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Thread: Kate

  1. #1
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    Kate

    Yet another female action lead. I'm liking this trend.

    Netflix Pre-empts ‘Kate’, Eyes April Start And $25M Budget For Female-Centric Action Script
    by Mike Fleming Jr
    October 19, 2017 9:36am


    Netflix

    EXCLUSIVE: On the heels of Ted Sarandos’ startling revelation to the financial community that Netflix aims to generate 80 feature films in 2018, the streaming service just took off the table a hot script by giving it basically a production commitment and a $25 million budget, sources said. Scripted by Umair Aleem, Kate is a hard action film with a female protagonist that sources said is evocative of Kill Bill and La Femme Nikita. The writer’s vision of the film is this: picture Cate Blanchett (who’s not attached) as Lee Marvin in a hard boiled action thriller about a woman who has 24 hours to solve her own murder. There is aggressive progress to production language in the deal and the project eyes a start date in April as Netflix quickly searches for the right director and star.

    Kate will be guided by the following producers: Atomic Blonde‘s Kelly McCormick, John Wick co-director David Leitch, and Bryan Unkeless, who produced The Hunger Games and the upcoming Toronto sensation I, Tonya with Margot Robbie. Clubhouse Pictures’ Scott Morgan will oversee it. I expect to see more of these kinds of deals, which traditionally get low to mid six-figures from studios that put them in development that can often take years to yield results, if they even get made. The market for material seems bound to change. If Netflix — which hasn’t been making original films long enough to have accumulated a backlog of development projects — is going to generate an annual volume three or four times what major studios do under film chief Scott Stuber, it can only rely so much on festival acquisitions. It will need good material fast, and so these kinds of deals on scripts that Netflix brass feels confident can be packaged should become more commonplace. I’ve heard this one is a pitch right down the middle of the plate. Another was Bright, the Max Landis-scripted sci-fi police procedural that David Ayer directed with Will Smith and Joel Edgerton starring. That deal, which was pegged at north of $90 million including the buyout of back end paydays for the top creatives, was considered disruptive when it happened. It won’t be the last of its kind if Netflix really wants to reach the level of output that Sarandos promised Wall Street.

    VERVE and attorney Cuffe Owens rep the scribe and brokered the package deal. The scribe co-wrote the 2015 Bruce Willis-starrer Extraction.

    The town is already talking about this deal and its possible ramifications. While for screenwriters this kind of deal is an alternative to the development hell that often befalls specs and pitches, Netflix’s great challenge will be quality control.

    “The normal major studio has six to 10 executives working on eight to 12 movies at a time,” said one exec at a major. “If there are five to 10 executives at Netflix, can they really oversee eight to 13 movies a year through production? They will have to be very careful or talent will soon realize that a quick payday isn’t worth the result, if too many of the films are invisible and forgettable, and were jammed through with not enough oversight.”
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  2. #2
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    KATE | Official Trailer | Netflix

    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  3. #3
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    Bad buzz

    ‘Hard pass’: Netflix’s ‘Kate’ criticized for having a white protagonist who’s out to ‘kill Asians’
    Carl Samson

    August 10, 2021

    A number of social media users are saying no to a new action-adventure film from Netflix after learning that its white protagonist is headed for an Asian murder spree.

    What’s it about: “Kate,” which releases on Sept. 10, centers on a “ruthless criminal operative” who was poisoned and left with less than 24 hours to exact revenge on her enemies. In the process, she forms an “unexpected bond” with the daughter of one of her past victims.

    Mary Elizabeth Winstead, who received praises for her performance as Huntress in the film “Birds of Prey,” will play the lead role. As per Indie Wire, Netflix’s official synopsis states that Kate “uncharacteristically blows an assignment targeting a member of the yakuza in Tokyo,” which leads her to being poisoned.
    The film also stars Woody Harrelson as Kate’s handler. Other cast members include Miku Martineau, Tadanobu Asano, Michiel Huisman and Jun Kunimura.
    The action-adventure is helmed by French film director and visual effects artist Cedric Nicolas-Troyan. It is written by Umair Aleem and produced by Bryan Unkeless, Kelly McCormick and Patrick Newall, according to Entertainment Weekly.

    What critics are saying: “Kate” has received more positive comments as of this writing, with many thrilled to see the involvement of Japanese rock band BAND-MAID and Winstead’s return in an action role. However, some laid out reasons why the film is problematic, and they’re all based on the idea that the lead character — a white person — is killing Asians.

    One Twitter user accused the film of Asian fetishization: “Shame on Netflix for this. After this past year especially, to then release a film that is literally white people murdering Asian people based on stereotypes and fetishization??? Hard pass.”
    Another called out the presence of white lead characters in Asian settings: “Love Winstead. But stop putting white leads around Asian culture in an Asian city while every antagonist is Asian. And what’s Hollywood’s obsession with the Yakuza, like, ****.”
    Meanwhile, one simply wrote: “#StopAsianHate. That’s it. That’s the tweet.”
    threads
    Kate
    Stop Asian Hate
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

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