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Pomegranates and Myrrh
A romance of Palestinian origin that avoids making an argument about Middle East politics.

Sin Nombre

The Missing Person

The Messenger

New Directors pushes Sundance pics
'Amreeka,' 'Push' to open, close festival
2/12/09 3:29pm

Magnolia gets 'Arlen Faber' rights
Daniels, Graham star in Sundance selection
2/5/09 9:21pm

'Push' sparks legal battle
TWC, Lionsgate file lawsuits
2/5/09 10:38am

Lionsgate, Winfrey, Perry push 'Push'
Trio to release Sundance winner
2/2/09 12:01pm

Samuel Goldwyn buys 'Cold Souls'
Sundance entry stars Paul Giamatti
1/31/09 9:30am

E1 Films receives 'An Education'
Distributor takes U.K., Ireland rights
1/27/09 9:52am

Sundance sales up from 2008
Total spending up despite drop in deals
1/25/09 8:00pm

'Push' wins big at Sundance Awards
Teen drama nabs grand jury prize at festival
1/24/09 7:15pm

Slamdance winners announced
'Quiet Little Marriage,' 'Strongman' nab awards
1/23/09 9:30pm

Anchor Bay nabs Kutcher's 'Spread'
Rights go for around $3.5 million
1/23/09 5:45pm

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Posted: Thurs., Jan. 24, 2008, 5:59pm PT
Star projects underwhelm Sundance
Smaller films continue to generate buzz


While smaller projects and documentaries continued to generate buzz as Sundance started drawing to a close, star-driven vehicles like the Robert De Niro pic "What Just Happened?" and "The Great Buck Howard," which Tom Hanks produced and co-starred in, held all of the appeal of three-day-old fish.

"What Just Happened?" -- in particular -- entered the fest with a roar and a great deal of enthusiasm. Still, even a red-carpet appearance by De Niro himself could do little to prevent the insider Hollywood tale from leaving Park City with a whimper.

As for the overall deal mojo, although several films hovered on the verge of landing distributors, only one found a home in the past 24 hours. Sony Pictures Classics scooped up U.S. rights to the fest's dramatic competition entry "Frozen River," for low- to mid-six figures.

William Morris Independent repped the film, which was written and directed by tyro helmer Courtney Hunt and centered on a woman caught up in poverty and human smuggling in rural upstate New York.

Meanwhile, it was deja vu for a number of pics that remained in a holding pattern with interested buyers.

Distribution deals were expected for the Deep South-set drama "Ballast" and the Colin Farrell-narrated soccer documentary "Kicking It," which was acquired earlier in the fest by ESPN.

Three buyers were courting the Duplass brothers' relationship-themed comedy "Baghead," with another three possibly coming to the table. The Weinstein Co. circled the Russian-language fairy tale "Mermaid," but no deal had been inked by early evening.

The ensemble wine country drama "Bottle Shock," which unspooled nearly a week ago, fielded offers, as buyers were in play for Stacy Peralta's Crips and Bloods documentary.

Multiple buyers spent the day circling the feel-good drama "Phoebe in Wonderland" and the Spanish-language CG-laden "Sleep Dealer," which had IFC in the hunt.




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