“Kiss of the Spider Woman,” a musical remake from director Bill Condon and star Jennifer Lopez, is finally close to finding a buyer after its buzzy Sundance Film Festival premiere.
Roadside Attractions, Lionsgate and LD Entertainment are circling domestic rights, though a deal has yet to close.
This adaptation of Manuel Puig’s novel was one of higher profile projects to debut at Sundance. Set in an Argentinian prison in 1981, the film centers on queer hairdresser Luis Molina is serving an eight-year sentence for allegedly corrupting a minor. To escape the horrors of his imprisonment, he dreams up vivid stories about the cinematic exploits of his favorite on screen diva, an actress name Ingrid Luna, including a role of the spider woman, who kills her pray with a kiss. Molina’s life is upended after forming an unlikely bond with his new cellmate. Tonatiuh plays Molina while Diego Luna portrays his fellow prisoner.
“It’s probably my favorite movie experience,” Lopez told Variety prior to Sundance. “It’s a film about how love transcends everything — the hardest circumstances, gender, social prejudices. Everything.”
It’s the second film adaptation of “Kiss of the Spider Woman” following the acclaimed 1985 feature from director Héctor Babenco, which won an Oscar for William Hurt’s portrayal of Molina. John Kander and Fred Ebb’s stage version opened on Broadway in 1993 and won seven Tony Awards, including best musical and best performances by Chita Rivera, Brent Carver and Anthony Crivello.
Condon has become a preeminent filmmaker for movie musicals, having worked on “Chicago,” “Dreamgirls,” Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast” remake and “The Greatest Showman.” Lopez’s filmography includes “Selena,” “Out of Sight,” “Hustlers” and last year’s inspirational “Unstoppable.”