Movie plot takes twist with new focus
Updated: 2012-07-03 07:56
By Raymond Zhou (China Daily)
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Cloud Atlas, adapted from David Mitchell's 2004 novel of the same name and directed by Tom Tykwer, who made Run Lola Run and Perfume, and the Wachowski family partnership of The Matrix fame, is technically a German film, although it has English dialogue. The movie, distributed in North America by Warner Bros and in other territories by Focus Features, is scheduled for release later this year.
The only Chinese element visible so far in the pre-publicity material is the actress Zhou Xun, who plays Yoona-939. Zhou worked as a paid employee, not an equity participant. It is still uncertain whether the film will be classified as a co-production in China or as an import. In the case of co-production, it will not only skirt the quota, but also provide a larger return to the investors.
The Expendables 2 is a slightly different case. It features Jet Li as one of half a dozen aging action stars, a lineup very similar to a Chinese variety show that pulls together all the glittering names of yesteryear. The first film, released in 2010, grossed $103 million in the US and $171 million in the rest of the world. Zhang Zhao, CEO of Le Vision Pictures, revealed that his company is investing in the sequel, budgeted at $100 million, but declined to divulge how much it will invest or any other details of the deal.
As has been previously reported, Beijing-based DMG Entertainment will fund Iron Man 3, together with Walt Disney Co. However, the film will be considered a co-production because shooting will partly take place in China. The producers are looking to cast a 40-year-old Chinese actor in a minor role, but nothing has been finalized yet.
DMG has also backed a Bruce Willis film called Looper, which will be released later this year, and is launching a $300 million fund for similar projects.
Crouching tiger
There are also Chinese companies embarking on China-themed projects, but with an international cast and English dialogue. Tom DeSanto, producer of The Transformers series, is attached to a Chinese project entitled Gods, set in a mystical China thousands of years ago. The participants are touting it as the next Lord of the Rings, even though the script is still under development.
Hollywood movies imported into China through the quota system represent the cream of the crop in terms of earning power. These are the kind of projects Chinese investors are chasing, but they carry huge risks, especially for those who have never before been involved in such high stakes. As a matter of fact, Zhang Zhao of Le Vision, the participant in The Expendables 3, sees its function as mostly learning how to hitch up with Hollywood's operational side.
In a couple of years, it will be clear who has cracked the global film market with leveraged investment in Hollywood tentpoles and who has lost his pants. Meanwhile, Chinese money is chasing big projects and big stars with star-struck excitement and nouveau riche bravado.
Contact the writer at raymondzhou@chinadaily.com.cn
Telling a Chinese story against an international backdrop Mike Medavoy was born in Shanghai. He grew up in the city before moving to Hollywood and beginning a 50-year career as one of its most successful producers with 300 films - and 18 Oscar nominees, including, most recently, Black Swan - under his belt. Medavoy seems to have a special affinity for the city that provided his Jewish family with shelter in the chaos of war. After producing Shanghai, the 2010 thriller starring John Cusack, Gong Li, Ken Watanabe and Chow Yun-fat, Medavoy is developing another "property", Hollywood parlance for a possible film, based on a Chinese novel. A Jewish Piano is set in Shanghai during World War II and focuses on a Jewish family escaping war in Eastern Europe and ending up in the tumultuous Chinese metropolis. Penned by Shanghai writer Beila, the pen name of Shen Lei, the story has everything required for a Hollywood-style epic, according to Medavoy. But on top of the majestic sweep spanning 40 years and the turmoil of history, it is essentially a tragic love story akin to Titanic, explained Medavoy. It has the potential to transcend races, or national boundaries. One can even say the story has that ability built-in. Medavoy wants to make it into an epic in the style of David Lean's Doctor Zhivago. Only by producing a great film can we defy the inertia and ignorance of those who do not have the knowledge or willingness to learn of that time and the humanity that rises above the din, he said. Coincidentally, this is also a story that Ren Zhonglun wants to tell. The president and chairman of Shanghai Film Group feels his mission is to "tell Chinese stories to the world", and this is a perfect story for that purpose, in his opinion. Ren is partnering with Medavoy on the project because of the Black Swan producer's understanding of the international market and his talented production team. Ren sees it "as a Chinese movie at its core" but with multinational elements. It will touch on both Chinese and Jewish culture, but inspired by a book about the making of Gone With the Wind, he interprets it as "a love story against the background of war". "Out of all the movies we have watched," said Ren, "90 percent are about things we are not familiar with. Art has the ability to extend your experience. So, whether a film is about the ancient past or a distant land, it has to address the human experience. It does not matter whether its historical background or social customs are foreign to the audience." A Jewish Piano is currently in development. It is one of several co-productions Shanghai Film Group is involved in. "Twenty years ago, we assisted in foreign productions; and 10 years ago, we started having co-productions, which is a safe approach as if wading into the sea with a buoy," says Ren. But "it is time we had real co-productions, to tell worldwide stories. This may succeed or may fail, but it is necessary to explore that approach so that Chinese cinema may eventually be part of world cinema." Ren recounts what he heard on his frequent trips to Hollywood: "Every country makes movies for its own people, such as Indian films for Indians and Chinese films for Chinese. When I ask what audience American filmmakers have in mind, they say small-town American. Because America is racially diverse, they end up making movies for the whole world." Raymond Zhou |
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