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HBO has acquired all U.S. rights to the documentary Project Nim, just days ahead of its world premiere in competition at the Sundance Film Festival Thursday night. Those rights include theatrical, video and TV broadcast.
Directed by James Marsh, who helmed the Oscar-winning Man on Wire, the film follows the life of a chimpanzee who was raised like a human child as part of a pioneering 1970s experiment. The film combines interviews with participants in the experiment and archival footage to depict the chimpanzee’s experience living in New York. Named for the late chimp, Nim Chimpsky, the film has generated significant buzz in advance of the festival.
HBO picked up the 2010 Sundance docs Teenage Paparazzo and Smash His Camera.
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