
ZAGREB (Reuters) - Police in Bosnia and Croatia have arrested 38 people accused of smuggling illegal migrants into the European Union in a coordinated crackdown on human trafficking in the region. The so-called "Balkan smuggling route" is used to ferry contraband drugs and people from Eastern Europe, Africa and the Middle East. Police in Croatia, which joins the European Union on July 1, arrested 25 people and were looking for eight more suspects, while 13 were arrested in Bosnia, said Dean Savic, head of the Croatian police unit for corruption and organized crime. ...

While American audiences may be familiar with Baltasar Kormakur thanks to his Hollywood debut on last year's hit "Contraband" starring Mark Wahlberg, in his native Iceland, the filmmaker is not just respected as a director, but as an actor as well. Films like "Jar City" (which he helmed, and there's a remake in the works) and "Reykavik-Rotterdam" (in which he starred; the film was remade as "Contraband") -- and oh yeah, he was a producer on both -- helped put him on the map, and of course, Hollywood came calling. But he never left home completely, and while later this summer his re-teaming with Wahlberg for the action flick "2 Guns" will hit theaters, coming first is a film that saw Kormakur return home to tell a gripping true story. The dramatic thriller "The Deep" tells the tale of a group of fisherman whose boat capsizes in freezing waters, and centers on the one, unlikely everyman who manages to survive the harsh conditions and unbelievable set of circumstances. The picture was...

So just how busy is Martin Scorsese at any given moment? Well, here's a taste: he's currently in post-production on his next feature, "The Wolf Of Wall Street," he's producing a documentary about the late Roger Ebert, working on a movie project about the New York Review Of Books, developing a TV series based on "Gangs Of New York," executive producing new films for Luc Besson and Andrew Lau, and he also signed up to direct a documentary about Bill Clinton for HBO. And this is all stuff that happened in 2013. So is it a surprise that something that cropped up in 2011 might not be happening? Way back then you'll remember that Scorsese had put an adaptation of Jo Nesb?'s serial killer novel "The Snowman" on his plate, but alas, it seems it's not to be. Norwegian paper Afterposten reports (via News And Views From Norway) the lengthy waiting period for Scorsese has caused producers to start looking at other directors to take it on. Baltasar Kormakur ("Contraband") and Morten...

Well, Universal was expected to make an announcement this week and indeed, almost seven days since the news that Justin Lin wouldn't be directing "Fast & Furious 7," the studio has found their man. And it's none of the rumored Brad Furman, Harald Zwart or Jeff Wadlow. Rather surprisingly, it's low budget horror sensation James Wan -- "Saw," "Insidious" and this summer's "The Conjuring" -- who has landed the job. Deadline reveals that Universal has actually known Lin wouldn't be back since Sundance, and so they've been considering a number of options including the aforementioned Zwart and Wadlow, along with Baltasar Kormakur ("Contraband," the upcoming "2 Guns"). But Wan is the guy they are in negotiations with, and it's intriguing to say the least. It will be the first time the helmer has worked with a budget that is likely going to be nine figures (you could make about eleventy billion "Insidious" movies with that kind of cash), and surely the most major set pieces he's ever...
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