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  1. #1
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    Wolf Totem issues

    I thought we had more on this film.

    Hong Kong Filmart: China Film Group Files Lawsuit Over 'Wolf Totem' Streaming
    3:26 AM PDT 3/23/2015 by Clifford Coonan


    UniFrance

    The state colossus is suing web firms Youku Tudou, Baidu and Sina Weibo for copyright theft.

    Chinese state-owned film company China Film Group has filed a lawsuit against online streaming services Youku Tudou, Baidu and Sina Weibo for copyright infringement of the movie Wolf Totem.

    The $40 million Sino-French epic from Jean-Jacques Annaud had grossed $107.46 million in China by last week. But China Film Group claims that the online streaming services had infringed copyright by allowing their sites to be used for illegal downloads of the film and is seeking damages of $410,000 (2.54 million yuan), with most of the claim levied against against Youku Tudou.

    A court in Beijing has now accepted the case. The plaintiff stated that China Film Group was the copyright owner for Wolf Totem in mainland China, and that the three companies had caused significant losses during the film's theatrical release.

    After the movie bowed, China Film Group discovered a number of links through the Baidu search engine. The company sent a letter on Feb. 28 asking for their removal, but alleged that Baidu had not complied.

    Sina Weibo deleted similar links when requested, although others are said to have later appeared. China Film Group also alleges that Youku Tudou provided online movie-on-demand services for the film without payment.
    Oh well. It could have been worse.
    Gene Ching
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  2. #2
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    China enlists Hollywood to spread its culture?

    More like Hollywood caters to Chinese culture to capture its market.

    ENTERTAINMENT 20 hours
    China enlists Hollywood to spread its culture with blockbusters


    "The Great Wall" star Matt Damon (left) and director Zhang Yimou discuss the film during a 2015 press conference in Beijing. | Andy Wong/AP
    By Ryan Nakashima | Associated Press

    LOS ANGELES — China has a new ally in its campaign to turn itself into a global cultural superpower: Matt Damon. And, behind him, a good chunk of Hollywood as well.

    Chinese leaders have long sought international cultural influence, aka “soft power,” commensurate with the nation’s economic might. That’s brought us official Confucian institutes scattered across the world, billions of dollars in development aid and awe-inspiring Olympic ceremonies. But China’s own film industry remains a mere flicker on the global screen.


    Which is where Damon comes in. Early next year, the star of “The Martian” will headline “The Great Wall,” a historical epic filmed in China with Chinese and American stars, a famous Chinese director, a cast and crew of roughly 1,300, a $150 million budget and some nasty monsters. (Not to mention the support of the Chinese government.) If all goes according to plan, the film could be China’s first international blockbuster — one that might presage a wave of similar films intended to present a new face of China to the world.

    That’s a lot to expect from a decidedly unusual action flick. In “The Great Wall,” Damon plays a wandering European mercenary in the pre-gunpowder era who stumbles across the titular structure and learns what it’s really for. (Hint: Those monsters might be involved.)

    But film-industry types on both sides of the Pacific believe this kind of joint venture could open huge new opportunities for all sides. For Hollywood, it’s about expanding markets and investment; for the Chinese government and private companies alike, it’s about harnessing American stars and storytelling to help movies based on Chinese history, myths and cultural icons break out onto a global stage.

    Chinese authorities “have not made any secret of their desire to spread and to encourage and to develop soft power,” says Rance Pow, president of Artisan Gateway, a Shanghai-based research firm that tracks the Chinese box office. Regaling the world with made-in-China blockbusters, he says, is one way to do so.

    Hollywood naturally welcomes Chinese investment to help fuel its voracious movie-making machine. One Chinese company — conglomerate Dalian Wanda Group — snapped up an entire Hollywood studio, Legendary Entertainment, for $3.5 billion. Legendary just happens to be the studio behind “The Great Wall.”

    Working with Chinese partners also offers a shortcut past rules that limit the distribution of foreign movies in China’s booming film market. That could open up a vast new territory to U.S. studios — at least so long as they play by China’s rules.

    “For U.S. industry, these concessions are really about market access,” says Thilo Hanemann, an economist with Rhodium Group, a research firm focused on global trade flows and government policies.

    Of course, plenty could still go wrong. There’s no guarantee that either “The Great Wall” or another half-dozen or so would-be Chinese blockbusters will wow either Chinese or global audiences. Some previous efforts along these lines have been global flops.


    “Kung Fu Panda 3” | Dreamworks Animation

    This time, both Chinese and American movie executives think they’ve got the formula right. The most successful attempt so far is “Kung Fu Panda 3,” which has pulled in $314 million, including an outsized $149 million in China. Unlike its predecessors, the third movie in the series was produced by a joint venture between the series’ original studio, DreamWorks Animation and Chinese investors, including state-backed China Media Capital.

    The biggest draw for Tinseltown is China’s huge and expanding film market. Cinema attendance in the U.S. and Canada has been flat for a decade, but Chinese moviegoers are on a tear, snapping up tickets worth $6.8 billion in 2015, up nearly 50 percent from a year earlier. At that pace, China could eclipse the U.S. as the world’s largest film market as early as next year.

    But tapping that market has been a challenge. Chinese regulators allow no more than 34 foreign films to screen in China every year — far fewer than filmmakers release in the U.S. every month — and impose multiple “blackout” periods during which none at all can be shown. Regulators vary the length of the blackouts so that Chinese-made films eke out a majority of the market every year, Artisan Gateway’s Pow says.

    Films like “Kung Fu Panda 3” and “The Great Wall,” however, get ushered to the front of the line. Because of their Chinese backers, the films qualify for prime release dates. Their backers also get to keep a bigger share of the box office than they ordinarily would.

    So Hollywood has eagerly welcomed Chinese partners. From 2000 to 2015, Chinese direct investment in U.S. entertainment firms amounted to $4 billion, according to Rhodium Group. That pace then skyrocketed in January with Wanda’s purchase of Legendary, which almost doubled that total by itself.

    Chinese studios and investors have pledged another several hundred million dollars for Hollywood film slates. Warner Bros., DreamWorks Animation and Universal have linked up with state-owned enterprises and private companies such as electronics maker LeEco and Internet giants Alibaba and Tencent.

    That flood of Chinese cash makes possible epic films like “The Great Wall,” helmed by internationally acclaimed director Zhang Yimou and filmed at a multi-billion-dollar production facility still under construction in Qingdao on China’s eastern seaboard. Legendary plans eight more Chinese-themed projects with similar budgets, says Peter Loehr, CEO of Legendary’s wholly owned subsidiary Legendary East.

    “We’re hoping this is a model that works and that we can recreate it often,” he says.

    But the Western appetite for China-centric films remains uncertain. Consider “The Flowers of War,” a 2011 film about the Japanese army’s vicious 1937 sack of Nanking. Despite star Christian Bale and a $94 million budget, the movie pulled in less than $500,000 in the U.S., according to Box Office Mojo.

    The brutality portrayed in the film turned off foreign audiences as a “kind of propaganda,” says Peter Li, managing director of CMC Capital Partners, a unit of China Media Capital.

    Foreign co-productions could suffer a similar fate if they grow too heavy handed in an attempt to satisfy Chinese censors, who oversee all films released domestically. “If you promote socialist core values, you’re not going to succeed overseas,” says Stan Rosen, a University of Southern California political scientist.
    Gene Ching
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  3. #3
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    In the Christian Science Monitor

    We knew this, of course.

    Chinese movie market aims to become No. 1
    During the month of February, the box office revenue in China outgrossed that of North America for the first time. Will China become the biggest market for movies?
    By Molly Driscoll, Staff writer MARCH 22, 2016


    FilmRise/Edko Films Ltd./AP
    A scene from 'Monster Hunt,' one of the top 10 highest-grossing films in China in 2015.

    The power of the Chinese moviegoer continues to grow. During the month of February, the box office revenue in China outgrossed that of North America for the first time.

    The achievement comes as the international box office has become increasingly important to Hollywood over the past several years. Remember the 2012 remake of “Red Dawn”? In the new version, the invaders were digitally changed from Chinese to North Korean during post-production to appease Chinese audiences. In addition, more movie theaters are being built in China, and experts are predicting the Chinese movie market could completely outpace North America’s by 2017.

    So what happened in February? Before you think Hollywood is about to lay down a walk of fame in Beijing, there are some cultural differences to consider. Aynne Kokas, an assistant professor at the University of Virginia who specializes in Chinese media, points out that the comparison is not a perfect one because February includes the Chinese Lunar New Year holiday when more people are going to the movies in China, not unlike December in North America.

    In addition, one hit film played a big part in China’s record turnout. The Chinese film “The Mermaid,” released on Feb. 8, is now the highest-grossing movie ever in China.

    An interesting movie to watch going forward, however, says Ms. Kokas, will be the upcoming film “The Great Wall,” from Chinese director Zhang Yimou and featuring big-name Hollywood actors (Matt Damon, Willem Dafoe) alongside successful Chinese actors (Andy Lau, Tian Jing). “The Great Wall” is scheduled for an early 2017 release by Legendary Entertainment, which was recently purchased by Chinese company Dalian Wanda Group.

    These new developments on the cinema landscape show that we can expect more Hollywood and China partnerships to come.
    For reference:
    Monster Hunt
    Red Dawn
    The Mermaid
    The Great Wall
    Gene Ching
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  4. #4
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    Tax rebates for domestic films

    I suppose this is better than ghost screenings...

    China to Reward Cinemas for Favoring Local Films Over Hollywood Imports
    10:55 PM PDT 3/27/2016 by Patrick Brzeski


    'The Monkey King 2'
    Courtesy Filmko Pictures Co., Ltd

    Movie theater chains in China that ensure Hollywood films take no more than one-third of total box office will be granted a sizable tax rebate.

    China is introducing another layer of protectionism to give its domestically produced movies an edge over Hollywood imports.

    Last week, state regulators announced that Chinese theater chains that generate at least two-thirds of their box office receipts from local Chinese films will be able to keep half of a five percent tax they usually pay on ticket sales.

    The China Film Bureau normally collects a five percent tax on all box-office revenue. The funds are channeled towards various government grants and initiatives designed to aid the development of the Chinese film sector.

    Under the new rules, to qualify for the rebate Chinese theater groups must ensure that imported movies take no more than one-third of the box office for the full year, and the exhibitor must have a clean regulatory record, with no history of box office under-reporting or fraud. Throughout its recent, historic expansion, the Chinese film industry has been dogged by cases of box office embezzlement and manipulation, and Chinese regulators have repeatedly vowed to crack down on offenders.

    China employs various measures to protect its fast-growing domestic film industry. The country's notorious quota system restricts foreign film imports to just 34 titles per year on revenue-sharing terms. The quota was raised from 20 titles to 34 in 2012, in a landmark deal that temporarily resolved a bitter dispute that had led the United States to file an official complaint with the World Trade Organization alleging that China was unfairly restricting access to its market.

    In addition to the quota, Chinese regulators have employed subtler protectionist tactics, such as blackout periods on foreign film releases during popular summertime and holiday moviegoing periods, as well as strategic scheduling of release dates, whereby top local titles are given the best weekend opening windows.

    It's not clear how much of an immediate effect the new tax break will have on exhibition patterns, given how successful the existing methods have already been. Over the past two years, Chinese blockbusters have made impressive gains. Stephen Chow's Hong Kong-China co-production The Mermaid, for example, grossed a record $520 million since its debut in mid February.

    In 2015, Chinese films claimed 61.6 percent of the $6.78 billion box office total. So far this year, their share has climbed to about 70 percent, while Hollywood has dipped to a record low. As recently as 2014, Hollywood claimed some 45.5 percent of the Chinese theatrical market.

    Nonetheless, China remains a rapidly growing market for the U.S. studios, due to the explosive growth of the Chinese box office overall, which expanded by 48 percent last year. The country is on course to surpass North America as the world's largest theatrical territory in 2017.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
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  5. #5
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    When I first went to Taiwan, a local in-law of the family I initially stayed with told me that Taiwan limited the number of Japanese movies allowed to screen in theatres to no more than 2 or 3 per year (I can't remember which). He said it was because Japanese movies were so popular there that they outperformed the local movies. I don't know if this was true or not. This was back in 1984.

  6. #6
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    That surprises me Jimbo

    I thought the Taiwanese bore a lot of resentment towards the Japanese after WWII.
    Gene Ching
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  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by GeneChing View Post
    I thought the Taiwanese bore a lot of resentment towards the Japanese after WWII.
    Oh, no doubt there's that. But my heritage is Japanese-American, and I personally experienced very little anti-Japanese attitude there, including from those who knew what I am. The Taiwanese family who opened their home to me certainly knew, and they treated me very well, with respect. Interestingly enough, their youngest daughter treated me like an older brother.

    A lot of younger people liked many of the young Japanese actors/actresses/idols, and Chinese translations of Japanese manga were extremely popular. In all my years in Taiwan, I saw Japanese movies in theaters a total of 3 times, and each time they were pretty packed, even if the movie was crap.

    The amount of resentment will vary with the individual, just like anywhere else. It might be a generational thing, too. Although, some older Taiwanese I've spoken to could still speak fluent Japanese as well as Taiwanese, but claimed their Mandarin was so-so. Some of them claimed to have preferred the Japanese to when the Nationalists took over. Since I don't speak Japanese or Taiwanese, we spoke in Mandarin.

    There are tons of people right here in the U.S. who still hate/blame all Japanese people for WWII. And some idiots even still believe that Japan is trying to take over the U.S. The 1970s called and wants its misplaced paranoia back.
    Last edited by Jimbo; 03-28-2016 at 11:00 AM.

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