Camp campaigners: Breaking Glass Pictures' Wolff and Ross

PHILADELPHIA - Richard Wolff's career has taken him from a peaceful childhood in King of Prussia, Pa., to Pure Hell and finally to "The Coffin."</p><p> Wolff, 54, isn't in a coffin - he is releasing a film named "The Coffin" through his fledgling distribution company, Breaking Glass Pictures.</p><p> Due Aug. 30, "The Coffin" is "a psychological thriller that broke box-office records in Thailand and Singapore," says Wolff, who lives a few blocks away from his company's Philadelphia office.</p><p> As for Pure Hell, it's the name of a black 1970s punk band Wolff represented in his early days as a young, idealistic music promoter.</p><p> Lucky for film fans, Wolff left the music industry in the early '80s. After pit stops in a Brazilian gold mine, a new-age crystal emporium, and graduate school, he entered the film business, first at TLA Entertainment, then in his own firm.</p><p> Whence the name Breaking Glass? "We named it after the Bowie song" from 1977, he says. "We wanted to have a little bit of a hip image."</p><p> "The Coffin" is one of 50 films Wolff and Breaking Glass cofounder Richard Ross have released on DVD since they hung out their shingle 18 months ago.</p><p> The firm's roster of films isn't exactly mainstream. You won't find Tom Cruise or Angelina Jolie. But you will find "Ticked-Off Trannies With Knives," a revenge thriller that is by turns ultraviolent and campy; "Half Moon," a werewolf-meets-prostitute yarn starring porn actor Tori Black; the Japanese gay romance drama "Boys Love"; and the indie documentaries "American Jihad" and "Cropsey."</p><p> Wolff and Ross say they hope to carve out a niche market in the home entertainment industry.</p><p> There's plenty of room: Home Media Magazine reports that in 2010, the industry made $16.3 billion from retail sales of DVDs and Blu-rays alone.</p><p> "We are trying to establish ourselves as a leading boutique distributor who presents interesting and often challenging films into the marketplace," Ross says.</p><p> Wolff and Ross, who formerly worked for TLA Releasing, say the company is even making some inroads in the mainstream market.</p><p> Last month, the pair made their annual pilgrimage to the Cannes Film Festival, where they began negotiations to sign writer-director Danny Buday's "Five Star Day," a romantic drama about love, chance, and astrology starring Cam Gigandet and Jena Malone.</p><p> At Cannes, the Richards also managed to win distribution rights for one of France's most-hyped indie films, "Gigola," starring American fashion model Marisa Berenson.</p><p> "For the past two years, they had these giant posters at Cannes announcing it was coming," says Wolff, who adds that he had to talk the filmmakers down from their initial demand for a six-figure advance.</p><p> He describes the gender-bending film as a sophisticated period piece set in the 1960s about a woman who dresses as a man to work as a gigolo for wealthy women.</p><p> Wolff believes the film will boost the company's profile.</p><p> "I guess you could say we are walking toward the mainstream while still embracing the fringe," says Ross.</p><p> Ross, also in his mid-50s, says Breaking Glass' mix of horror shockers, gay and lesbian dramas and comedies, and edgy indie documentaries has served the company well. So well, Breaking Glass grossed $1 million in its first year.</p><p> Not bad for a company that almost didn't exist.</p><p> Wolff says potential backers thought he was mad to start a company in such a competitive field during a recession. "Last thing people wanted to do was to put money into a film distribution company."</p><p> That's when fate stepped in: Wolff, who needed "hundreds of thousands of dollars," ran into Australian film distributor Tony Romeo, who agreed, virtually on the spot, to invest in the company.</p><p> </p><p> Fate seems to have a benevolent eye on Wolff.</p><p> After leaving the music industry in the early '80s, he decided to go on an extended holiday in Brazil.</p><p> Before long, he found himself owner and manager of a gold mine. "This opportunity just presented itself to us," he recalls. "I had a friend there and we bought gold claims this mining company was selling for cheap." The two friends employed 30 miners to do the tedious dredge mining.</p><p> "Then, I got malaria and I had enough of the jungle so I left," says.</p><p> Back in Philly, he used his profits from the mine as he and a partner opened new-age shop Mineralistic on South Street, where he sold imported Brazilian folk art and clothes. Wolff has since sold his share in the store.</p><p> Wolff, who majored in marketing at Temple University, capped his pre-DVD adventures by earning a master's degree in business administration from City University of Seattle.</p><p> In another bit of luck, he came back to Philly in 1995 just as TLA needed someone with a cool business head to organize its new venture, TLA Releasing.</p><p> TLA cofounder Ray Murray says he was a little concerned when his former colleagues launched their own company.</p><p> "I remember thinking, 'Oh my God, I can't believe (Wolff) is going to be a competitor."</p><p> As it turned out, the two companies formed a cooperative network along with San Jose, Calif.-based Wolfe Releasing, which touts itself as the oldest and largest distributor of gay and lesbian films.</p><p> "We have created a cooperative space," says Wolfe's president, Maria Lynn. "If we acquire a title, TLA will put it up on their website and vice versa." Murray says the three firms plans to launch marketing deals together.</p><p> </p><p> Ross says small film companies live or die by their marketing - and marketing is what filmmakers are promised when they sign with a distributor.</p><p> He says his partner forges strong working relationships with filmmakers.</p><p> Directors have responded to the company's approach, including Israel Luna, of "Ticked-Off Trannies With Knives."</p><p> "We weren't looking to sign with whoever gave us the most money, but who had the biggest amount of passion to work on our film," he says.</p><p> Kyle Patrick Alvarez, director of the romantic drama "Easier With Practice," says Wolff and Ross asked for his input on everything from the DVD cover art to extra features.</p><p> </p><p> Dan Lantz, 42, says Breaking Glass made it possible for him to make a feature in the first place. He and his producer Jim Becket approached Wolff and Ross with a story outline. Lantz came out of the meeting with a three-picture deal.</p><p> "We talked in February," says Lantz, "and by April we had a finished movie," the B-horror entry "Bloodlust Zombies," starring porn player Alexis Texas.</p><p> Lantz plans to shoot the next entry, the gay mystery thriller "Into the Lion's Den," at the end of the month.

Jungle Jim Dvd - News


Camp campaigners: Breaking Glass Pictures' Wolff and Ross

"Then, I got malaria and I had enough of the jungle so I left," says. Back in Philly, he used his profits from the mine as he and a partner opened new-age shop Mineralistic on South Street, where he sold imported Brazilian folk art and clothes.



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Guillermin returned to Africa for Sheena: Queen of the Jungle in 1984. Shaft in Africa benefits from solid production values. If it was made today, it might go direct to video, but it would never look this good. And it's unlikely it would have an



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Jungle Jim - Jungle Man-Eaters (Widescreen) - Action & Adventure ...

Description by OLDIES.com:

Following the success of his role as Tarzan, Johnny Weissmuller starred in a series of films as Jungle Jim, a character first depicted in a comic strip by Alex Raymond and Don Moore. Weissmuller played a hunter with a deep knowledge of the native people of the area, and its land and animals. Most often, Jim faced off against evil and greedy scientists who were attempting to exploit the region and its people or resources for profit. Substantial adventure and danger from the jungle wildlife drive a fast pace, not to mention comic relief from Jim's pet chimp, Tamba. In this entry, Jungle Jim faces a diamond smuggler willing to destroy the local tribe to control a diamond mine. Karin Booth plays a young doctor who crosses Jim's path. Newly remastered.

This product is manufactured on demand by Sony using DVD-R recordable media. Almost all DVD players can play DVD-Rs (except for some older models made before 2000) - please consult your owner's manual for formats compatible with your player. Sony DVD-Rs may not play on all computers or DVD player/recorders. This is normal. To address this we recommend viewing this product on a DVD player that does not have recording capability. Film Collectors & Archivists : Alpha Video is actively looking for rare and unusual pre-1943 motion pictures, in good condition, from Monogram, PRC, Tiffany, Chesterfield, and other independent studios for release on DVD. We are also interested in TV shows from the early 1950s. Share your passion for films with a large audience. Let us know what you have .


Jungle Jim Dvd - Bookshelf

Film Noir, Detective and Mystery Movies on DVD: A Guide to the Best in Suspense

Film Noir, Detective and Mystery Movies on DVD: A Guide to the Best in Suspense

69 minutes. SYNOPSIS: Cannibals are implicated in a crooked scheme to sell cobalt to foreign powers. Number 14 of the 16-picture Jungle Jim series. ...

Halliwell's film, video & DVD guide

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Empire Jungle Fighters: see The Long and the Short and the Tall Jungle Jim When Johnny Weissmuller began to show his middle-age spread, Columbia put him in ...

DVD & video guide 2005

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1967 DVD JUNGLE CAPTIVE ★+ Acquanetta's missing from this second and last ... 1984 JUNGLE JIM ★★★ The first entry in Columbia's long-running series ...

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3709 Alex Raymond - Jungle Jim Sunday Comic Strip Original Art, dated 11-30-41 ( King ... Each DVD, featuring Stan Lee as interviewer, is only $14.95, ...

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1967 DVD JUNGLE WARRIORS ••1/2 The idea of a group of JUNGLE CAPTIVE ... The big guy pokes fun at JUNGLE JIM *+* The first entry in Columbia's his macho ...

Day-to-day Info Directory


Jungle Jim DVD Collection
Get the Ulitimate Jungle Jim DVD Collection. Including 16 Jungle Jim Movies starring Johnny Weissmuller

Jungle Jim DVD @ DVD Empire
Jungle Jim (Grant Withers) goes of safari to darkest Africa ... Jungle Jim is based on a comic strip by Alex Raymond, the creator of Flash Gordon, and produced by Universal ...

Jungle Jim (DVD) | Overstock.com
Buy Jungle Jim (DVD) at an everyday discount price on Overstock.com! Get $2.95 shipping on your entire order and read product reviews.

Jungle Jim - DVD - Full Screen | Meijer.com
Jungle Jim - DVD - Full Screen for Sale at Meijer.com. This set contains 12 chapters of the popular 1930's serial that was based on the comic strip created...

Jungle Jim: Information from Answers.com
Jungle Jim . Plot: 'Tarzan with clothes on'. That's how one reviewer summed up. Visit Answers.com for Cast, Crew, Reviews, Plot Summary.