During the recent Sundance Film Festival, Summit Entertainment had bought the worldwide distribution rights to Once, the Irish musical that premiered at the festival. Now Summit has sold the film's North American distribution rights to Fox Searchlight. The price was under $1 million -- not bad for a movie that cost about $100K to make. Fox hasn't publicized a possible release date yet, except to say it will be released in 2007.Once was written and directed by John Carney, and won the World Cinema Audience Award for a dramatic film at Sundance this year. James Rocchi caught the film at Sundance and said it "isn't just the standard-issue struggling artist story it could have been, but, rather, a symbol for moving on, daring to be happy, daring to reach out." Once sounds like a charming love story, and hopefully, since a larger distributor like Fox Searchlight has the film, more of us will get the opportunity to see it later this year. Other movies Fox Searchlight bought at Sundance include the Adrienne Shelly film Waitress, Joshua and La Misma Luna (partnering with The Weinstein Company).

Want to see a satire about the Ten Commandments? ThinkFilm is hoping you will -- the company just partnered with City Lights Home Entertainment to buy
I went to a meeting tonight and returned home to discover that the industry wheeling and dealing at Sundance had produced a number of distribution deals. An LA Times article refers to
Just because everyone's been
Thought that Sundance had generated enough deals today? Think again! Here's another round of distribution news related to the festival.
Fox Searchlight has just purchased theatrical distribution rights to
Sometimes writing about distribution deals at Sundance makes me feel like I'm doing play-by-play. I can hear a Howard Cosell voice in my head saying, "And that's Harvey Weinstein out in front,
Since I studied screenwriting in college (which qualifies me to write this post) and have a number of acquaintances who are screenwriters, I hear all kinds of colorful and sometimes depressing anecdotes about film credits for screenwriters, Writers Guild of America arbitration, and who really worked on a certain screenplay. And now that some screenwriters are keeping blogs, I get to read even more of these stories. You hear these tales from all kinds of angles: the writer who originally was signed to rework the script for the remake of Movie X, but then a big-name director took over who rewrote the script enough to get the writer removed entirely from the credits of the film; the writer who doesn't quite understand why his name is still on the credits of Movie Q, since she knows at least three other people have worked on the script since she turned in a draft five years ago; the writer who has asked to have her name removed from Movie B, because it's so far removed from what she originally wrote, and the stink lines from the finished product radiate across the country.
If you feel like you've been hearing a lot of news lately about movie distribution deals, that's because the annual American Film Market (AFM) has been going on in Santa Monica for the past week. The 






