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made mark on North CarolinaThe national obits today on filmmaker Dino De Laurentiis give scant mention to his one time studio in North Carolina and his impact on filmmaking in the state. But the movie producer was instrumental in turning Wilmington into Hollywood East.He first came to the state in 1983 to film Stephen King "Firestarter," drawn by an image of Wilmington Orton Plantation on a magazine cover. He liked what he saw so much that he stuck around, choosing Wilmington over Charleston for his DEG Studios (De Laurentiis Entertainment Group), a 32 acre moviemaking complex. He even built a home in Wrightsville Beach.For four years, DEG produced films including "Blue Velvet," "Crimes of the Heart," and "King Kong Lives." Folks around Wilmington, Southport and Wrightsville Beach got used to seeing movie stars like Jessica Lange and Diane Keaton in their midst.De Laurentiis ran into financial difficulties after some big budget flops (remember "Dune"?) and by 1990, DEG was in the hands of Carolco Pictures. But De Laurentiis continued to visit the coastal area for years afterward.Carolco eventually filed for bankruptcy SAS once flirted with buying it until Jim Goodnight and other execs decided it strayed too far from their core business. The complex is now owned by EUE/Screem Gems Studios and is the largest full service motion picture facility east of California. And the state has since gone on to host a variety of TV shows, including "Dawson Creek" and "One Tree Hill" as well as numerous movies such as "Sleeping with the Enemy,"De La Hoya set to wage different battlesNow, five years after the