Variety
By Nick Vivarelli
April 1, 2016
In January, when Quentin Tarantino’s “The Hateful Eight”
launched in Italy at a special venue at Rome’s Cinecitta Studios equipped with
a 70mm projector, Raffaella Leone had reason to be particularly proud.
Leone Film Group, the company founded in 1989 by
spaghetti Western master Sergio Leone and now run by his children, Raffaella
and Andrea, is the Italian co-distributor of the film, shot in Ultra
Panavision. “It has a special meaning for us,” she says. “It takes us back to
our passion for a certain type of cinema.” Of course Tarantino is a huge fan of
her father.
The Leone Group is changing the dynamics of Italian
theatrical distribution. After signing an Italo output deal with DreamWorks
less than three years ago that propelled its expansion, it has stepped into a
theatrical distribution gap that opened when Silvio Berlusconi-owned Medusa and
pubcaster RAI’s Rai Cinema, both tied to broadcasters, began to focus more on
TV dramas and local movies.
“Three or four
years ago, we realized something was changing. Top-tier production companies in
Hollywood were sending us their lineups.”
Raffaella Leone
Up until 2012, Leone mainly had been distributing movies
for TV. Then “three or four years ago, we realized something was changing,” she
recounts. “Top-tier production companies in Hollywood were sending us their
lineups, and asking if we were interested.” Swiftly following the DreamWorks
deal, the Leones floated the company on the Milan stock market in December
2013. Soon after that came multiyear agreements with Lionsgate and the
Weinstein Co.
The Leone Group is currently teamed with Rai Cinema’s 01
Distribution as well as Medusa and Eagle Pictures as co-distributors on
different packages of titles, sharing costs and revenues.
Outside of these larger deals, Leone cherry-picks what’s
hot on the market. In Berlin it picked up “Suburbicon,” the upcoming George
Clooney-directed black comedy sold by Bloom. The company also has gone into
production, acquiring local shingle Lotus Prod., which made recent hit comedy
“Perfect Strangers.” Upcoming features by prominent local helmers Paolo
Virzi and Giuseppe Tornatore are in the pipeline. And
Leone will be branching out into high-end TV with “I Beati Paoli,” a Mafia
origins skein conceived by Tornatore, who will
direct the first episode.
Leone recently serviced the Rome shoot of Lionsgate’s
Keanu Reeves-starrer “John Wick 2,” then pacted with Cinecitta Studios to
jointly service Hollywood productions. She worked hard to lure “Wick 2” to
Cinecitta. “My father became who he was partly because at the time, they shot
international movies in Italy,” she says. Her aim now: “to co-produce with
Americans and Europeans, to give Italian directors more access to the
international market.”
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