http://www.variety.com/VR1117947477.html

Amazon.com is going from peddler to producer.

In its first feature-film venture, Amazon has optioned screen rights to 
Keith Donohue's bestselling novel "The Stolen Child." Amazon will move 
to secure a filmmaker and then a studio partner to turn the fantasy into 
a live-action feature.

Move marks the first foray of the world's biggest online retailer into 
content creation not limited to its Web site.

Company isn't looking to co-finance the film but does bring an 
intriguing variable to the table: a pledge to use the clout of its site 
as a marketing tool for the theatrical and DVD launch.

Novel by first-time writer Donohue combines literature and fantasy and 
covers issues of identity. A 7-year-old is kidnapped by forest-dwelling 
changelings, who replace him with a look-alike. Book tracks the 
changeling's attempt to meld into a family and the boy who roams the 
woods with a pack of feral children.

Author's pic deal was made by UTA, which has guided Amazon into such 
recent showbiz ventures as "Amazon Fishbowl With Bill Maher." Donohue 
already appeared on that show, part of an ongoing Amazon.com campaign to 
propel sales of the book. That enthusiasm led to the movie deal, said 
Laura Porco, Amazon director of merchandising.

"We are always trying to innovate, based on listening to customers and 
the things they're passionate about," she said. "This was a book we 
passed around to our editorial and merchandising teams. Everybody was 
excited by Keith's voice and felt this could be a great movie."

Amazon.com's clout is no guarantee of a hit movie. Lionsgate made 
Starbucks a partner in "Akeelah and the Bee" in exchange for a marketing 
campaign; the effort produced no discernible benefit for the film.

Still, Joe Regal, whose Regal Literary made the book deal for Donohue 
with UTA, said the chance to try something new with an eager partner was 
persuasive.

"This is all a gamble, but if you're going to gamble, why not do 
something that nobody has done before?" he said. "We could have set an 
option deal with a studio, but Amazon just understood the book and moved 
quickly. Having a billion-dollar company with such marketing might 
behind you is appealing. If they cross-promote the DVD with the book, 
these are compelling things."




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