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  1. #1
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    Painted Skin 2: The Resurrection

    Donnie's back. Recall Painted Skin 1?
    "Painted Skin 2" Starts Shooting In Da Lian
    2010-07-08 16:22:37 CRIENGLISH.com Web Editor: shixisheng
    A sequel to director Gordon Chen's romantic fantasy story "Painted Skin" recently started shooting in Dalian city, northeastern China's Liaoning province.

    A sequel to director Gordon Chen's romantic fantasy story "Painted Skin" recently started shooting in Dalian city, northeastern China's Liaoning province.

    Adopted from Chinese novelist Pu Songling's famous work "Erotic Ghost Story" or "Liao Zhai Zhi Yi", the first installment of the movie tells about a love triangle that takes place between a human couple and a fox spirit. Action star Donnie Yen, along with mainland actors Chen Kun, Zhao Wei, Zhou Xun and Sun Li starred in the film released in 2008. It pocketed 230 million RMB or about 33million US dollars at the box office.

    The second installment will be an adventure story more than a love tale. It tells of when the couple's son grows up and makes a journey to the west to seek the source of eternal youth for his parents. During the trip, he conquers many difficulties which are given to him by some powerful demons.

    Donnie Yen, Zhao Wei, Zhou Xun and Sun Li will join the film again, and mainland actor Huang Xiaoming will replace Chen Kun to play the male lead, Wang Sheng and his son Wang Ying.
    Gene Ching
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    Trailer

    Gene Ching
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    ok i was about to rip apart that corny outline..but the trailer looks good.

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    Fox demon!

    PS2 working it at Cannes

    Follow the link in the first article for a photo progression of the makeup job.
    How Actress Zhou Xun Turns into a Fox Demon in "Painted Skin 2"
    2012-05-15 15:01:55 Chinese Films

    A still photo oof "Painted Skin 2" features Xiaowei, a fox demon portrayed by actress Zhou Xun. [Photo: Mtime.com]
    The fantasy blockbuster "Painted Skin 2" will hit cinemas nationwide on June 28.

    A series of photographs featuring actress Zhou Xun turning into a fox demon were released today, Mtime.com reports.

    In the film, Xiaowei, a fox demon portrayed by Zhou Xun, needs to trade skins with Vicki Zhao to play a role.

    The exchange of skins was a major hurdle for the make-up team, an undertaking so difficult that it was broken up into 35 separate sections. In order to really get a vivid image, 100 makeup artists spent 60 weeks preparing for this single scene.

    For actress Zhou Xun, playing the role of Xiaowei was not an easy job.

    "I spent 5 hours on makeup before shooting and two hours on makeup removal every day. I am the first to come to the set and the last one leave," Zhou was quoted as saying. "Although the makeup artists and I are tortured by the process, the final result is pretty successful. I believe Xiaowei's on-screen fox demon will give audiences an unusual visual shock."

    By Liu Shuai
    "Painted Skin 2" Set to Release in 2D and 3D Formats
    2012-05-16 16:59:45 Chinese Films

    Producer Pang Hong, director Wuershan and lead actor Feng Shaofeng last night made an appearance at a press conference held in Beijing and announced that the film "Painted Skin 2" will be screened nationwide in 2D/3D formats in June, Mtime.com reports.

    It has been revealed that the star-studded lineup for the film, including the artistic director Yang Zhenjian, producer Pang Hong, director Wuershan and cast members Zhou Xun, Yang Mi, Feng Shaofeng, Kris Phillips and Cheng Tingjia, will arrive in France to promote the film at the 65th Cannes International Film Festival.

    A new trailer tailor-made for the film's promotion at Cannes was viewed by 500 movie fans at the news conference.

    Hu Xiao, the 3-D visual effects supervisor of the film, revealed that "Painted Skin 2" is a 3-D film made by a Chinese team with international-level quality.

    "We met with many difficulties during the production, but we are confident that the final visual effects will be on par with that of the 3-D 'Titanic'." Hu Xiao stated.

    Moviegoers can watch the film in cinemas starting June 28.

    By Liu Shuai
    Intimate Zhou Xun and Vicki Zhao in "Painted Skin 2"
    2012-05-15 15:19:31 Chinese Films



    Director Wuershan's fantasy film "Painted Skin 2" is set to hit theatres on June 8. Two still shots featuring intimate actresses Zhou Xun and Vicki Zhao in the film have been released. [Photo: Mtime.com]
    Gene Ching
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    In contrast to those 'intimate' shots above

    Thu, 31 May 2012 02:50:32 GMT
    Zhou Xun avoids Vicki Zhao by using body double
    The actresses who are rumoured to be on bad terms avoided each other on the set of their new movie


    Zhou Xun Vicki Zhao

    How far would you go to avoid someone you hate at work?

    Actress Zhou Xun insisted on using a body double for all her scenes with Vicki Zhao on the movie Painted Skin: The Resurrection. Other than frontal shots, the two actresses will have no contact with each other, according to a tip-off on Tuesday.

    Since the filming for the movie commenced, the pair has been rumoured to be on bad terms. The pair reportedly compared the ratings for their other movies, the fee that they received from the movie and there was even a "chair-kicking incident" in one of the artiste's waiting room.

    In other related news, producers of the Taiwanese movie LOVE which starred Shu Qi and Vicki, had originally approached Zhou Xun to be part of the cast. Zhou Xun reportedly rejected the role when she learnt that Vicki would also be involved.
    These two should just duke it out. Maybe mud wrasslin... I'd be glad to referee.
    Gene Ching
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    I only posted two key pix

    There are more if you follow the link...

    Vicky Zhao, the Vulnerable Princess Gets Naked in "Painted Skin 2"
    2012-06-06 14:41:07 Chinese Films



    "Painted Skin 2" released a batch of new still photos featuring Vicky Zhao, a princess who has scars on her face, in the movie. Zhao was seen getting naked under water. She and Zhou Xun will offer a skins changing performance.
    Gene Ching
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    Interestingly her armor looks a lot like Samurai layered armor as apposed to Chinese...the whip is a nice touch. I usually pay extra for that.

    Now if I had to pick a Demoness to be seduced by here, because I deal with this exact issue in my every day life, I'm leaning towards Zhou Xun! If she would only return my calls...
    "if its ok for shaolin wuseng to break his vow then its ok for me to sneak behind your house at 3 in the morning and bang your dog if buddha is in your heart then its ok"-Bawang

    "I get what you have said in the past, but we are not intuitive fighters. As instinctive fighters, we can chuck spears and claw and bite. We are not instinctively god at punching or kicking."-Drake

    "Princess? LMAO hammer you are such a pr^t"-Frost

  8. #8
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    Zhao's armor or lack thereof

    Painted Skin 2: The Resurrection: Film Review
    10:34 AM PDT 6/17/2012 by Deborah Young

    The Bottom Line
    Spectacular if blemished Chinese fantasy aiming for high lyricism should pull in female viewers and fans of the 2008 original.

    Cast
    Zhou Xun, Zhao Wei (Vicki Zhao), Chen Kun,Yang Mi, Chen Tingjia, Feng Shaofeng (William Feng), Fei Xiang (Kris Phillips)

    Director
    Wu Ershan

    Screenwriters
    Ran Ping, Ran Jianan

    The sequel to the 2008 film by Gordon Chan kicked off the Shanghai International Film Festival Sunday.

    The unbridled visual creativity of big-budget Chinese fantasy films offers a thrilling entry point into Painted Skin 2: The Resurrection, a spectacular mythological period piece that segues from the 2008 film directed by Gordon Chan. But the bigger the expectations, the harder they fall, and many scenes fail discouragingly to live up to the director Wu Ershan’s (The Butcher, the Chef and the Swordsman) lyrical ambitions, when not downright ridiculous. The result is a roller-coaster of a film that will divide audiences particularly along gender lines, having greater appeal for female viewers both because it is fundamentally a love story with a noble, long-haired, romantic hero, and thanks to the presence of four strong and powerful women characters who run the show. The print screened at the opening of the Shanghai Film Festival was breathtaking in 2D, though a 3D release is planned in China at the end of June.

    This classic Chinese ghost story refuses to die, having been adapted for the screen a number of times by directors as illustrious as King Hu. Here the tale follows from its predecessor: Xiaowei (Zhou Xun, reprising her role) is a fox demon who has been imprisoned under ice after saving the lives of human beings in Painted Skin I. Her beautiful face attracts the attention of the female bird demon Quer (Yang Mi), who pecks her out of the ice, effectively reopening a Pandora’s box of trouble.

    To regain her youth and beauty, Xiaowei is obliged to devour human hearts, and her first victim is a luscious barbarian prince who will come back to haunt her in the final scenes. But what she really wants is to become human, and that requires a warm, innocent human heart freely given. The rules governing demons are quite intricate, and easily spoofed in the character of comic demon-hunter Pang (Feng Shaofeng) who gets romantic with the bird demon in her pixie-ish human guise.

    The main story, however, belongs to Princess Jing (Zhao Wei) and her dashing young guard General Huo Xin (Chen Kun). Jing was mauled by a bear when she was 15, and Huo Xin fled the court in shame at not protecting her. Now, eight years later, she wears a mysterious gold mask on a quarter of her beautiful face, hiding the scars that disfigure her. Donning a man’s armor, she crosses China to find her true love Huo Xin, though his status will never allow them to marry, and though she’s betrothed to the very same Tian Liang barbarian prince that Xiaowei seemed to have dispatched. But never say never in this film. Feeling rebuffed by Huo Xin for her looks (though his reasons for coyness are utterly noble), the aching princess turns for help to the fox demon Xiaowei, who proposes they swap faces and bodies, at the price of taking possession of Jing’s warm heart.

    Between Princess Jing, the fox spirit Xiaowei, the cute but powerful bird demon and the fur-clad barbarian princess (Chen Tingjia), there’s not a weak lady in the house. Performances run surprisingly deep, and the bond that links Jing and Xiaowei, in particular, rings very true in spite of the square-off between divas Zhou Xun and Zhao Wei. Women will certainly identify with a lot that is going on here: selfish and selfless love, sacrificing everything for a man, fighting off rivals for his affection, and the frantic search for youth and beauty to capture his heart (mythological “plastic surgery” is clearly a mistake in this story, shown in a poetically-grisly scene of mask-switching.)

    On the other hand, all auds will enjoy the visuals and the extraordinary animation sequences that carry the story when it soars high, along with scattered but well-handled fight scenes that show off the superhuman prowess of the young general. His ability to snag a falling coin with an arrow, even blindfolded, gives way to wrestling with giant warriors and snarling wolf-slaves in spectacular later scenes.

    The unsuccessful parts are linked to the disappointing depiction of the Tian Liang barbarians, who live in a city carved out of rock beyond China’s Western border. Leading the brood is a tattooed grand wizard (Taiwan pop singer and Broadway performer Fei Xiang a.k.a. Kris Phillips) with a Spiderman halo and shaven head. If the elaborate costumes of Jing’s forces seem inspired by the Terracotta Army, their rivals take their cue from animals, in manners as well as apparel, while their black magic rituals are a laughable throwback to long-outgrown film stereotyping. All this compromises the climactic scenes as Huo Xin’s army storms the barbarians’ Game of Thrones-style fortress, though even here there are moments of great beauty and fantasy.

    Bottom line: Spectacular if blemished Chinese fantasy aiming for high lyricism should pull in female viewers and fans of the 2008 original.

    Venue: Shanghai Film Festival (opening film), June 17, 2012.

    Production companies: Ningxia Film Corp., Dinglangda Culture Development, H. Brothers, Kylin Films
    Cast: Zhou Xun, Zhao Wei (Vicki Zhao), Chen Kun,Yang Mi, Chen Tingjia, Feng Shaofeng (William Feng), Fei Xiang (Kris Phillips)
    Director: Wu Ershan
    Screenwriters: Ran Ping, Ran Jianan
    Producers: Pang Hong, Wang Zhonglei
    Executive producers: Tao Kun, Pang Yong
    Director of photography: Huang Yuetai
    Production designer: Hao Yi
    Editor: Xiao Yang
    Music. Katsunori Ishida
    Sales Agent: Huayi Brothers
    No rating, 132 minutes
    "This classic Chinese ghost story refuses to die"... love that line.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
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    Opening Shanghai

    June 18, 2012, 6:03 PM HKT
    ‘Painted Skin’ Sequel Opens Shanghai Film Fest
    By Dean Napolitano

    “Painted Skin: The Resurrection,” China’s latest big-budget action movie, kicked off the Shanghai International Film Festival over the weekend.

    A sequel to 2008′s “Painted Skin,” the film reunites most of the original’s cast, including Zhou Xun, Zhao Wei and Chen Kun. Notably absent this time around is kung-fu star Donnie Yen.

    “Painted Skin: The Resurrection,” whose budget is reportedly as high as 150 million yuan ($23.5 million), also features a new director, Wuershan, who replaces the original film’s Gordon Chan. Singularly named and hailing from Inner Mongolia, Wuershan is known for his commercial work and made his feature-film debut in 2010 with “The Butcher, the Chef and the Swordsman,” a martial-arts black comedy about a large blade traversing ownership among three men.

    Set in ancient China, “Painted Skin: The Resurrection” is about a demon (Ms. Zhou) who consumes the hearts of men to remain young and beautiful, and the pursuit of true love that will transform her into a human. Critics praised the sequel’s cinematography and costumes but knocked what they described as the movie’s “paper-thin characters and incoherent story.”

    The Hollywood Reporter said “many scenes fail discouragingly to live up to” the director’s “lyrical ambitions, when not downright ridiculous.” But trade publication Film Business Asia described it as a “very entertaining, slightly over-long costume fantasy whose performances and sheer technique carry a script that often punches above its weight.”

    “Painted Skin: The Resurrection” opens across China on June 28 and in early July in other parts of Asia.

    Follow Dean Napolitano on Twitter @NapolitanoWSJ
    I liked tBtC&tS, so I'm hopeful Wuershan can pull this off.
    Gene Ching
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  10. #10
    I must say that this looks incredibly silly. I mean, "Erotic Ghost Story"? Please.

    And this coming from a guy who loves the Bill & Ted movies.

  11. #11
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    Highest Grossing Domestic film

    I had a feeling this would do well. Still waiting on that first KFM review...
    Resurrection takes China BO record
    By Stephen Cremin
    Tue, 24 July 2012, 17:45 PM (HKT)
    Box Office News


    Painted Skin: The Resurrection 畫皮Ⅱ is officially China's highest grossing domestic film. In 25 days, Wuershan 烏爾善's action fantasy has taken RMB686 million ($107 million) in China.

    Resurrection has taken the box office record from Let the Bullets Fly 讓子彈飛 (2010) which made RMB674 million. It had narrowly taken the record from Aftershock 唐山大地震 (2010), which had taken RMB665 million a few months earlier.

    Due to the higher ticket prices of the 3-D Resurrection, it has yet to match the admission records of either film. At an average ticket price of RMB44 ($6.90), it has been viewed by 15.5 million people in cinemas.

    Resurrection was ranked second at the box office last week behind another action-fantasy, The Four 四大名捕. The 2-D film has now made RMB151.9 million ($23.8m million) in China. A sequel is currently shooting.

    In third place, CHEN Kaige 陳凱歌's contemporary drama Caught in the Web 搜索 has now taken RMB147 million (US$23 million) in 16 days. His most recent film, the historical drama Sacrifice 趙氏孤兒 (2010), made RMB199 million (US$31.1 million).

    The strongest new film last week was Bunshinsaba 筆仙 (pictured), South Korea's AN Byung-ki 안병기's Chinese-language remake of his own Bunshinsaba: Ouija Board 분신사바 (2004). The horror took RMB32.0 million (US$5.01 million) in 7 days.

    The highly-anticipated remake features a Chinese cast and local scriptwriters, but employs a South Korean cinematographer, CHOI Sang-mook 최상묵, and composer, JEONG Yong-jin 정용진.

    Another local horror, The Death is Here 筆仙驚魂 , released in June used a similar Chinese name and poster art inspired by the original South Korean horror. It made RMB23.3 million ($3.64 million) in cinemas.

    Also newly released last week was GAO Qunshu 高群書's award-winning Beijing Blues 神探亨特張. The docu-drama made RMB4.30 million (US$670,000) over 3 days.
    Gene Ching
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  12. #12
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    Picked up a copy of Painted Skin II yesterday. Will be viewing some time next week.
    Simon McNeil
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    Be on the lookout for the Black Trillium, a post-apocalyptic wuxia novel released by Brain Lag Publishing available in all major online booksellers now.
    Visit me at Simon McNeil - the Blog for thoughts on books and stuff.

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    Simon, you had me beat...

    Quote Originally Posted by SimonM View Post
    Picked up a copy of Painted Skin II yesterday. Will be viewing some time next week.
    But where's the review?

    So last Friday, I had an interview with RZA in Chinatown and that evening, I was working Phish at BGC, so I figured I'd stay in SF, work from home on Saturday, and treat myself to either Expendables 2 or Miike's Harakiri. Century at Embarcadero had neither, but Metreon had PS2. Metreon is AMC and AMC recently got bought out by a Chinese company, so they are playing some new Chinese movies. So I caught that and Dark Knight as it started right after PS2 ended. The showing I attended was essentially empty (there was one Asian couple, and then some theater hoppers ducked in but escaped quickly when they saw the subtitles).

    Man, I wish I saw this in 3D. Like Avatar, a lot of it is CGI, so it is probably fairly robust 3D. It is visually stunning, like Legend of Zu was in its day. The color schemes are outrageous, cascades of flowing silk, glittering golden armor and ghostly white hair tentacles. I'm delighted to have seen this on the big screen. It's so visual and psychedelic. Vicky Zhao Wei and Zhou Xun return but this story is only loosely connected to the first. Vicky is a scarred princess general and gets to cry hell of a lot, which is her forte with those crazy huge eyes of hers. Zhou is the fox demon and she also has huge eyes, perfect for a demon. And Yang Mi perfectly chirpy as the bird demon. It's sappily romantic in that Chinese sacrifice-love-for-station-and-circumstance, and some of those scenes get a little long, but the musical interlude is a traditional melancholy ballad and all three actresses are just stunning in their roles. It's funny, sexy, tragic, campy and stylish, and apart from a few romantic scenes, moved at a decent pace to keep me engaged. The romantic scenes are redeemed by the literal giving of hearts, as demons have no hearts so they must eat them regularly and have one given willingly to become human.

    Plus there's some fun sword fights. It's magical flying about coupled with some decent chopping.

    Loved it, loved it, loved it, but I'm as much a sucker for Chinese myth and Vicky as I am for Catwoman, so take that into account.

    It's all about Wuershan for me now. I loved this movie. I loved tBtC&tS. I'm watching everything he makes for a while.

    I just realized that Yang Mi was also the hottie in Wu Dang but I read her 'English' name in the credits. She has two English names: Mini Yang and Mimi Yang. I didn't put that together as her character in this film was so different.
    Gene Ching
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  14. #14
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    I confess - this film is a guilty pleasure

    According to Box Office Mojo, it's playing in 6 theaters in the U.S., two of which are in the S.F. Bay Area.

    A Fantasy Land Where Love and Betrayal Reign
    ‘Painted Skin: The Resurrection,’ by Wuershan
    By JEANNETTE CATSOULIS
    Published: August 16, 2012

    Despite its obsession with a triumvirate of powerful women, “Painted Skin: The Resurrection,” Wuershan’s fantastical follow-up to Gordon Chan’s popular 2008 original, plays like the death knell of feminism. Not that this is likely to be of concern to the film’s target audience, whose appetite for ancient Chinese ghost stories is more vulnerable to a scarcity of special effects than to a surfeit of regressive sexual attitudes.


    Chen Kun as Gen. Hou Xin in “Painted Skin: The Resurrection,” a fantasy film directed by Wuershan.

    That said, this deliciously nutty love story — sample dialogue: “Let me eat this heart, then we can pick azaleas together” — is blindingly gorgeous to look at and exceptionally well acted, at least by the women. As a fox demon recently freed after 500 years in an ice prison, Zhou Xun is craftily seductive, munching on human hearts to postpone refreezing. As the lovelorn princess who conceals her scarred face behind a golden mask, Zhao Wei pines like a pro and brandishes a sword as well as any warrior. And the splendidly named Yang Mini, playing a bird demon unwisely aflutter for a goofy demon hunter, is bewitchingly playful.

    Then there are the men, who range in unworthiness from a comatose king and an insipid general (Chen Kun) to a bald wizard with a bad case of gingivitis. Besotted by the general’s flowing locks and limpid eyes, the princess exchanges her heart for the fox’s demonic beauty, a transaction accomplished with the aid of sinuous animation and much underwater hanky-panky. Imagine John Woo’s “Face/Off” crossed with the Neve Campbell-Denise Richards pool scene from “Wild Things,” and you’ll get the idea. The moral? Never go swimming with a woman whose head zips up the back.
    Gene Ching
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    Quote Originally Posted by GeneChing View Post
    According to Box Office Mojo, it's playing in 6 theaters in the U.S., two of which are in the S.F. Bay Area.
    i hate you
    For whoso comes amongst many shall one day find that no one man is by so far the mightiest of all.

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