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  1. #1
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    Thanks PalmStriker

    Chollywood Rising is the name of my new print-only column in Kung Fu Tai Chi. I launched it in the last issue.

    I was torn between posting this on our RoA or RC threads but decided this needed a bump as my column is due.

    * October 7, 2010, 1:05 PM HKT
    The Continuing Return of John Woo
    By Dean Napolitano

    The recent two-part Chinese historical epic “Red Cliff” marked a *return to Asia for legendary Hong Kong director John Woo after more than a decade in Hollywood. With his latest project*—the martial-arts film “Reign of Assassins,” starring Michelle Yeoh as a Ming Dynasty-era assassin struggling to leave her past behind—Mr. Woo is again sticking to home turf. “The film business in China is growing—and growing fast,” says Mr. Woo. “There are good opportunities for all kinds of directors.”

    Mr. Woo has inspired a generation of filmmakers with his unique style of extreme action and *detailed storytelling in movies from Hong Kong (“The Killer”) to Hollywood (“Face/Off”). Last month, he was awarded the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement at the *Venice International Film Festival. “It’s a great honor,” he says, “but I wouldn’t say I had much *influence.”

    “Reign of Assassins,” opened in China last week and hits screens around the region this month. It was written and directed by Taiwan’s Su Chao-pin. Mr. Woo serving as co-director and co-producer.

    Q. What do you like about working in mainland China?

    A. There are so many talented young people in China. They have great passion, and they love to learn. That is one of the reasons why I came back to make “Red Cliff.

    Q. How does working in China compare with the U.S.?

    A. There are so many meetings in Hollywood. You have to make compromises. I feel free working in China. We have one meeting to talk about the budget and we go ahead and do it. But we still need to learn so much from Hollywood.

    Q. What’s your role?

    A. I see myself as a bridge. I *always try to bring in the good things from both sides. We can learn from each other.

    Q. What’s the future for the Hong Kong and mainland China film industries?

    A. I think they are merging into one. Hong Kong filmmakers need a bigger market. Hong Kong and mainland China people have *different lifestyles and cultural backgrounds, but it’s nice to see them work together to create something new.

    Q. What’s next for you?

    A. I go where the work is interesting—for the moment that’s China and America. I have three projects developing in Beijing and three in Hollywood. I love work. I don’t want to stop.
    On a side note, look at what happened to China's remake of High School Musical.
    Gene Ching
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    Flying Tigers

    Woo vs. Cruise? Interesting...very Chollywood vs. Hollywood...

    Tom Cruise vs John Woo For 'Flying Tigers'
    By MIKE FLEMING | Thursday October 7, 2010 @ 7:01pm EDT

    EXCLUSIVE: John Woo and Terence Chang might well be getting off the tarmac first with their WWII saga Flying Tigers. But New Regency, 20th Century Fox, and Tom Cruise are still fighting the good fight on a rival project that carries the identical title. They've hired Kirk Ellis to rewrite a draft of Flying Tigers that was done by Cruise's Valkyrie scribe Christopher McQuarrie and Mason Alley. Both films are based on the story of the volunteered fighter squadron formed by General Claire Chennault to help the Chinese fight against the Empire of Japan before the United States entered WWII. The aging Chinese planes were no match for the superior Japanese forces, until the volunteers arrived in American-made P-40 War Hawks. The two squadrons flew side by side, in fighter planes emblazoned with the gaping tiger's teeth logo. After Pearl Harbor, the Flying Tigers became an effective squadron in the U.S. Air Force. Jeff Greene is producing.

    Cruise has long wanted to play a pilot in a period war movie, and has been attached to several WWII aviator pictures. He's always got multiple offers, and I'm told reliably that despite reports, he is not attached to the Warner Bros script El Presidente. He's obviously not taking part in the Flying Tigers movie directed by his Mission: Impossible 2 helmer Woo, who with Chang have mounted a Hollywood-China joint production with China Film Group as the lead Chinese financier. They expect to shoot next spring, and signed a deal for the footage to be remastered for the IMAX Experience. My experience on these races is that whether it was The Last Samurai (a race Cruise won) or Alexander the Great, once a picture makes it into production, the other one gets shelved.

    Ellis won two Emmy Awards for the HBO miniseries John Adams, writing 7 episodes of the mini.
    Gene Ching
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    It's all about the 4th to the last paragraph.

    China National Day box office hits $42 mil
    Week-long holiday a winner for "Detective Dee"
    By Jonathan Landreth
    Oct 9, 2010, 10:44 PM ET
    BUSAN, South Korea -- China’s movie ticket sales during the recent National Day holiday rose 12% over the same week-long period last year to reach 280 million yuan ($42 million), led by audiences flocking to see director Tsui Hark’s "Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame."

    “Dee,” from distributors Huayi Brothers, stars Hong Kong actors Andy Lau and Carina Lau and Chinese actress Li Bingbing. The film has grossed 180 million yuan ($27 million) since its bow on Sept. 29, just before the Oct. 1-7 holiday.

    Also strong during the period was "Reign of Assassins," from directors Su Chao-pin and John Woo, which sold tickets worth 30 million yuan ($4.5 million), according to a report from the Xinhua News Agency, citing Liu Hui, deputy general manager of Beijing-based UME Huaxing Cinema, one of the nation’s largest theatrical circuits.

    Ticket sales of 50 million yuan ($7.5 million) over the holiday pushed "Inception" up to a China gross of 400 million, making it only the fourth import ever to pass the $60 million mark.

    Box office takes of this size have become possible in China only in the last 18 months as the nation’s growing middle class develops a movie-going habit at the hundreds of new multiplexes going up around the country.

    Three other Hollywood blockbusters also grossed $60 million in China since early 2009, "2012," "Transformers II," "Avatar."

    As with these films, it was the state-run China Film Group, the nation’s de facto monopoly importer, that distributed “Inception.”

    In March 2011, China is supposed to allow greater overseas participation in the distribution of copyrighted cultural content, including movies, to be in compliance with a Dec. 2009 anti-protectionist ruling at the World Trade Organization.
    More on Dee & RoA.
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    Korea is what? Kollywood?

    This could have gone on our RoA thread, but given the buzz, RoA is now figuring to be a major factor in the rise of Chollywood.

    10-11-2010 10:20 여성 음성 듣기 남성 음성 듣기
    Jung looks to China beyond Hollywood


    Korean heartthrob Jung Woo-sung, right, and Michelle Yeoh in a scene from John Woo's "Reign of the Assassins." Su Chao-bin co-directed the film, which is showing at the ongoing Pusan (Busan) International Film Festival, before opening in theaters nationwide on Oct. 14. /Courtesy of SBS Contents Hub

    By Lee Hyo-won

    As Asia’s leading cinema event, the Pusan (Busan) International Film Festival (PIFF), whose 15th edition opened Thursday, most appropriately showcases the latest trends, including most notably the ever-expanding influence of Sino-cinema.

    Similarly, superstar Jung Woo-sung has looked to China for his much anticipated overseas debut: He stars opposite Michelle Yeoh in the John Woo-powered epic “Reign of Assassins,” which is featured in PIFF’s non-competitive section Window on Asian Cinema.

    ``Hollywood is not my final destination,’’ Jung told reporters Tuesday in Seoul after the press preview. While local actors such as Jun Ji-hyun (Gianna Jun), Rain or Jang Dong-gun have knocked on Hollywood’s door, So Ji-sub made his overseas debut in China with Zhang Ziyi.

    ``In Hollywood, Asian actors can assume lead roles continuously only if they master martial arts, like Jet Li or Jackie Chan… But I do have small hopes of becoming a noted actor in pan-Asian regions,’’ he said.

    This isn’t his first project to be fully based in China. He played the lead in Hur Jin-hon’s ``A Good Rain Knows,’’ which is set in Chengdu and co-stars Chinese actress Gao Yuan-yuan.

    ``Reign of Assassins,’’ co-directed by Taiwanese writer-director Su Chao-pin (``Silk’’), premiered at the Venice Film Festival last month. ``Mr. & Mrs. Smith relocate to ancient China in the dazzling martial-arts epic,’’ according to the Hollywood Reporter, and indeed Yeoh and Jung play an ordinary married couple, each unaware the other is a world-class assassin. Guns, bombs and other modern spy gadgets are replaced by elaborate wire tricks and sword-swinging, while being peppered with dashes of comedy and romance.

    The 37-year-old said it was a great pleasure working with Yeoh.

    ``When I first heard about the casting, it’s true I felt a little pressured but I didn’t mind the age difference,’’ he said about his co-star, who is 11 years older.

    ``Ms. Yeoh is a respectable veteran actress and world-class star but she is extremely humble. I thought she was a beautiful actress who is aging with grace. I was the only foreigner on the set and so she paid a lot of attention and care, to make sure I wasn’t uncomfortable.’’

    Working in a foreign language, however, was a challenge. ``I was worried whether I would sound awkward to native Chinese speakers, but I’m glad to hear it sounds OK,’’ he said, when a reporter complimented his pronunciation. ``The romance is central to the film, and it was really important to deliver the lines with feelings of affection. I think I mastered the Chinese lines naturally while working with Ms. Yeoh.’’

    Starring in a Chinese martial arts movie, moreover, proved to be a great adventure. ``I always carried around a sword,’’ he said. ``Hong Kong cinema has adopted Hollywood-style system, and so it’s much more advanced than domestic filmmaking. We filmed for 12 hours every day and took mandatory breaks once a week.’’

    During PIFF, ``Reign of Assassins’’ will show Friday at 9:30 p.m. and Oct. 10 at 9:30 a.m. at Lotte Cinema Centum City. It will open in theaters nationwide on Oct. 14. Distributed by SBS Contents Hub.
    Gene Ching
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    More current...

    Hong Kong Production Funding Emerging from Unlikely Places
    10:32 PM 11/4/2010 by Karen Chu

    The pipeline is bursting with them – the potential blockbuster co-productions with their eyes on the Chinese box office that is nowadays counted in hundreds of millions of yuan.

    Emperor Motion Picture's 200 million yuan-costing December 2010 release Shaolin, starring Andy Lau and Jackie Chan, Media Asia's biopic Bruce Lee My Brother, due for end of this month, Peter Chan's US$20 million directorial outing Wu Xia, featuring Donnie Yen and Takeshi Kaneshiro in the leads (for late 2011), or the 400-million-yuan 3D fantasy The Monkey King and the remake of A Chinese Odyssey, Filmko and Stephen Chow's different takes on the Chinese literary classic Journey to the West, These are among some of the eyeball-drawing upcoming titles that serves as examples of what is now called "Greater China films."

    However, in Hong Kong, new investors are surfacing and trying to capitalize on the atmosphere of diversity in the local marketplace, bringing with them new opportunities from unlikely places. For instance, the local charitable organization, the Tung Wah Group of Hospitals, has pooled its resources to create Merry-go-round, a drama co-directed by indie helmer Mak Yan-yan (Butterfly) and Clement Cheng, in celebration of the organization's 140th anniversary. All the more surprising is the venture into the film industry by the Hong Kong restaurant chain, Tsui Wah Group, which in collaboration with the production company T-Films, is producing two stereoscopic 3D animation features and a live action film.

    T-Films has secured a distribution deal with The Weinstein Company for the North American release of the company's debut US$8 million 3D animated feature Little Gobi, slated for release in December in Hong Kong, and China through China Film Group. The second 3D animated feature, Flying Hero, a US$11 million tale about a firefighting airplane inspired by the Mongkok building fire tragedy in August 2008, which took the lives of two firefighters and four civilians, is set for late 2011 release. Tsui Wah holds the rights thus the merchandising potential inherent in its animated output, with dolls and other merchandise distributed through its chain of restaurants. The company is also co-financing, alongside producers Charlie Wong and Peggy Lee, with HK$2.8 million government investment from the FDF, the US$1.5 million beach volleyball action comedy Beach Spike.

    To venture into animation with a backer outside of the film industry, producer Charlie Wong and T-Films founder Tony Tang took their lesson from the collapse of Hong Kong animation studio, Imagi. Established by animator Tony Tang, one of the co-founders of Imagi and director of Little Gobi, Flying Hero and Beach Spike, T-Films intends to tap into the market possibilities of truly economically-produced Hong Kong animation. That's what Imagi promised but failed to deliver after its US$60 million flop last year, Astro Boy, led to its demise.

    "Animation doesn't have to be so expensive," says Charlie Wong, who produces the upcoming T-Films slate. "If we can control the budget, the quality of the products can fare as well as those made elsewhere." Animation also travels well, Wong says. "There's little age and race limit with animation, so it can be sold across the globe. The market for it would be bigger than the mid-range dramas and romantic comedies that local filmmakers are focusing on." That said, the producer-director team is also behind Beach Spike, described by Wong as "Charlie's Angels with beach volleyball", that was made "to explore the middle ground for survival in today's local and international market."
    We're discussing all these films on their own independent threads:
    Shaolin, starring Andy Lau and Jackie Chan

    Media Asia's biopic Bruce Lee My Brother

    Peter Chan's US$20 million directorial outing Wu Xia, featuring Donnie Yen and Takeshi Kaneshiro in the leads (for late 2011)

    the 400-million-yuan 3D fantasy The Monkey King
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    Into those film archives

    A lot of those classics are really dated now. I know I've been waiting for Tower of Death on Blu-Ray...
    Posted: Fri., Nov. 5, 2010, 6:06am PT
    Twin nabs Fortune Star pics
    Catalog includes Bruce Lee, Jackie Chan pix
    By Mark Schilling

    TOKYO -- Tokyo-based distrib Twin has acquired 300-plus titles from the Chinese pic library of Fortune Star, the company announced on Thursday.

    Its first releases will be the five Bruce Lee classics "The Big Boss," "The Way of the Dragon," "Fist of Fury," "Game of Death" and "Tower of Death."

    Paramount Home Ent. Japan will bow the titles on Blu-ray on Nov. 26 to celebrate the 70th anniversary of Lee's birth.

    Another major upcoming release is 24 Jackie Chan titles, also on Blu-ray, in December. This will be followed by VOD releases of more Fortune Star pics.

    The world's largest Chinese film library, Fortune Star offers more than Chinese 700 pics including those by helmers John Woo, Yuen Woo Ping and Ronny Yu, and films starring Bruce Lee, Jackie Chan, Chow Yun Fat, Jet Li and Michelle Yeoh.

    Launched in 1988, Twin has "The White Ribbon," "Confucius" and "True Legend" on its upcoming theatrical slate.
    Gene Ching
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    There's a vid

    click the link.
    Hollywood woos China
    By John Boudreau
    jboudreau@mercurynews.com
    Posted: 11/12/2010 07:33:49 PM PST
    Updated: 11/13/2010 05:46:05 AM PST

    BEIJING -- Silicon Valley arrived here first, bearing technology and business plans. Now, Hollywood is swooning over this rising economic empire in the East.

    At a recent art gallery event of film industry glitterati, producer David Lee worked the crowd with Hollywood flair -- greeting friends and strangers with hugs, posing for photos, mingling with the champagne-sipping guests.

    "I want to be the Jerry Bruckheimer of China," said Lee, a former executive at the American film company Weinstein Co., referring to the prolific action blockbuster film and TV producer. As managing director of Beijing-based Xinhua Media, he has just completed a dark comedy, "Inseparable," that stars American actor Kevin Spacey but was financed by a local Chinese backer and shot in China. It will be released in China and the United States early next year.

    Many Western film executives once dismissed China and its tightly regulated film industry with a Hollywood brushoff -- "Don't call me, I'll call you." But now the mood is, "Let's do lunch." Lee and other film industry executives, actors and production crews have descended on China in search of the latest outsize opportunity.

    "Hollywood has become a really good friend of ours," said Jiang Defu, an executive with the powerful China Film Group, one of only two entities authorized to distribute foreign films theatrically in China. "I get 40 e-mails a day," said Jiang, who keeps a photo of himself posing with comedian Jimmy Fallon on the shelf of his office. "But I don't have time to reply to everyone."

    China is building state-of-the-art movie theaters at a breathtaking pace -- at least two screens a day. Within five years, it is expected to surpass Japan as the second-largest movie market in the world after the United States. China is also the new ATM for those looking for film financing at a time funding is hard to find in the United States, said Larry Gerbrandt, principal of Media Valuation Partners, a Los Angeles firm that studies the economics of the entertainment industry.

    "Hollywood is always chasing the money," said Lee, whose movie "Inseparable" will be released in China and the United States early next year.

    China will have 6,000 cinema screens by the end of the year, and 12,000 within five years, according to the China Film Producers association. During the first half of 2010, China's box office revenue soared by more than 80 percent to $726 million, according to government statistics. In the United States, which has nearly 40,000 theater screens, box-office receipts topped $10 billion last year.

    In China, "they have multiplexes that are as nice as anything you'd see in San Jose, if not better," said Jonathan Landreth, China-based correspondent for The Hollywood Reporter. "They just spring up overnight."

    But just as valley companies and other foreign businesses have discovered, the reach-for-the-moon opportunities in this nation of 1.3 billion people come with only-in-China problems. China may now be the world's second-largest economy, but the Communist government's rigid censorship policies create a minefield for filmmakers. And producing movies that speak to audiences in China and the United States -- two vastly different cultures -- is not easy, experts say.

    It will require filmmakers to pay attention to details -- films in the past have made such blunders as casting a Vietnamese actor in the role of a Chinese character, said Beijing-based director Chen Daming, who worked in San Francisco during the 1990s.

    "The world is smaller," he said. "You can't do stupid things anymore."

    But China's film industry isn't yet ready for prime time, according to former Bay Area filmmaker Ruby Yang, who relocated to Beijing six years ago.

    China is "the happening place right now in terms of commercial films, but not movies of substance," said Yang, who won an Oscar in 2006 for "The Blood of Yingzhou District," a documentary about children in the province of Anhui who lost their parents to AIDS.

    The industry, nonetheless, is dynamic and growing.

    "I've done more here in a year than five years in Los Angeles," said actor Russell Wong, who relocated to Beijing more than a year ago and is studying Mandarin.

    Not long ago, recalls director Chen, he received rude responses from Hollywood -- and one industry executive in particular -- to his plot pitches centered on Asian characters.

    "Now, this guy is in China trying to raise money and he's super nice to me," said Chen, sitting in front of two flat-panel monitors while putting the final touches on his latest movie, "Thief of Hearts," a remake of the Mel Gibson romantic comedy, "What Women Want," starring Gong Li and Any Lau, two of China's biggest stars.

    Chen is asked out to dinner by the likes of Keanu Reeves. He has drinks with representatives from the William Morris Agency. He has to bat away offers coming his way from across the Pacific.

    —‰'High School Musical' came to me (to make a Chinese version of Disney's teen musical series)," he said. "I said, 'I don't do movies like that.' "

    By coproducing movies with Chinese companies, Hollywood is looking to get around government restrictions that allow only 20 foreign films a year to share in box office receipts -- a policy ruled illegal by the World Trade Organization, though it's unclear if anything will change. Chinese filmmakers, meanwhile, would like greater access to the global market.

    "Hollywood provides the best access and distribution to the rest of the world," said former Fremont resident Rong Chen, now running the film and entertainment arm of game developer Perfect World, producer of the comedy "Sophie's Revenge," starring Zhang Ziyi.

    "We want to learn more about Hollywood," said China Film Group's Jiang. "But we also want Hollywood to know more about Chinese culture."

    Co-productions do not mean Hollywood can sidestep the government's censorship, which extends beyond political issues. Censors flag anything from smoking -- they don't want outsiders to think Chinese are smokers -- to issues of prostitution, filmmakers say.

    "They want you to paint a very positive picture of China," said Hollywood producer Terence Chang, who just completed three films in China. "Nothing negative is allowed. That's why people are making period films. Pre-communism is safe."
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    I'm surprised we don't have a Tai Seng thread

    We had one, but it was deleted. So this can go here:

    TAI SENG Poised to Launch New Media and Broadcasting Channels to Meet Demand for Multicultural Content in 2011!
    November 18, 2010 07:03 AM Eastern Time

    SAN FRANCISCO--(EON: Enhanced Online News)--Tai Seng Entertainment, the leading distributor of Asian films and TV series in the USA, today announced its upcoming plans to launch several major new channels to meet the demand by broadcasters and new media platforms for quality multicultural programming.

    According to television executives speaking at the 24th Annual NAMIC conference in New York recently, “With the continued growth of the multicultural population in the U.S., the television industry should be producing more quality, diversity-themed television programming that reflects the views and culture of multicultural audiences.” (Multichannel News, 9/15/10)

    With over 20 years as a leader in Asian film distribution in the U.S. and a library of nearly 100,000 hours of premium content including motion picture and TV dramas, Tai Seng is both well positioned and uniquely qualified to meet the ever increasing demands for culturally relevant programming by the national and regional broadcasters.

    Tai Seng has a history of helping to popularize Asian stars such as action heroes Jackie Chan and Jet Li, matinee idol Chow Yun Fat, and Bond girl Michelle Yeoh by circulating their movies in America well before each became household names.

    “Tai Seng’s vision is to bring the best in Asian entertainment to all ethnicities in the USA, not just our loyal audiences of Chinese, Vietnamese, etc.,” said Tai Seng President Bernard Soo. “Our long term goal is to market Asian films to the general mainstream U.S. market, by providing a broader access to what some of the top Hollywood directors and producers have known for years – Asia’s directors, from Hong Kong to Japan to Korea and all points in between, are creating some of the most exciting and captivating cinema in the world.”

    With nearly 16 million Asian Americans in the U.S. alone, the company is confident that its market will not only continue to grow vertically, but horizontally as well with the continued popularity of its content among the General Market, Latino and Urban audiences.

    “Tai Seng stands ready to lead the way again in content aggregation from Asia to U.S. audiences by consistently providing our content distribution partners with the best premium content available and the highest subscriber growth opportunities,” said Mr. Soo.

    For more information about Tai Seng visit www.taiseng.com.
    Gene Ching
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    3 cinemas per day

    Digicon Special: "China is building 3 cinemas per day!" - Alex Law
    By Money Sharma, November 19, 2010 - 15:10 IST

    Alex Law Excerpts from the keynote address by famed Hong Kong filmmaker, Alex Law, whose recent release, Echoes of the Rainbow has received critical acclaim worldwide. Alex was speaking at 12th Digicon Pre-Conference "Asia Contents Forum", running at the sidelines of Inter BEE conference in Tokyo.:

    Echoes of the Rainbow is about my childhood. In fact, 90 per cent of what you will see in the film is all about what happened to me in my childhood. I have made sure that I shot the film in actual locations where particular incidents in my life had happened. While choosing locations, I was very particular that they were most suitable for the story. It all depends on the story and not the market.

    Authentic Locations
    The reason why I chose the '60s as the background of the film was because that's actually the time when it happened. Somehow, the '60s are a very nostalgic age, the golden age for some who stayed in Hong Kong at that time. All the people born after the war will cherish the film. The love that the people shared in those times was unprecedented. The entire neighborhood would dine together. My mum would only cook one dish because all the rest was taken care of by our neighbors. Even when I returned from school to find my home locked, I could easily walk into my neighbors house and stay as long as I wanted.

    Asian Film Market
    The film has not been released outside of Hong Kong yet but we are in talks with a Japanese distributor. I look forward to the day when there will be a pan-Asian market for films from not only Japan, but other Asian countries too. In Asia, we have our drawbacks. But we also have our advantages. With the spread of the internet, the popularity of small filmmakers is increasing, and not only in their parent countries but the neighboring countries as well. Moreover, we have seen, in the recent years, a number of co-productions among countries. So, the market of such films is not limited to the producing countries but goes beyond that. When I showed Echoes of the Rainbow in the Berlin Film Festival, to my pleasant surprise, I was approached by an Israeli company for a co-production!

    Chinese Potential
    A film commission in Hong Kong sponsors 35-40 per cent of films that cost up to USD 2 million. All regions in China have government subsidies meant for films. But there is a lot of latent potential in the Chinese film market because filmmaking is ultimately an investment. Sooner or later the film industry should be able to stand on its own feet. But the government has to jumpstart the process. The mainland Chinese market is huge and undiscovered. In China there are 2,500 screens whereas in the U.S. there are over 15,000, with only one-tenth the population of China. In many provinces of China there are no cinemas at all. Right now the number of cinemas being built per day in China is three. Hence, there is a huge potential.

    American Dominance
    American movies have dominated the world film market over the past 20-30 years. But I can see a future where Asian movies will dominate the Eastern hemisphere. The development of the Chinese market is almost there. I am just hoping that it is here to stay. Americans are very good storytellers, whereas Asians are on the other end of the spectrum: they like to listen to stories. But we need to make improvements in the distribution, technical know-how and the studio system, not so much in the stories. Each country should produce its own stories. Movies should be made if they touch the filmmaker. One always wants to come up with a story that has never been told. But all the existing stories have already been told.
    So let's do the math: 15,000 - 2,500 = 12,500. 12,500/3 = 4166.66. 4166/365 = 11.41 years. Given that equation, Chollywood overtakes Hollywood sometime in 2021.
    Gene Ching
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    highly doubt it. hollywood movies have global apeal, mainly because they star people of multiple races, onlytime you see a non chinese in a chinese film is as a villian. unless that changes i highly doubt china will ever generate the amount of money hollywood generates. ever. hollywood including tv and movies generate over 100 billion dollars a year. is china even at 1 billion yet?

  11. #11
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    Legend of Mulan

    I guess we'll have to start a thread on Z's new project
    Banking on blockbusters
    * Source: Global Times
    * [09:06 December 14 2010]
    By Chen Yang



    When Hollywood films are seeing increasing box office revenues in China, Americans seem largely unaware of China's film industry except for a few famous names such as Zhang Ziyi and Jackie Chan.

    Bona Film Group, a Chinese film distributor, made its debut on the Nasdaq Thursday. However, the company's stock price slumped 22.35 percent to $6.6 from its $8.5 IPO price on the first trading day.

    As China's first film company to go public in the US, Bona's experience was in contrast to its competitor Huayi Brothers Media Corp, whose shares increased by nearly 150 percent to 63.66 yuan ($9.56) the day it debuted on China's Nasdaq-style growth enterprise board market last October.

    Looking longterm

    "It might take more time for US investors to understand our business better, as there are some differences between film industries in China and the US," said Xu Liang, Bona's chief financial officer, in a telephone interview Thursday. "We look for a long-term return on investment for our shareholders."

    Xu said Bona plans to expand overseas distribution channels for Chinese-made films, as well as cooperate with foreign studios to produce films. Its latest movie, co-produced with a Canadian company, is a 3D English film Legend of Mulan, with Dutch director Jan de Bont and Chinese actress Zhang Ziyi as Mulan.

    "Co-production will enable the film to have significant box office appeal for the US audiences, and help us gain distribution rights in China," he said, adding that in China only State-owned film companies have distribution rights for imported films, while co-produced films can be treated as domestic ones.

    Xu is optimistic about Bona's growth prospects based on China's booming film market. "Cinema visits per year per person is only 0.3 in China, while this figure is 4.3 in the US," he said. "If every Chinese goes to cinema one time every year, China will become the world's second largest film market with annual ticket sales of 30 billion yuan ($4.5 billion)."

    Box office sales up

    China's box office revenues totaled 8.7 billion yuan ($1.3 billion) as of November 30 this year, according to EntGroup, an entertainment consultant in Beijing. Several films shown in December, including Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows and Sacrifice, are still boosting ticket sales.

    EntGroup earlier estimated domestic box office revenues will hit 10.3 billion yuan ($1.55 billion) this year, a 65 percent year-on-year growth, mainly boosted by imported blockbusters Avatar and Inception, as well as the Chinese-made film Aftershock.

    "If the growth rate can keep around 40-50 percent, China will likely to jump from the sixth to the No.2 spot in the world by box office revenues next year," said Gao Shouzhi, EntGroup's vice president.

    But the number of viewers has not grown as fast as box office revenues. Mao Yu, an official within the State Administration of Radio Film and Television, said earlier that the number of moviegoers visiting theaters was around 200 million as of October, the same level as all of last year.

    As the inflation continues to rise, analysts doubt consumers will pay to watch films due to high ticket prices. The average ticket price is around 36 yuan ($5.40) in China, accounting for 2.5 percent of urban residents' disposal income every month, while the percentage is only 0.5 in developed countries, said a report released by Deloitte Consulting earlier this year.

    Investors interested

    However, the film industry's high growth rate has attracted investors. Coalmine owners, property developers, Wenzhou merchants and private equity funds managers are reportedly ready to step into the film sector.

    "Investment mainly goes into film production and theatre building sectors, as their entry barriers are relatively lower than that of the distribution sector," said Gao from EntGroup.

    In China, normally theaters take half of the box office revenues, film producers take 40 percent and film distributors the remaining 10 percent.

    But the film industry might not be as profitable as outsiders think. "Producing films is high risk ... while building theatres is an investment that will take 4-5 years to recover costs," he said.

    China produced 456 films last year, and about 300 films were shown on the big screen. Some films apparently get rejected by movie theater owners for poor quality, while others lack big name actors or directors.

    "If the average investment on a film is 5 million yuan ($751,000), then producers lost about 1 billion yuan ($150.2 million) in total," said Xue Shengwen, an entertainment industry analyst from Shenzhen Zhongzhe Investment Consulting. "With an increasing number of modern theaters emerging around the country, more domestic films will have the chance to be shown," Gao said.

    Spin-off products lacking

    Industry watchers say Chinese film companies rely too much on box office revenues. "Earnings from box office make up more than 70-80 percent of a film's total revenues in China," Gao said. "While ticket sales only account for less than 30 percent in Hollywood film productions, the others mainly come from selling derivative products."

    Xu from Bona said revenues from television royalties, new media and home video products only account for 7-10 percent of their total revenues.

    "China lags so far behind the US, especially in developing film derivative products," said Wu Jun, president of Shanghai Movie Shine Entertainment Merchandising, who has launched a retail chain selling film memorabilia since 2002.

    But the business has not run as well as Wu expected. "We opened more than 20 stores in movie theatres around 2005, but most didn't make money," he said, adding that he only keeps two stores running in Shanghai now.

    Wu said local film producers have not focused much on exploring film spin-off products.

    "We mainly sell imported film memorabilia ... but high prices prevent audiences from buying and some would rather buy unlicensed ones," he said.

    Gao said China's film industry chain has not fully matured compared with the Hollywood model.

    "Lack of talents and rampant piracy hinder the development of film derivative products," he said.

    Wu is now turning to the online game sector, but he still waits for the opportunity.

    "China's film derivative product market will grow up one day, when film producers become familiar with marketing and audiences become accustomed to paying for more than a film ticket," he said.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  12. #12

    New Chinese Film Rules

    John Scalzi wrote an article about the new rules about Chinese film imports and how it will affect the American film industry. Basically, expect to see more big budget Sci-Fi and Fantasy Films.

    However, a new film deal between the U.S. and China was announced last week. It does a number of things, including allowing for the creation of independent (i.e. not state-run) film distributors and an increase in the amount of the box office foreign (i.e. U.S.) film studios can take home with them -- it'll now be up to 25%, which is a significant bump. But more importantly it allows for an increase in the number of foreign films that can be shown in China. The Chinese government will allow for an additional 14 foreign films a year to unspool in its theaters.
    You can read the whole article here: John Scalzi on Film

    John Scalzi is probably best know for writing "The Old Man's War"

  13. #13
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    Let me finish my Shuhua Milk

    I wish they left that line in the film.

    Black Widow was the best thing in tA. Must have been that Semir outfit.
    China big on product placement in films
    Los Angeles Times
    Published 5:42 p.m., Friday, September 14, 2012



    Hollywood movies regularly showcase American brands such as Ford, Coca-Cola or Apple. But recent U.S. films and TV programs have begun enjoying product-placement deals from half a world away: China.

    Recent episodes of "The Big Bang Theory" have featured Shuhua Milk, made by the Chinese dairy giant Yili. "Transformers: Dark of the Moon" featured Shuhua and products from Chinese clothing company Meters/Bonwe, computer maker Lenovo and electronics company TCL, which will also be a marketing partner on "Iron Man 3." In "Iron Man 2," Chinese clothing line Semir, an official sponsor of the movie, provided the outfit for Scarlett Johansson's character, Black Widow.

    In most cases, the primary goal isn't to woo American consumers. Instead, the Chinese firms hope that their presence in Hollywood productions will resonate with Chinese viewers. "The Big Bang Theory," for instance, does not air on TV in China, but has drawn as many as 18 million hits on domestic video sites.

    "Chinese consumers are wowed when they see Chinese brands in American media," said Janie Ma, entertainment marketing director at Ogilvy Beijing, which represents Lenovo. "It polishes the brands' local image."

    China is calling on Hollywood product-placement experts for help. Norm Marshall, a Burbank maven of Hollywood product placement, set up the "Transformers" promotion for Lenovo, even creating a character named Brains with director Michael Bay specifically for Lenovo. (The character transformed into a Lenovo computer.)

    For years, Chinese companies have paid to include their brands in Chinese films, sometimes subsidizing as much as 30 percent of a movie's budget for the privilege. Chinese director Feng Xiaogang's film "A World Without Thieves" featured BMW, Nokia and Canon, among others.

    The product placement doesn't always promote a strictly positive image. In the 2006 Chinese comedy "Crazy Stone," a can of Coke drops from the sky and smashes into a truck, which then crashes into a BMW.

    But saturation in these films - coupled with a general belief that Hollywood represents a globalized cool - has led to a push into big-budget, English-language movies.

    "We think Hollywood movies have great advantages in their quality, box office (reach) and commercial operation compared with domestic films," said Xie Wei, brand manager for Meters/Bonwe. "To a certain extent, Hollywood means high-tech, high box office, high quality."

    Chinese companies are also looking for exposure, and with Hollywood films dominating the Chinese box office, a product placement in a big American movie ensures that large groups of people will see the goods.

    Some early statistics suggest that the approach may be helping drive sales. In the 2011 film "Transformers: Dark of the Moon," a wacky Chinese scientist slurps a carton of Shuhua Milk in an elevator with star Shia LaBeouf. "Let me finish my Shuhua Milk," he said in the Chinese version, and the line became an online catchphrase in China. Sales of Shuhua Milk rose 12 percent last year.

    "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen," the previous film in the "Transformers" series, featured the Meters/Bonwe logo. In the first week after the film's release in 2009, Meters/Bonwe's Shanghai flagship store sold 10,000 Transformers T-shirts, Xie said.

    "One of the key goals of product placement is to make a brand seem bigger than it actually is," said Morgan Spurlock, director of the documentary "The Greatest Movie Ever Sold" and a product-placement expert. "And in a lot of places around the world, nothing does that better than being in a Michael Bay movie."
    Gene Ching
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  14. #14
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    Cultural differences

    Nice piece on censorship.
    Reel China: A crash course in different storytelling traditions
    Reconciling disparate narratives in China versus America has become a challenge for filmmakers to appeal to Chinese sensibilities and censors.
    By Clarissa Sebag-Montefiore and John Horn, Los Angeles Times
    September 22, 2012, 8:00 a.m.

    BEIJING — Every movie project involves a certain amount of negotiation, but finding middle ground proved no easy matter when writer-director Daniel Hsia tried to film "Shanghai Calling" in China.

    To secure permission to make his story about a Chinese American lawyer relocated to the country's largest city, Hsia exchanged numerous screenplay drafts with China's censors. The government's film production arm, China Film, which co-produced the movie, wanted to make sure that Shanghai was depicted as an efficient modern metropolis, that locals were shown as "kind and hospitable," that the visiting lawyer comes to appreciate the country by the film's conclusion and that a plot about piracy would be rewritten into more of a business misunderstanding, Hsia said.

    But the most complicated give-and-take focused on the movie's investigative journalist, and the character's heroic path. American movie heroes typically choose greatness, but their path to glory is often sidetracked by failings or doubts as the idol struggles with physical and emotional setbacks. Chinese movie paragons, on the other hand, normally have greatness thrust upon them, are physically and emotionally stable and rarely change over the course of a tale.

    "American heroes go out of their way to search for trouble," said Hsia, whose movie has played several festivals and will be shown at the Mill Valley Film Festival on Oct. 13 and 14. A Chinese protagonist, conversely, "does what he does because it's his duty, it's his job — not because he wants to do it." Incorporating that fundamental difference, Hsia said, led to "another huge rewrite," and the project was subsequently approved.

    For all of the concessions and changes he had to make, Hsia said, "I absolutely would do it again." The movie opened Aug. 10 in China to glowing notices and solid box-office returns, and Hsia said he expects the independently financed film to play in U.S. theaters next year. "I do feel I got to make the movie I wanted to make," he said.

    Hollywood and China are separated by more than 6,000 miles, but the more significant gulf can't be charted on any map. There are vast, historical differences in storytelling tradition that owe as much to Confucianism as modern political sensitivities, and bridging that narrative chasm has become a burning challenge given that within the next few years China will become the world's biggest movie market.

    Thanks to loosening quota limits and an explosion of new theaters, Chinese moviegoers have been patronizing American movies in record numbers. The returns for U.S. films have been so outsized this year that Chinese authorities in the last several weeks have tried to limit their popularity. The steps include blackout periods in which no imported films can be exhibited in China and releasing two Hollywood blockbusters on the same day to limit their upside, as Chinese exhibitors recently did with "The Dark Knight Rises" and "The Amazing Spider-Man."

    Those punitive limits, which prompted the Motion Picture Assn. of America to complain to Chinese authorities and the Obama administration, are compelling American producers to search for more Chinese co-productions such as "Shanghai Calling," which are not subject to retaliatory exhibition restrictions.

    In many cases, the East-West partnerships are relatively painless, as was the case with "Looper," a science fiction action story opening here and in China on Sept. 28, which originally was set in France but rewritten to unfold partly in China. But in several other instances, American filmmakers have had to undergo crash courses in Chinese storytelling traditions, which can be as complex as a hero's journey and as seemingly trivial as how dragons are portrayed.

    "There is no clear definition of what you can do and what you cannot do — from both the culture aspect and the censorship aspect," said Chinese American director and screenwriter Anna Chi, the director of the HBO film "Dim Sum Funeral" and co-director of "A Thousand Years of Good Prayers." "Of course there are regulations, there are laws. Everybody knows you can't do [a movie about] Tibet, you can't talk about the Falun Gong," she said of the spiritual practice the China Communist Party has tried to eradicate. "But in terms of creativity there is no handbook. It's all project by project."

    To qualify for co-production financing, productions must include a Chinese story element and employ some Chinese production staff. China benefits from the expertise of foreign filmmakers, while Hollywood, in addition to avoiding the retaliatory distribution tactics, gets access to Chinese funding and a bigger cut of box office receipts than a purely American production.

    Backers of foreign films typically take home around 25% of cinema grosses, assuming they are among the handful of non-Chinese movies allowed into the country under an import quota. But the American makers of Chinese co-productions can collect nearly double that amount of ticket sales. Qualifying for a co-production, however, can be akin to untying a Gordian knot.

    "Back home in the States you are talking to just one person: the consumer. Here, you are talking to two: one is the government, the other is the consumer," says the Beijing-based American Dan Mintz, chief executive of DMG Entertainment, the Chinese partner for "Iron Man 3," a proposed co-production that has not started filming in China but has commenced in the United States.

    Chi's proposed co-production "Women Warriors of the Yang Family" ran into problems over the depiction of its protagonist in her script. The story follows the life of the well-loved Northern Song Dynasty general Yang Zongbao, considered a hero in Chinese history books. To make his character more nuanced and a bit more Western, Chi provided him with a foible. To save his loved ones, he must first do something they abhor: When captured by the enemy he becomes a traitor. In reality, he is secretly fighting for his family.

    The Chinese producers and censors demanded that the twist must be scrapped.

    "[They said] he is a historical figure, so we cannot put any shameful things to his name. Because he's so beloved they say a Chinese audience wouldn't accept it," said Chi, who has since rewritten the script.

    It wasn't Chi's first brush with Chinese censors. In "Cicada's Summer," a fully Chinese-funded movie Chi directed and wrote, two scenes had to be removed after shooting was finished, one in which a schoolgirl has an abortion, the other where schoolchildren post photos on a social media site during class. Both were deemed detrimental to the image of the country's education system.

    Sometimes, the governmental concerns might seem almost trivial.

    Just before shooting commenced on 2011's "The Dragon Pearl," Australian writer-director Mario Andreacchio was forced to tear up his script, largely because of how he was depicting dragons.

    The family film, the first official treaty Australia-China co-production, revolves around two teenagers' discovery of a live dragon in China. Andreacchio had envisioned a Western-style dragon: a fearsome, fire-breathing creature with connotations of evil. In China, however, dragons traditionally symbolize prosperity and power.

    "We had to rewrite the screenplay — we were six weeks out from shooting, and I had to go back to treatment stage, which is pretty scary for any producer," Andreacchio said. "The only way we could continue was to unstitch the story and stitch it up again with changes so we could get filming approval." The benevolent Chinese dragon won, and the film turned into a modest Chinese hit.

    Producer Pietro Ventani, who was a consultant on 2008's Chinese-American co-production "The Forbidden Kingdom" with Jet Li and Jackie Chan and is developing with director Rob Minkoff the proposed co-production adventure tale "Chinese Odyssey," said the screenwriting education is not a one-way street.

    If Chinese filmmakers want their films to travel beyond the country's borders, Ventani said, they also must reexamine narrative rules, and understand why movies such as "Avatar," which grossed more than $182 million in China, do so well in Chinese multiplexes. In many Chinese films, Ventani said, "the accomplishment is given as much emphasis as the individual, which can be a problem because we are drawn to people stories." But Chinese society is changing rapidly, Ventani said, and its homegrown movies will soon follow, embracing more Western structures. "The Chinese audience is ready to embrace those kind of stories."

    john.horn@latimes.com

    Correspondent Sebag-Montefiore reported from China, staff writer Horn from Los Angeles.
    Gene Ching
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  15. #15
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    more theaters...

    ...who'd a thunk the the Chicoms plan for world domination was going to be through movie theaters?

    Alibaba Pictures to Build Its Own Cinemas
    Patrick Frater
    Asia Bureau Chief


    COURTESY OF ALIBABA
    AUGUST 18, 2016 | 04:45AM PT

    Alibaba Pictures Group is planning a move into the construction and operation of cinemas in China.

    The company is the movies arm of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba and has its own share listings in Hong Kong and Singapore.

    “APG has set up a team in charge of this (cinema) business and the team is already operational,” an Alibaba Pictures spokesman told Variety by email.

    Local media reports have pointed to a construction project in the giant inland city of Chongqing as one of APG’s first sites.

    In May this year APG agreed to invest $154 million in the convertible bonds of Dadi Cinema Construction, one of China’s top three circuits. But aside from the Dadi investment, APG is currently more focused as a technology-driven film financier, distributor and marketing player.

    The downstream move into exhibition comes at a time when box office growth in China has suddenly slowed and cinemas suffered three successive months of lower sales. But this and other huge bets such as Wanda Cinema Line’s recent commitment to buy 150 additional IMAX screens, suggest that Chinese companies are confident that the theatrical business will recover its poise.

    Many more cinemas are coming on stream. At the end of 2015 China had 31,600 cinema screens in operation. By the end of this year the total is expected to be close to 40,000, putting it roughly on a par with the North American screen count – albeit with a population more than four times as large.

    At the time of the Dadi deal APG CEO Zhang Qiang said: “Cinemas will play an integral part in Alibaba Pictures’ operations, as the company aims to build an integrated entertainment platform for the film industry. It will not only serve as an important consumption context within the entertainment industry, but also become a core application of internet in the film industry.”

    Last month APG said that it was setting up a $300 million (RMB2 billion) investment fund in partnership with Gopher Asset Management. Some of the capital from the new fund could conceivably flow into APG’s cinema unit. The fund’s purposes were spelled out only vaguely: “The investment fund will invest in companies along the value chain of the movie and TV entertainment industry,” APG said in a filing.
    Gene Ching
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