Tuesday, 9 February 2016

The Man From Uncle :Budget Vs. Box Office Comparison

Box office / business forThe Man from U.N.C.L.E. (2015) 

Budget
$75,000,000 (estimated)
Opening Weekend
$13,535,000 (USA) (17 August 2015)
$13,535,000 (USA) (16 August 2015) (3,638 Screens)
Gross
$45,372,659 (USA) (11 October 2015)
$45,256,316 (USA) (4 October 2015)
$45,049,134 (USA) (27 September 2015)
$44,531,628 (USA) (20 September 2015)
$43,101,801 (USA) (13 September 2015)
$39,374,148 (USA) (6 September 2015)
$34,142,762 (USA) (30 August 2015)
$26,534,214 (USA) (23 August 2015)
$13,535,000 (USA) (16 August 2015)
$109,645,109 (Worldwide)
Weekend Gross
$59,729 (USA) (11 October 2015) (158 Screens)
$130,405 (USA) (4 October 2015) (266 Screens)
$203,929 (USA) (27 September 2015) (323 Screens)
$754,274 (USA) (20 September 2015) (955 Screens)
$1,871,347 (USA) (13 September 2015) (1,656 Screens)
$3,445,000 (USA) (6 September 2015) (2,102 Screens)
$4,431,136 (USA) (30 August 2015) (2,706 Screens)
$7,317,374 (USA) (23 August 2015) (3,673 Screens)
$13,535,000 (USA) (16 August 2015) (3,638 Screens)
Filming Dates
9 September 2013

Technological specifications

Technical Specifications

Runtime1 hr 56 min (116 min)
Sound Mix |  |  | 
Color
Aspect Ratio2.35 : 1
CameraArri Alexa XT Plus, Panavision E-Series, Zeiss Super Speed and Cooke Varotal Lenses
Canon EOS 5D Mark II
Canon EOS C500, Panavision E-Series and Zeiss Super Speed Lenses
GoPro Hero 3+ Black
LaboratoryTechnicolor, London, UK (digital intermediate) (dailies)
Negative FormatCodex
Cinematographic ProcessARRIRAW (2.8K) (source format)
Canon RAW (4K) (source format) (some scenes)
Digital Intermediate (2K) (master format)
Panavision (anamorphic) (source format)
Printed Film Format35 mm (Kodak Vision 2383)
D-Cinema

The Digital Technology and special effects Used In The Film as Explained by John Mathieson

John Mathieson BSC Brings To Life… The Man From U.N.C.L.E




Two-time Oscar nominee John Mathieson BSC (Gladiator, The Phantom of the Opera, Robin Hood, 47 Ronin) recently completed work on The Man from U.N.C.L.E., an update of the stylish 1960s television series of the same name. The new film is an action-comedy in which Napoleon Solo (Henry Cavill) and Illya Kurykin (Armie Hammer) work to foil an atomic plot.


Regarding the film’s aesthetic, Mathieson says, “It’s definitely got that British invasion, early Bond sensibility – 60s pop art, a lot of plastic and polyester. Low-end technology, but good, futuristic ideals, and a good sense of design. The colours are very bold and synthetic, with E-type Jaguars and A-frame dresses. This film is kind of comic strip. At times we even split the frame. It’s slightly quirky.”

Directed by Guy Ritchie, The Man from U.N.C.L.E. was Mathieson’s second feature film foray into full digital cinematography. He enlisted top digital imaging technician Francesco Giardiello to help devise the workflow. 

“Now that the Codex is internal, in the camera where it should be, you don’t have the extra lump to carry around with you,” Mathieson says. “I know my crew – the ACs and the DIT – liked it. I’m more interested, of course, in the sensor. Frankly, I don’t care how it gets down the line, as long as it works.”

Mathieson says that he would have preferred to shoot film, but that the demise of some of the major film laboratories in the U.K. made it impossible. He did shoot a little bit of 16mm film on a wind-up Bolex (processed at Bucks Laboratories) for the opening of the film, to bridge some archival footage from the period with the main storyline. In some ways, the colours and textures of the period production design lent themselves to digital, he says. 

“Things were so boldly graphic, and slightly hyper-real at that time, so I rolled with it,” Mathieson says of the decision to shoot digital. “It’s quite ‘up’ and colourful. I applied myself to the job. It’s an echo of those times. I certainly tipped my hat to the painters – Warhol and Lichtenstein – and filmmakers of that time.”



He mentions classics of 1960s cinema such as Grand Prix (1966; cinematography by Lionel Lindon ASC), The Ipcress File (1965; Otto Heller BSC), and Billion Dollar Brain (1967; Billy Williams, BSC). In Grand Prix, John Frankenheimer made memorable use of the split frame technique. 

Fittingly for this Cold War-era tale, the optimistic and opulent tones of the West are contrasted by drab dinginess in the Soviet-dominated East. Meanwhile, Solo and Kurykin bicker about the relative merits of decadent capitalism and communism. Later, the scene changes to 1960s Rome, another playground for Oliver Scholl’s production design and Mathieson’s frame.

The aspect ratio was 2.40:1. The digital sensor made it easy for Mathieson to work with a wide range of lenses, including E-series Panavision anamorphics, anamorphic zooms, longer spherical zooms, and a Technovision conversion of an older Cooke lens that delivered lots of flares and blooming. Zooming within shots was considered part of the 60s flavour, as was a bit of vignetting at the edges, which was reasonably consistent in the longer focal lengths. Whatever the lens, the final image maintained the 2.40 frame. 

The Man from U.N.C.L.E. would require a workflow that would accommodate multiple sources, formats, and resolutions. Giardiello’s charge was to provide maximum image quality without unduly burdening the filmmakers, and to move toward a common colour space for the accurate development of the look of the movie. The colour pipeline and workflow was based on a “classic” 10-bit RGB Log-C to P3/709 conversion, plus custom integration. “I needed to create a workflow able to accommodate both flat and scope image formats, and a range of cameras,” says Giardiello. “We had to be able to put cameras everywhere, and overcrank if needed. This included aerial shots, underwater shots, body/car/bike rigs, et cetera, all running together. That meant a multitude of different colour/data pipelines that, without this workflow, we would have had to match and change on a shot-by-shot basis,
every day. 

“Since John decided to go with the ALEXA/ARRIRAW as the main camera/recording format, we chose the ALEXA M as the option for the aerial units, and the GoPro Hero 3 for some very specific ‘hidden camera’ action shots,” he says. “Then, for a couple of situations, we added a Canon 5D because we needed a small underwater camera setup with which we could still mount ‘proper’ lenses. In other situations, a Canon C500 with a Codex S recorder was used.”

Working with the Technicolor colour science department and Paul Ensby, Mathieson’s longtime colourist, the team generated a colour pipeline which was mainly based on the following three elements: an input LUT, when needed, for non-LOG-C sources; an ASC CDL (colour decision list), to define the look; and an output LUT, to better define look and the overall density and to establish the gamma/colour space. Standard ASC CDL values that Giardiello generated on set shot-by-shot were introduced into the pipeline and baked into the dailies and later, used in VFX and for the DI as a starting reference.




“We used a live, one-light grading system based on ASC-CDL values that allowed John to define his look from the set in a very accurate, but simple way,” Giardiello says. “It allowed John to fully convey his artistic intentions to the director and producers immediately, on-set. He could trust that the dailies would be as he intended without having to spend additional time after a long day of work, and he could build his cinematography using the on-set grading as an additional tool, as he would a light, a gel filter, a flag or camera movement. It’s a harmony that has been created not just to make things quicker, but to make them better.”

Giardiello has used Codex on every job for the past five years. “Codex has always guaranteed me a solid, fundamental and unrivalled instrument for my job,” says Giardiello. “Capturing ARRIRAW on Codex allowed us even more flexibility on The Man from U.N.C.L.E. Through Codex we customised and integrated different pipelines. We created an extremely solid and reliable colour pipeline, and also it allowed us to add our custom CAMERA FORMAT metadata field that defined how the many input sources would to be handled in post, smoothing out the various procedures needed to conform the movie.”

The DI was done at Technicolor in London with Ensby. “Paul has a light touch,” says Mathieson. “He’s got a very sensitive eye, and he doesn’t go to extremes, pulling things apart. I feel that when you do a DI, it should be like a piece of music, with rhythm. If you noodle with every shot, you’ll destroy all the caricature and imperfection in it, and it becomes normal. Imperfections give you your look as a DP. The danger of the moment is that there’s so much photography that looks the same. So much CGI work goes in, which has a certain look. 

“There’s an expression: imperfection is the essence of music,” he says. “You did what you thought was right on the set, at 3 o’clock in the morning. It might not be great but it was bold and it was instinctive and you were there at the time. It had a feel. Stay with that. I feel that’s a better way to go, and I enjoy that more.”

Mathieson is currently shooting Knights of the Roundtable: King Arthur with Guy Ritchie using Codex recording and media. Giardiello is the DIT. Mathieson credits Codex with bringing some order to the chaos in digital filmmaking workflows. 

“With film, we had a universal standard that worked,” Mathieson says. “With digital, there have been a lot of people driving wedges between us. It’s really alarming when things bounce all over the place. Codex said, ‘Enough of this nonsense.’ What we need is a common language. Codex has come forward as a standard, whichever camera you’re on.

Wednesday, 3 February 2016

The Production Companies:RatPac-Dune Entertainment/360 films

RatPac-Dune Entertainment

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
RatPac-Dune Entertainment, LLC
Formerly called
Dune Entertainment
Private
IndustryMotion pictures financing company
Founded2006; 10 years ago (in Los Angeles, California)
Founder
HeadquartersLos Angeles, California
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Divisions
  • Dune Entertainment, LLC
  • Dune Entertainment II, LLC
  • Dune Entertainment III, LLC
RatPac-Dune Entertainment or RatPac Entertainment, is an American motion picture financing company formed in a merger by producer-director Brett Ratner, his partner billionaire James Packer, and Dune Entertainment's Steven Mnuchin, which provides funds to a number of Warner Bros. films.[2][3][4][5] The company is the result of a 2013 merger between RatPac Entertainment and Dune Entertainment, following a collapse in negotiations between Dune and 20th Century Fox – which led the company to close a deal with Warner Bros. instead, replacing Legendary Pictures as Warners' key co-financing partner.[2][5][6] Dune had been co-financing Fox films since 2006.

Films[dit]e

Tuesday, 2 February 2016

The Production Companies:Davis Entertainment

Davis Entertainment

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Davis Entertainment is an American independent film production company, founded by John Davis in 1984.
Davis's three divisions–-feature film, independent film, and television-–develop and produce film and television projects for the major studios, independent distributors, networks and cable broadcasters. The Company has enjoyed a long-standing first-look production deal at 20th Century Fox, though also produces projects for all studios and mini-majors.

Filmography[edit]

  • Predator (1987)
  • License to Drive (1988)
  • Little Monsters (1989)
  • Curiosity Kills (1990) (TV movie)
  • Dangerous Passion (1990) (TV movie)
  • Silhouette (1990) (TV movie)
  • The Last of the Finest (1990)
  • Predator 2 (1990)
  • Shattered (1991)
  • Storyville (1992)
  • This Can't Be Love (1994) (TV movie)
  • Gunmen (1994)
  • Tears and Laughter: The Joan and Melissa Rivers Story (1994) (TV movie)
  • New Eden (1994) (TV movie)
  • Richie Rich (1994)
  • The Hunted (1995)
  • Waterworld (1995)
  • Denise Calls Up (1996)
  • The Chamber (1996)
  • Daylight (1996)
  • Out to Sea (1997)
  • Asteroid (1997) (TV movie)
  • Volcano: Fire on the Mountain (1997) (TV movie)
  • Miracle at Midnight (1998) (TV movie)
  • Dr. Dolittle (1998)
  • The Jesse Ventura Story (1999) (TV movie)
  • Dudley Do-Right (1999)
  • Little Richard (2000) (TV movie)
  • Heartbreakers (2001)
  • Dr. Dolittle 2 (2001)
  • Behind Enemy Lines (2001)
  • Life or Something Like It (2002)
  • Daddy Day Care (2003)
  • Paycheck (2003)
  • Garfield (2004)
  • I, Robot (2004)
  • Alien vs. Predator (2004)
  • First Daughter (2004)
  • Fat Albert (2004)
  • Flight of the Phoenix (2004)
  • Nadine in Date Land (2005) (TV movie)
  • Life is Ruff (2005) (TV movie)
  • When a Stranger Calls (2006)
  • Dr. Dolittle 3 (2006)
  • Garfield: A Tail of Two Kitties (2006)
  • Jump In (2006) (TV movie)
  • Eragon (2006)
  • Norbit (2007)
  • Daddy Day Camp (2007)
  • The Heartbreak Kid (2007)
  • Garfield Gets Real (2007)
  • Aliens vs. Predator: Requiem (2007)
  • The Express (2008)
  • Dr. Dolittle: Tail to the Chief (2008)
  • Garfield's Fun Fest (2008)
  • Dr. Dolittle: Million Dollar Mutts (2009)
  • Garfield's Pet Force (2009)
  • Marmaduke (2010)
  • Predators (2010)
  • Gulliver's Travels (2010)
  • Locke & Key (2011) (TV pilot)
  • Mr Popper's Penguins (2011)
  • A Little Bit of Heaven (2011)
  • Chronicle (2012)
  • The Blacklist (2013–present) (TV series)
  • Ironside (2013) (TV series)
  • Devil's Due (2014)
  • The Man from U.N.C.L.E (2015)
  • The Player (2015) (TV series)
  • Dr. Ken (2015) (TV series)
  • Victor Frankenstein (2015)
  • Joy (2015)

Upcoming

Highest-grossing films

Highest-grossing films
RankTitleYearDomestic grossNotes
1I, Robot2004$144,801,023Co-produced by Overbrook Entertainment
2Dr. Dolittle1998$144,156,605Co-produced by Friendly Films
3Dr. Dolittle 22001$112,952,899
4Daddy Day Care2003$104,297,061Co-produced by Revolution Studios
5Norbit2007$95,673,607Co-produced by DreamWorks Pictures and Tollin/Robbins Productions
6Waterworld1995$88,246,220Co-produced by Gordon Company and Licht/Mueller Film Corporation
7Alien Vs. Predator2004$80,282,231Co-produced by Brandywine Productions
8Garfield: The Movie2004$75,369,589Co-produced by Paws, Inc.
9Eragon2006$75,030,163
10Mr. Popper's Penguins2011$68,224,452Co-produced by Dune Entertainment