Jasper M. de Gier will relaunch the company, which was declared insolvent 13 years ago.
The Dutch entrepreneur and investor Jasper M. de Gier has resurrected the former Neuer Markt player Helkon Media Ag to produce European feature films and TV series.
The Munich-based predecessor, which was founded in 1991 by the late Werner Koenig and Martin Heldmann and finally wound up in 2003 after prolonged insolvency proceedings, was launched this week in Berlin by de Gier’s Luxembourg-based financial investment company de Gier & Co.
De Gier had been working since 2007 on reviving the remnants of the former Helkon empire.
¨Our goal is to pick up where the old Helkon left off, i.e. to enable the new Helkon to connect to the success of its predecessor, which ran into difficulties after the tragic death of Werner Koenig in November 2000 and the collapse of the Neuer Markt,¨ said De Gier.
The reincarnation will focus on film production, film distribution...
The Dutch entrepreneur and investor Jasper M. de Gier has resurrected the former Neuer Markt player Helkon Media Ag to produce European feature films and TV series.
The Munich-based predecessor, which was founded in 1991 by the late Werner Koenig and Martin Heldmann and finally wound up in 2003 after prolonged insolvency proceedings, was launched this week in Berlin by de Gier’s Luxembourg-based financial investment company de Gier & Co.
De Gier had been working since 2007 on reviving the remnants of the former Helkon empire.
¨Our goal is to pick up where the old Helkon left off, i.e. to enable the new Helkon to connect to the success of its predecessor, which ran into difficulties after the tragic death of Werner Koenig in November 2000 and the collapse of the Neuer Markt,¨ said De Gier.
The reincarnation will focus on film production, film distribution...
- 2/2/2016
- by screen.berlin@googlemail.com (Martin Blaney)
- ScreenDaily
Our International Sales Agent (Isa) of the Day coverage resumed for this year's Cannes Film Festival. We feature successful, upcoming, innovative and trailblazing agents from around the world (during and after the festival) and cover the latest trends in sales and distribution. Beyond the numbers and deals, this segment will also share inspirational and unique stories of how these individuals have evolved and paved their way in the industry, and what they envision for the new waves in global cinema.
Picture Tree Films is an international sales and production company based in Berlin, and was created by Andreas Rothbauer and Alex Schulman in 2013. It had its first market presentations at Berlinale, as well as Cannes 2014. The years of experience in the film business and resourcefulness of this duo has enabled this relatively new company to ignite with full power, including numerous films launching with international releases and festival premiers, including Metal Head (Us release by Cinelicious Pics), Mary Queen of Scots (Us release by Mousetrap) , Victor "Young" Perez (Us release Synkronized), West (Us release Main Street Films) and the German blockbuster Fack Ju Goehte (Suck Me Shakespeer), which grossed 80 Million dollars at the German box office alone and will see its first international release in France, Italy, Spain, Eastern Europe, the Commonwealth of Independent States. and South Korea this fall.
nm2526725 autoAndreas Rothbauer[/link] shares Picture Tree's success, his experience, and his take on the transition and evolution of functionality in the industry.
Please share an overview of Picture Tree.
Picture Tree Films started over a year ago, and it's an integrated model of both production and sales. We've been developing our sales operation over the last 14 months, while at the same time allocating coproduction projects - our goal is two per year, and we primarily focus on English language projects, with countries like Canada, South Africa and Australia/New Zealand that fall under the respective coproduction treaty with Germany.
On the sales side, we do about 10-12 films per year. It's a mix of World Cinema and some German films with a crossover potential. With the coproduction projects that will also be sold by Picture Tree, we are also planning to complement our line-up with English-language films. In this respect, we're not restricted geographically.
My background is in sales and financing. I joined Beta Film (one of the biggest European television distributors and a former part of Kirch Media) in 2000 to build up their theatrical label Beta Cinema, and left to start Picture Tree in mid 2012.
Most of our films from the Berlin market will be released in the Us, like West (to be released by Main Street Films), Metal Head, which will be released by Cinelicious (a post production house that has worked with great talents, including Richard Linklater - learn more at Deadline Hollywood) and Raven Banner in Canada. Mary Queen of Scots will premiere at the MouseTrap Festival this year, and Synkronized (a company which falls under Millennium in North America) has picked up Victor "Young" Perez.
Upcoming titles of Pti that will launch at this year’s summer and autumn film festivals include A Hitman's Solitude Before the Shot, Therapy For a Vampire, Chrieg - At War, Pause and Mammal.
Where does your inspiration come from?
I grew up in a fairly small town, and after school when our parents were still at work, we would cruise around and hang out at the local cinema - the cinema was our babysitter. We befriended the older girls who worked there, and they let us watch as many films as we could. Film was a window into another world - geographically, culturally, but also psychologically and emotionally. It was eye opening to see people with similar troubles... as a kid, you think you're alone, and then suddenly things change when you see that other people have the same issues on the screen. Film can be healing in this way.
I was a journalist, a critic, and a film researcher. Early on, I was trying to be a director, but I figured out that all the people around me in film school were way more talented than me. I knew about the rest of it though - so I went on to find another way to be in this business.
I found that it's important for me not just to be on the content or creative side, but also to understand how films mechanically come together. It allows me to be in touch with both worlds, and it involves creativity as well.
What are you noticing about the latest trends in the industry and what's on the horizon?
This business is in a transitional period, and, more and more, I see distributors becoming content creators and producers. Smaller, more flexible units are starting to emerge, rather than the older, heavier business structures. I see more strategic alliances between companies without merging, and they're completely keeping their branding and functionality, which typically got lost in the big mergers of the past. It's about collaboration and smaller entities that need to have and retain their own specialized logic without having to compromise it because of corporate alliance.
Now is about being able to respond to all these new challenges, whether it's budgets, or new ways of distribution. Is it a film that goes theatrical everywhere, or does it have to go another route? Does it go straight to television or VOD, or will it be a day-and-date? Is it something that combines several different types of distribution? These are the questions we have to ask ourselves on regular basis.
Despite all the technological advances we're seeing in production and distribution, the physical experience of human interaction is necessary in film sales & distribution - there's nothing like looking each other in the eye and closing a deal, and this is why festivals and markets like Berlin, Cannes, Tiff or Afm will never disappear. They still fulfill an integral function, and it still comes down to this to make it happen.
Some people have criticized sales agents for trying to produce as well, and that the creative side of film is not their place. What's your take?
You have to make the right alliances with people. I don't think that a sales agent can't identify a good script, and there's no exclusivity for producers. We're all sellers in the film business. It's a big chain of selling, and it's how films get made. For us, it's like mixing the expertise of physical production with the expertise of financing and distribution with a fast moving and flexible business structure. From a content or creative point of view, I don't think that everybody can judge a script, but no one really has any exclusivity for judging it, better or worse. It’s mainly about people looking at it from a different angle with a different interest.
It is necessary that distribution and content creation come together, as integrated units, but every unit has to have its own logic. Otherwise, the whole decision-making process can become slower, and decisions can be compromised. The independent film business has become more competitive and fast paced, while the bottleneck of distribution has become tighter for various reasons. In that respect, it's always better that you create alliances, but without interfering with the logic of the others.
Learn more about the Picture Tree Films slate.
More About Picture Tree:
Picture Tree International GmbH was founded in December 2012 by Andreas Rothbauer and Alec Schulmann as an integrated world sales & production company with headquarters in Berlin.
The core business of Picture Tree International is worldwide licensing of film rights and the coproduction of international feature films in an integrated business model.
The company will handle an overall international sales line-up of up to eight films per year including two co-production projects.
Next to in-house co-productions and projects from its strategic partners, Picture Tree will secure it's film portfolio by 3rd party acquisitions from independent production companies.
Picture Tree Films is an international sales and production company based in Berlin, and was created by Andreas Rothbauer and Alex Schulman in 2013. It had its first market presentations at Berlinale, as well as Cannes 2014. The years of experience in the film business and resourcefulness of this duo has enabled this relatively new company to ignite with full power, including numerous films launching with international releases and festival premiers, including Metal Head (Us release by Cinelicious Pics), Mary Queen of Scots (Us release by Mousetrap) , Victor "Young" Perez (Us release Synkronized), West (Us release Main Street Films) and the German blockbuster Fack Ju Goehte (Suck Me Shakespeer), which grossed 80 Million dollars at the German box office alone and will see its first international release in France, Italy, Spain, Eastern Europe, the Commonwealth of Independent States. and South Korea this fall.
nm2526725 autoAndreas Rothbauer[/link] shares Picture Tree's success, his experience, and his take on the transition and evolution of functionality in the industry.
Please share an overview of Picture Tree.
Picture Tree Films started over a year ago, and it's an integrated model of both production and sales. We've been developing our sales operation over the last 14 months, while at the same time allocating coproduction projects - our goal is two per year, and we primarily focus on English language projects, with countries like Canada, South Africa and Australia/New Zealand that fall under the respective coproduction treaty with Germany.
On the sales side, we do about 10-12 films per year. It's a mix of World Cinema and some German films with a crossover potential. With the coproduction projects that will also be sold by Picture Tree, we are also planning to complement our line-up with English-language films. In this respect, we're not restricted geographically.
My background is in sales and financing. I joined Beta Film (one of the biggest European television distributors and a former part of Kirch Media) in 2000 to build up their theatrical label Beta Cinema, and left to start Picture Tree in mid 2012.
Most of our films from the Berlin market will be released in the Us, like West (to be released by Main Street Films), Metal Head, which will be released by Cinelicious (a post production house that has worked with great talents, including Richard Linklater - learn more at Deadline Hollywood) and Raven Banner in Canada. Mary Queen of Scots will premiere at the MouseTrap Festival this year, and Synkronized (a company which falls under Millennium in North America) has picked up Victor "Young" Perez.
Upcoming titles of Pti that will launch at this year’s summer and autumn film festivals include A Hitman's Solitude Before the Shot, Therapy For a Vampire, Chrieg - At War, Pause and Mammal.
Where does your inspiration come from?
I grew up in a fairly small town, and after school when our parents were still at work, we would cruise around and hang out at the local cinema - the cinema was our babysitter. We befriended the older girls who worked there, and they let us watch as many films as we could. Film was a window into another world - geographically, culturally, but also psychologically and emotionally. It was eye opening to see people with similar troubles... as a kid, you think you're alone, and then suddenly things change when you see that other people have the same issues on the screen. Film can be healing in this way.
I was a journalist, a critic, and a film researcher. Early on, I was trying to be a director, but I figured out that all the people around me in film school were way more talented than me. I knew about the rest of it though - so I went on to find another way to be in this business.
I found that it's important for me not just to be on the content or creative side, but also to understand how films mechanically come together. It allows me to be in touch with both worlds, and it involves creativity as well.
What are you noticing about the latest trends in the industry and what's on the horizon?
This business is in a transitional period, and, more and more, I see distributors becoming content creators and producers. Smaller, more flexible units are starting to emerge, rather than the older, heavier business structures. I see more strategic alliances between companies without merging, and they're completely keeping their branding and functionality, which typically got lost in the big mergers of the past. It's about collaboration and smaller entities that need to have and retain their own specialized logic without having to compromise it because of corporate alliance.
Now is about being able to respond to all these new challenges, whether it's budgets, or new ways of distribution. Is it a film that goes theatrical everywhere, or does it have to go another route? Does it go straight to television or VOD, or will it be a day-and-date? Is it something that combines several different types of distribution? These are the questions we have to ask ourselves on regular basis.
Despite all the technological advances we're seeing in production and distribution, the physical experience of human interaction is necessary in film sales & distribution - there's nothing like looking each other in the eye and closing a deal, and this is why festivals and markets like Berlin, Cannes, Tiff or Afm will never disappear. They still fulfill an integral function, and it still comes down to this to make it happen.
Some people have criticized sales agents for trying to produce as well, and that the creative side of film is not their place. What's your take?
You have to make the right alliances with people. I don't think that a sales agent can't identify a good script, and there's no exclusivity for producers. We're all sellers in the film business. It's a big chain of selling, and it's how films get made. For us, it's like mixing the expertise of physical production with the expertise of financing and distribution with a fast moving and flexible business structure. From a content or creative point of view, I don't think that everybody can judge a script, but no one really has any exclusivity for judging it, better or worse. It’s mainly about people looking at it from a different angle with a different interest.
It is necessary that distribution and content creation come together, as integrated units, but every unit has to have its own logic. Otherwise, the whole decision-making process can become slower, and decisions can be compromised. The independent film business has become more competitive and fast paced, while the bottleneck of distribution has become tighter for various reasons. In that respect, it's always better that you create alliances, but without interfering with the logic of the others.
Learn more about the Picture Tree Films slate.
More About Picture Tree:
Picture Tree International GmbH was founded in December 2012 by Andreas Rothbauer and Alec Schulmann as an integrated world sales & production company with headquarters in Berlin.
The core business of Picture Tree International is worldwide licensing of film rights and the coproduction of international feature films in an integrated business model.
The company will handle an overall international sales line-up of up to eight films per year including two co-production projects.
Next to in-house co-productions and projects from its strategic partners, Picture Tree will secure it's film portfolio by 3rd party acquisitions from independent production companies.
- 7/3/2014
- by Erin Grover
- Sydney's Buzz
German sales agents have revealed a raft of market premieres to be presented at the forthcoming American Film Market (Afm) (Nov 6-13).
Ida Martins’ Cologne-based Media Luna will have screenings of five new titles as market premieres:
Stijn Coninx’s romantic feel-good drama Marina, based on the childhood memories of the Italian-Belgian singer Rocco Granata;
Menno Meyjes’ psychological drama-thriller The Dinner, based on Herman Koch’s eponymous international bestseller, which had its world premiere at last month’s Toronto International Film Festival;
Jan Verheyen’s courtroom drama The Verdict, which received the Best Award at the Montreal World Film Festival;
Julia von Heinz’s German-Israeli romantic comedy Hanna’s Journey which celebrates its German premiere on at this week’s Hof Film Days and is nominated for the Millbrook Authors Prize;
Bettina Blümner’s coming of age drama Broken Glass Park which was awarded the Goethe Institut’s Youth and Children’s Film Prize at the Schlingel...
Ida Martins’ Cologne-based Media Luna will have screenings of five new titles as market premieres:
Stijn Coninx’s romantic feel-good drama Marina, based on the childhood memories of the Italian-Belgian singer Rocco Granata;
Menno Meyjes’ psychological drama-thriller The Dinner, based on Herman Koch’s eponymous international bestseller, which had its world premiere at last month’s Toronto International Film Festival;
Jan Verheyen’s courtroom drama The Verdict, which received the Best Award at the Montreal World Film Festival;
Julia von Heinz’s German-Israeli romantic comedy Hanna’s Journey which celebrates its German premiere on at this week’s Hof Film Days and is nominated for the Millbrook Authors Prize;
Bettina Blümner’s coming of age drama Broken Glass Park which was awarded the Goethe Institut’s Youth and Children’s Film Prize at the Schlingel...
- 10/23/2013
- by screen.berlin@googlemail.com (Martin Blaney)
- ScreenDaily
Film Review: Mongol
Opened: Friday, June 6 (Picturehouse). Production: CTB Film Co./Andreevskiy Flag Co/X-Filme Creative Pool/Kinofabrikia.
Long on ethnographic detail and visual splendor but short on narrative coherence, Sergei Bodrov's "Mongol" relates the story of Genghis Khan's early years in a plodding, uninspired fashion that doesn't bode well for the next two entries in a planned trilogy. The film, which snared a best foreign-language film Oscar nomination representing Kazakhstan, feels far longer than its two-hour running time.
Leading Japanese actor Tadanobu Asano plays the leading role of the famous 13th century conqueror, born with the name Temudgin and depicted here as a sensitive soul, loving husband and doting father. The screenplay, written by Bodrov and Arif Aliyev, begins the tale with Temudgin's childhood and his rude introduction to adult responsibilities when his tribal chief father is fatally poisoned by a rival.
It then proceeds to chart Temudgin's personal life -- including his devoted relationship to his wife, Borte (Kulan Chuluun), with whom he becomes betrothed while still a child -- and his rocky road to becoming emperor of the previously divided Mongol tribes, overcoming such early travails as enslavement and banishment along the way.
Despite the film's numerous tender moments, it's clearly the large-scale battle scenes that are its raison d'etre, and they are executed with suitable lavishness and raucous energy. Thankfully employing a minimum of CGI effects, the director lays on the violent gore in loving slo-mo fashion that should well appease action fans annoyed at having to read subtitles.
The film, which ends just as its central figure is about to begin his quest for world domination under his better-known moniker, is best appreciated for its rigorous attention to physical details, from its gorgeous locations to its detailed re-creation of its exotic milieu.Cast: Tadanobu Asano, Honglei Sun, Kulan Chuluun, Odnyam Odsuren, Aliya, Ba Sen, Amadul Mamadakov, Ba Yin. Director: Sergei Bodrov. Screenwriters: Sergie Bodrov, Arif Aliyev. Executive producers: Bob Berney, Bulat Galimgereyev, Alec Schulmann. Producers: Sergey Selyanov, Sergei Bodrov, Anton Melnik. Directors of photography: Sergey Trofimov, Rogier Stoffers. Production designer: Dashi Namdakov. Music: Tuomas Kantelinen. Costume designer: Karin Lohr. Editors: Aach Staenberg, Valdis Oskarsdottir. Rated PG-13, 121 minutes.
Long on ethnographic detail and visual splendor but short on narrative coherence, Sergei Bodrov's "Mongol" relates the story of Genghis Khan's early years in a plodding, uninspired fashion that doesn't bode well for the next two entries in a planned trilogy. The film, which snared a best foreign-language film Oscar nomination representing Kazakhstan, feels far longer than its two-hour running time.
Leading Japanese actor Tadanobu Asano plays the leading role of the famous 13th century conqueror, born with the name Temudgin and depicted here as a sensitive soul, loving husband and doting father. The screenplay, written by Bodrov and Arif Aliyev, begins the tale with Temudgin's childhood and his rude introduction to adult responsibilities when his tribal chief father is fatally poisoned by a rival.
It then proceeds to chart Temudgin's personal life -- including his devoted relationship to his wife, Borte (Kulan Chuluun), with whom he becomes betrothed while still a child -- and his rocky road to becoming emperor of the previously divided Mongol tribes, overcoming such early travails as enslavement and banishment along the way.
Despite the film's numerous tender moments, it's clearly the large-scale battle scenes that are its raison d'etre, and they are executed with suitable lavishness and raucous energy. Thankfully employing a minimum of CGI effects, the director lays on the violent gore in loving slo-mo fashion that should well appease action fans annoyed at having to read subtitles.
The film, which ends just as its central figure is about to begin his quest for world domination under his better-known moniker, is best appreciated for its rigorous attention to physical details, from its gorgeous locations to its detailed re-creation of its exotic milieu.Cast: Tadanobu Asano, Honglei Sun, Kulan Chuluun, Odnyam Odsuren, Aliya, Ba Sen, Amadul Mamadakov, Ba Yin. Director: Sergei Bodrov. Screenwriters: Sergie Bodrov, Arif Aliyev. Executive producers: Bob Berney, Bulat Galimgereyev, Alec Schulmann. Producers: Sergey Selyanov, Sergei Bodrov, Anton Melnik. Directors of photography: Sergey Trofimov, Rogier Stoffers. Production designer: Dashi Namdakov. Music: Tuomas Kantelinen. Costume designer: Karin Lohr. Editors: Aach Staenberg, Valdis Oskarsdottir. Rated PG-13, 121 minutes.
- 6/9/2008
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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