The producer credited with helping to launch the careers of Vincent Ward and Jane Campion says he would sell his films for $2 on the internet if it would get them to fans when they wanted them.

John Maynard wants New Zealand to pioneer an iTunes-like system for movies - getting films out quickly and cheaply on the internet to stop people turning to illegal downloads.

The Australasian producer, who has worked on two movies each by Ward and Campion, said the growth of iTunes had slowed illegal downloads of music. This week he told the Screen Production and Development Association (Spada) conference New Zealand could lead the world by adopting a similar model for films.

"It could happen in New Zealand - it's one of the few places in the world I know that can change very, very quickly culturally," he said. "I would rather sell my movies for $2 a download and make it available to its audience" than have people steal them.

In April, the Motion Pictures Association representative in New Zealand - Tony Eaton of the New Zealand Federation Against Copyright Theft - recommended Hollywood studios create a New Zealand website for legally downloading movies to reduce internet piracy.

Yesterday, Mr Eaton told the Spada conference that more than a third of the $6 billion film studios lost to piracy in 2005 was from illegal internet downloads.

He said the new James Bond film Quantum of Solace had been illegally downloaded 3.2 million times - before its New Zealand release.

Until recently, the federation's focus has been on pirated DVDs. Demand for movie downloads in New Zealand has been stunted by slow broadband speeds. But it is expected to increase when broadband gets faster.

Sony Pictures New Zealand general manager Andrew Cornwell said music downloads were easier to sell because they downloaded much faster than films.

There is a huge battle brewing between film producers, ISP's, Copyright Law and the consumer. Hopefully, the consumer will win.

 
 

For many North Americans, Danny Boyle’s Slumdog Millionaire will be the first slice of cinema sampled from the location of the world’s largest film industry.



The city formerly known as Bombay, India – Mumbai - is home to Bollywood, a massive film industry that cranks out twice as many films annually as Hollywood. But it is only courtesy of a 52-year-old Englishman that a Mumbai movie is finally connecting with the average North American movie fan, via film festival acclaim, critical raves and growing Oscar buzz. "[Mumbai] is just coming at you the whole time and you can't control any of it," says Slumdog Millionaire director Danny Boyle of the world’s fifth most populous metropolitan area during a recent interview with FilmStew in San Francisco. "You can try. You can futilely try to control it and you'll end up with rubbish." "What you've got to do is just embrace how out of control it is and how impossible it is apparently to find a pattern in anything, but if you do trust it, there is a pattern there," he continues. "It does work. Against all the odds, it does work and you will find it eventually. The country gives it to you back eventually.” “You start work, and you think, 'We're never going to get this. We're never going to get anything done today.' By 4 o'clock in the afternoon, you've got everything you've ever wanted."  


The story of a teenager from Mumbai's slums who makes the most of an appearance on the Indian edition of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?, Boyle's heartfelt drama (co-directed with local Loveleen Tandan) has been creating a stir ever since its world premiere at August's Telluride Film Festival. It went on to win Audience Awards at the Toronto International, Chicago and Austin Film Festivals and has been nominated for six British Independent Film Awards, including Best Director, Best Screenplay and Best Independent Film. Harrow native Dev Patel, who received a British Independent Film Award nomination for Most Promising Newcomer, plays Jamal, the 18-year-old accused of cheating when he gets to within one answer of winning the quiz show. Boyle's original plan was to cast all of his actors in India, but he ran into trouble when it came to casting Jamal. Not that the young Indian actors he saw weren't good actors. "But they are all built like bodybuilders," Boyle reveals. "If you want to get on in Bollywood, you have to look like a hero. You've got to be able to take the shirt off and kind of like dance in the waterfall in Switzerland. They all looked wrong. I didn't want anybody that looked like that." It was Boyle's 17-year-old daughter who clued him to Patel, a co-star on a favorite TV show, the British series Skins. "Dev plays a comic character in it. He was good and he looked dead right for me. He was kind of nothing looking, not particularly handsome, a bit scrawny, and I kind of liked that look. And I met him, and he was cool," Boyle recalls. In the film, Jamal faces arrest and even torture when the powers that be decide that there is no way that an uneducated Mumbai "slumdog" could possibly know so many correct answers. The only way to clear himself is to tell his life's story, the source of his knowledge springing directly from hard experience. It was those twin conceits of the game show and personal history revealed and taking on nearly epic proportions that enthralled Boyle when he first read Beaufoy's screenplay. "I love the idea of India, that it was portrait of India that was clearly changing,” he explains. “It’s such an extraordinary culture and history and yet it's clearly changing all the time. Those are things I responded to, that I jumped at." "I've always wanted to make a film about seeing a person age," he adds. "Normally, it's done, they're 80 and they're on their deathbed and they're reminiscing, and they're trapped by their memories really in a way. But he's 18 and he's got a fistful of memories, and they set him free really, because he's got his whole life in front of him really. I loved that fact, that was quite kind of radical, and I thought, quite cool. I'd never seen that before."