Friday, October 14, 2011
Lemon, AAA pact on wrestling photos
RIO P JANEIRO -- In the novel try to forge a Mexican super hero, Lemon Films' Fernando and Billy Rovzar have pacted with Mexico's Triple AAA wrestling federation to develop film and TV characteristics for Mexico based on AAA's stable of wrestlers. All films and tv shows are available in The the spanish language language-language. The Rovzar brothers and sisters and Lemon's mind of production Alexis Fridman have held preliminary conferences with AAA new content director Dorian Roldan to develop content, Fernando Rovzar mentioned within the Rio Festival market. "Mexico goes using a very difficult time due to the violence which we, as People in mexico, should have hope money for hard times,In . Rovzar told Variety. "Hope frequently will come in the kind of quite the hero. The U.S. is not any stranger with this: Captain America fought against against Nazis." AAA stages about 400 fights yearly, drawing crowds to every single fight of 15,000 to 40,000, with Mexico but regions of the U.S., Rovzar told Variety. "This is a massive audience." Any Lemon lucha libre film, Rovzar mentioned, will probably be "a great deal a lot more like Christopher Nolan's 'Batman' than Joel Schumacher's." Nolan's hero, Rovzar added, has his foot more inside the real existence -- a far greater fit for heroes within the context from the Mexican reality. While Rovzar mentioned Lemon's ideal is "Marvel, Electricity, because there's an enormous amount of figures," he added the Mexican masked super hero wouldn't, however, have super forces. "He basically has will, guts, heart." In the first transfer to large-screen Mexican wrestling filmmaking, Lemon and three other Mexican production houses - Mantarraya Films, Filmadora Nacional and Jaibol - teamed to produce "Rally Professional Camara versus. Caballera," a tournament of four shorts featuring AAA wrestlers which have been first examined at July's Guanajuato Festival in Mexico. Alberto Cortes won the jury prize with "Ya no se sabe..." Fernando Rovzar helmed Lemon's short "Girl Dynamite," starring Jennifer Blake, a Canadian wrestler who fights from Mexico. Creating its first film, action thriller "Matando cabos," in 2004, Lemon is marketing an frequently impressive production house style grafting U.S. genre and identifiable Mexican details. Lemon's latest movie, Beto Gomez's "Saving Private Perez," a Mexican dirty dozen Iraq war film, is among Mexico's two finest earners this year. Contact the number newsroom at news@variety.com
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