A
Rotterdam VPRO Tiger winner, Suzhou
has been seen by all the American majors
represented at the Berlinale except for
one, who arrives today, said Bober.
Probably
the other Berlin standout, Forum entry
George
Washington, was picked up
by World Sales Christa Saredi on Monday.
Meanwhile,
Sony Pictures Classics (SPC) stealthily
took North America on FilmFour's Solomon
And Gaenor a day before its Oscar
nomination, and Denmark's Trust Film Sales
announced that Hrafn Gunnlaugsson's Witchcraft
(aka Flames Of Paradise) had sold
all media to NY's Zeitgeist.
Early
Berlin sales kicked, as is their wont,
at Fortissimo, with Clara Law's Cannes
hopeful The Goddess Of 1967
selling to France (Océan Films).
By Wednesday, action was heating up on
several key territories for Fortissimo's
Wong Kar-wai pic In The Mood For
Love.
Another
early market breakout, Gerardo Chijona's
Un Paraíso Bajo Las Estrellas
(A Paradise Under The Stars)
licensed Scandinavia, Switzerland, Germany
(Kinowelt) and all of Latin America.
Meanwhile, Manolito Gafotas,
from Spain's Filmax-Sogedasa, went to
Mexico and Scandinavia.
Bavaria
Film Int'l sold Veit Helmer's wordless
fairy tale, Tuvalu,
to Norway, Finland and Spain; Rosa von
Praunheim's The Einstein Of Sex
to Holland; and Ricardo Larrain's En
Entusiasmo (The Enthusiasm)
to Switzerland and Austria.
Jochen
Hick's Panorama entry No
One Sleeps went to Taiwan,
while Hannu Salunen's Down Hill
City went to Spain and France.
A
further hot Latin item looks like Francisco
Lombardi's steamy jungle brothel farce,
Pantaleón Y Las Visitadoras
(Captain Pantoja And The Special Service),
sold by Rene Fuentes-Chao's Cinevista,
which has good word from its early Berlin
screenings.