Cast: Ji-woo: Ha Jung-woo
Seh-hee: Park Ji-yun
See-hee: Sung Hyun-ah
No MPAA rating
Running time -- 97 minutes...
Ji-woo's girlfriend Seh-hee has a pathological fear of losing him to another woman. She worries so much about his having grown tired of her body that in one sad scene she encourages him to imagine she's someone else when they make love. Going a good deal further, this pretty girl eventually decides to transform herself physically. Vanishing mysteriously from Ji-woo's life, she has her face remade in a gory plastic surgery so she can meet Ji-woo again (after the scars heal) in a fresh new package.
But a six-month recovery period is a long time for a jealous woman to wait, and as Ji-woo works through his heartbreak -- intending to stay faithful to the girl who left him, but occasionally stumbling -- Time uses some slasher-flick-style POV camerawork to suggest he is being stalked. If the sick theme of commercialized "aesthetic surgery" isn't unsettling enough, we begin to suspect that Time is becoming an outright horror film.
Shades of Vertigo, Ji-woo eventually falls in love a second time with the same woman. It takes Seh-hee (now going by the name See-hee) a while to realize what the audience immediately understood: She's in a no-win situation -- she will feel betrayed if her old love moves on, and rejected if he stays true to his vanished love. Her attempts to solve this problem inevitably make it worse.
For a film with quite a few itchy moments -- including the stick-in-the-brain image of a woman wearing what amounts to a death mask of her former face -- Kim brings more warmth and humor into Time than he has in some of his best-known work. Motifs centering on familiar locations help: an island filled with strange sculptures serves as an oasis where nascent romantic sentiments can transfer innocently from one object to another; the cafe that Ji-woo haunts becomes the setting for so many comic altercations that one wonders why he and Seh-hee aren't banned for life.
While providing an obvious if scathing critique of the modern world's obsession with beauty at all costs (even her plastic surgeon admits to Seh-hee "I don't know if I can make you any prettier"), Kim finds ageless causes for what some see as a byproduct of capitalism. Seh-hee isn't made mad by fashion magazines featuring airbrushed models; she just looks to them for an answer when overtaken by the primal fear of losing a love that isn't in jeopardy. Kim has found an entertaining vehicle for one of the oldest tragedies known to man, and executed the scenario with finesse.
TIME (SHI GAN)
No U.S. Distributor
Kim Ki-duk Film
Credits:
Director: Kim Ki-duk
Writer: Kim Ki-duk
Producer: Kim Ki-duk
Executive producer: Michio Suzuki
Director of photography: Sung Jong-moo
Production designer: Choi Keun-woo
Music: Noh Hyung-woo
Editor: Kim Ki-duk.
Cast: Ji-woo: Ha Jung-woo
Seh-hee: Park Ji-yun
See-hee: Sung Hyun-ah
No MPAA rating
Running time -- 97 minutes...
- 9/15/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
MOSCOW -- Korean director Ki-duk Kim's latest film, Time, will open the 41st edition of the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival on June 30, organizers announced Thursday. Kim -- whose films have proved big hits with audiences at the Czech festival over recent years -- will be in the Bohemian spa town for his third visit to the festival to personally present the world premiere of his film. A story of a young couple who test their relationship by changing their appearances to refresh their passion, Time upholds Kim's reputation as one of the modern film world's most original story tellers, the festival said. Added Kim in the statement: "Among numerous festivals, the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival definitely (has) the purest and most genuine spirit for film admirers."...
- 5/19/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
MOSCOW -- Korean director Ki-duk Kim's latest film, Time, will open the 41st edition of the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival on June 30, organizers announced Thursday. Kim -- whose films have proved big hits with audiences at the Czech festival over recent years -- will be in the Bohemian spa town for his third visit to the festival to personally present the world premiere of his film. A story of a young couple who test their relationship by changing their appearances to refresh their passion, Time upholds Kim's reputation as one of the modern film world's most original story tellers, the festival said. Added Kim in the statement: "Among numerous festivals, the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival definitely (has) the purest and most genuine spirit for film admirers."...
- 5/19/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
MOSCOW -- Korean director Ki-duk Kim's latest film, Time, will open the 41st edition of the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival on June 30, organizers announced Thursday. Kim -- whose films have proved big hits with audiences at the Czech festival over recent years -- will be in the Bohemian spa town for his third visit to the festival to personally present the world premiere of his film. A story of a young couple who test their relationship by changing their appearances to refresh their passion, Time upholds Kim's reputation as one of the modern film world's most original story tellers, the festival said. Added Kim in the statement: "Among numerous festivals, the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival definitely (has) the purest and most genuine spirit for film admirers."...
- 5/18/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
MOSCOW -- Korean director Ki-duk Kim's latest film, Time, will open the 41st edition of the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival on June 30, organizers announced Thursday. Kim -- whose films have proved big hits with audiences at the Czech festival over recent years -- will be in the Bohemian spa town for his third visit to the festival to personally present the world premiere of his film. A story of a young couple who test their relationship by changing their appearances to refresh their passion, Time upholds Kim's reputation as one of the modern film world's most original story tellers, the festival said. Added Kim in the statement: "Among numerous festivals, the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival definitely (has) the purest and most genuine spirit for film admirers."...
- 5/18/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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