by Shannon Hood, Jul 24 2010 // 11:15 AM
Ryan Kavanaugh’s Relativity Media has announced that it has acquired Overture Film’s distribution and marketing operation from Starz LLC which allows for Relativity to become a full service studio. About 2/3 of the Overture staff will be moved over to Relativity during the transition, including executives Peter Adee and Kyle Davies, who will retain their titles.
Relativity recently struck a favorable deal with Netflix. The Overture film library was not part of the deal, it will stay under the Starz umbrella. Starz will also retain Anchor Bay home video.
Previously, Relativity has had to distribute its films through other companies, but now it will be able to distribute its own movies, including Rogue pictures. Relativity hopes to put out 25 titles by 2012.
Now Overture will release its last three films, Stone, Jack Goes Boating, and Let Me In through Relativity. Chris Albrecht, Starz LLC, expressed that an increased emphasis on original programming helped shape the decision. He also was pleased that many of Overture’s employees would be able to retain their jobs after the move.
Relativity is the company behind this weekend’s Salt.
Posted in: Announcements · News · Starz
Tagged: Announcements, Netflix, News, Overture, Relativity Media, Ryan Kavanaugh, Starz
by Cortney Zamm, Sep 28 2009 // 11:00 AM

WARNING: This review contains minor spoilers, when noted.
It feels like genuine sci-fi, humans vs. aliens films are few and far between these days. Which is why, after seeing the trailer for Pandorum, I was so excited. Fortunately, Pandorum won’t disappoint any die-hard fans of sci-fi, especially if you’re also a lover of the blend of sci-fi and horror.
Pandorum centers around Bower (played quite convincingly by Ben Foster), who wakes up from extended hypersleep on a spacecraft, with no idea who he is or why he’s on the ship. Soon after, Payton (Dennis Quaid), wakes up too, and they join forces to try to figure out where they are and why in the world they’re awake. As they gain back their memories, they realize they’re not the only humans on board…and that humans aren’t the only things on board.
What this film does well (and I was a bit skeptical about this at first) is it puts the viewer right into the action and horror, with little to no backstory or introduction into the world of the film. Other sci-fi/horror films, like Event Horizon or Sunshine, work to make you feel safe and secure in your surroundings before they start scaring you.
With Pandorum, we’re clueless and freaked out from the moment Bower wakes up, and we experience with him the same fear, anxiety, and confusion that he goes through as he explores the ship and learns about the horrors within. We’re on the same page as our main character throughout the whole film, and it makes his journey and discoveries ours as well.
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Posted in: Horror · Movies · Reviews · Sci-Fi
Tagged: Ben Foster, Christian Alvart, Dennis Quaid, Overture, Pandorum, Paul W.S. Anderson