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The Details on 'The Details'

SUNDANCE FILMS

With the Oscar nominations out, 'The Details' takes center stage at Sundance. Nicole LaPorte on the latest deals.

We expect to be seeing a particularly jolly Harvey Weinstein (spotted Monday night at the premiere for The Details) around town, given that he woke up Tuesday morning to a dozen Oscar nominations for The King’s Speech, making it the official Oscar front-runner.But enough about high-falutin’ films about proper English people. We’re still enjoying the almost-dying embers of a festival that’s treated us to dope-smoking monkeys, a Kevin Smith implosion, and, last night, a very dark comedy—The Details, directed by Jacob Aaron Estes—in which Tobey Maguire, as a porn-loving baby doctor, is even more crazy-scary than he was in Brothers. Well, not quite, but we’re starting to wonder about him. The film also starred Elizabeth Banks, as his wife, and a fabulous if misplaced Laura Linney as their “wackadoodle” neighbor who wears sprigs of basil on her sweaters and (of course) is obsessed with cats. Basic story line: Baby Doctor’s marriage is falling apart, despite perfect home in a Utopian Seattle neighborhood, complete with shiny Priuses and immaculate yards. Insanity ensues, involving Wackadoodle Neighbor, an unwanted pregnancy and, yes, raccoons. We will leave it at that.

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Meanwhile, the deals continue at a dizzying rate. Every time we leave a screening there are more Blackberry alerts that such-and-such has sold to so-and-so. Such as:—Fox Searchlight has stepped up to the plate, snagging the creepy-suspenseful Lizzie Olsen film Martha Marcy May Marlene, a crowd favorite; as well as the Emma Roberts coming-of-age movie Homework. The studio also acquired the remake rights to the documentary The Bengali Detective.—National Geographic acquired the rights to Kevin Macdonald’s YouTube project, Life in a Day, executive produced by Sir Ridley Scott.—IFC Films picked up The Ledge, which stars Charlie Hunnam (Sons of Anarchy) as a man trying to decide whether or not to jump off a tall building.—HBO bought the remake rights to the Irish fist-fight documentary Knuckle, with talk of turning it into a TV series.—Liddell Entertainment picked up Silent House, the other Lizzie Olsen movie, that’s a horror pic.—Participant Media and Magnolia Pictures bought Andrew Rossi’s documentary Page One: A Year Inside The New York Times. Participant also picked up Circumstance, about forbidden love in Iran.

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