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Chinese actresses explore Hollywood
Posted in China Actresses, China Movies, Uncategorized on April 1, 2013 by infoseekchinaApril movie guide for China
Posted in Uncategorized on March 30, 2013 by infoseekchinaMovies to be released in April:
“Drug War”
Release date: April 2
Genre: feature/action/crime
Director: Johnny To
Starring: Sun Honglei, Louis Koo, Huang Yi, Wallace Chung

“Saving General Yang”
Release date: April 4
Genre: costume/action
Director: Ronny Yu
Starring: Ekin Cheng, Raymond Lam, Adam Cheng, Chun Wu, Vic Chou, Xu Fan

“Django Unchained”
Release date: April 11
Genre: crime/western
Director: Quentin Tarantino
Starring: Jamie Foxx, Christoph Waltz, Leonardo DiCaprio, Kerry Washington

“G.I. Joe: Retaliation”
Release date: April 15
Genre: action/adventure/crime/sci-fi
Director: Jon Chu
Starring: Bruce Willis, Dwayne Johnson, Lee Byung-hun, Channing Tatum

“Conspirators”
Release date: April 12
Genre: action/crime/suspense
Director: Oside Pang Chun
Starring: Aaron Kwok, Nick Cheung, Jiang Yiyan

“The Incredible Truth”
Release date: April 28
Genre: thriller
Director: Leong Tak Sam
Starring: Christy Chung, Liu Yan, Sam Lee, Megumi Kagurazaka

“A Wedding Invitation”
Release date: April 12
Genre: romance
Director: Wu Jihuan
Starring: Eddie Peng, Bai Baihe, Jiang Jinfu, Pace Wu

“American Dreams in China”
Release date: April 16
Genre: feature
Director: Peter Chan
Starring: Huang Xiaoming, Deng Chao, Tong Dawei

“When A Wolf Falls in Love with a Sheep”
Release date: April 19
Genre: romance
Director: Hou Jiran
Starring: Ke Zhendong, Jian Man-shu, Guo Shuyao

“So Young”
Release date: April 26
Genre: romance
Director: Vicki Zhao
Starring: Mark Zhao, Han Geng, Jiang Shuying, Yang Zishan
Source: Chinese Films
Actress Qin Lan
Posted in Uncategorized on January 30, 2013 by infoseekchinaBehind the Massive Box Office Revenue
Posted in China Movies, Uncategorized on January 7, 2013 by infoseekchina
According to a recent report by Xinhua News Agency, the box-office revenue for movies in the year 2012 in China achieved around 16.8 billion yuan ($2.69 billion), a 28 percent increase from the 13.1 billion yuan of 2011.
But the big number does not represent prosperity for the domestic industry. In fact, some media used the word “chaos” to describe last year’s local movie market.
Taking a beating
With 989 million yuan (as of December 31 and over 1.1 billion yuan after the New Year holiday), greenhand director Xu Zheng’s Lost in Thailand became the box-office champion of last year. However, a glance at the remaining top 10 list reveals only two other domestic productions – Painted Skin: The Resurrection and Jackie Chan’s CZ12. The others are Titanic 3D, Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol, Life of Pi, The Avengers, Men in Black III, Ice Age: Continental Drift and Journey 2: The Mysterious Island. Back to 1942, a long-anticipated work by famous Chinese director Feng Xiaogang, ranked 11th with 370 million yuan.
Chongqing Economic Times reported that, except for a few movies like The Great Magician and Black & White Episode 1: The Dawn of Assault, which supplemented ticket sales with implanted ads and selling their copyright to Internet video websites and TV stations, all other domestic films finished in the red. As Ng See-yuen, chairman of the Federation of Hong Kong Filmmakers, told the newspaper, 80 percent of domestic movies saw a deficit last year.
Although the call for improving domestic movie quality had already rung out in 2011 when foreign productions accounted for almost half of that year’s box office, domestic films still took a beating in 2012.
The lesson to be learned from Painted Skin: The Resurrection, Lost in Thailand and CZ12 is that 3D technology, exciting action scenes and localized comedy are the most bankable elements – as long as the timing is right.
It’s anybody’s guess
Besides disappointment in the Chinese film industry’s quality, another thing many domestic audiences complain about is the disordered screen schedule. For example, White Deer Plain was to begin screening on September 13, but two days before that it was postponed citing technical problems.
The Grandmasters, The Last Supper and Switch are known for causing the worst birth pains, because they all kept teasing audiences about a release date, but then delayed screening for months or even years.
The Grandmasters is the most notorious example. According to website portal ent.sina.com.cn, it’s been 16 years since Hong Kong director Wong Karwai first raised the idea for the movie. And even though it recently set a debut date for January 8, many netizens have said they expect yet another delay.
Besides some small-budget movies that did not get much attention, popular big-budget movies that changed screen dates include Lost in Thailand, CZ12 and The Last Tycoon.
Such disorder, as the report from ent.sina.com.cn concluded, is for the purpose of avoiding head-to-head competition with Hollywood blockbusters.
However, movie critic Fang Liuxiang disagrees. He said, “There is no real screen schedule in China, it is always in chaos. Even Hollywood movies cannot decide when to screen. There are too many outside forces that can influence the [Chinese] market.”
Box office not a rating scale
Though most of the time what movie producers ultimately care about is the final box-office revenue, and even audiences often compare movies according to ticket sales, experts in the industry widely agree that the box office is not always an appropriate scale on which to evaluate a movie.
Examples can be seen from last year’s Seediq Bale, Beijing Blues and Feng Shui.
With less than 10 million yuan in box-office revenue, Beijing Blues proved its worth by taking home a Golden Horse, for it was able to “make a breakthrough” among its peers, as movie critic Wang Siwei told the Global Times previously.
As for Seediq Bale and Feng Shui, they impressed insiders with their “earnest attitude in making movies,” said Fang Liuxiang, a freelance film critic. “They are able to reflect the brutal as well as the gentle side of reality and history.”
The notion that box-office numbers alone are not a proof of movie quality can also be seen from some of 2012′s imported works such as A Separation and The Artist.
Between the years 2011 and 2012, A Separation won more than 70 awards around the world, including an Oscar and the Berlin Film Festival’s Golden Bear. “Though the censorship system is much stricter in Iran than on the Chinese mainland, there is never a lack of quality in Iranian movies,” a report from ent.sina.com.cn said. “With a cost of $300,000, [A Separation] makes a number of movie insiders blush with shame.”
According to the statistics on entgroup.cn, a professional entertainment industry research institution, as of December 30, 2012, ticket sales in China for The Artist – the Academy Award winner for Best Picture in 2012 – had only reached 1.54 million yuan. The low number is more a reflection of screen availability than film quality. Additionally, the film had been widely available on DVD for several months: those who wanted to see it already had.
Industry scandal
Achieving another record-breaking year at the domestic box office is an important accomplishment; however, as people often do a bit of introspection during the New Year season, the Chinese film industry should learn from past mistakes to avoid repeating them.
By far, the biggest scandal exposed last year was the “water army” issue (fake web postings to alter a movie’s rating). As the scandal involving The Last Supper became public, movie critic websites and the reputation of movie companies suffered a serious confidence crisis.
The lesson both professionals and regular moviegoers can take from last year is that judging a film’s quality does not always come from high numbers at the box office, but rather the strong impression it leaves on audiences.
Source: Global Times via Chinese Films
‘Lost in Thailand’ becomes biggest grossing Chinese film
Posted in China Movies, Uncategorized on December 26, 2012 by infoseekchinaSource: CRI via china.org.cn
Chinese cinema has witnessed a miracle: low-budget film “Lost in Thailand” has just become the most bankable Chinese film of all time.
The comedy had grossed 721 million yuan (US$115 million) as of December 24, Mtime.com reports. It officially took the best-selling-domestic-film crown from “Painted Skin: The Resurrection”, which earned 702 million yuan this summer.
With a budget of 30 million yuan, “Lost in Thailand” follows three Chinese men who meet on their trips to Thailand, where hilarity ensues.
Actor Xu Zheng made his directorial debut with the film, in which he costars with Wang Baoqiang and Huang Bo.
The film opened on December 12 and quickly became popular via word of mouth. It was given 8.1 out of 10 on the popular Website Douban.com, a score rated by nearly 120,000 viewers.
With the 3-day New Year holiday beginning on January 1, the film is well on track to becoming the first Chinese film ever to pass the 1-billion-yuan threshold, industrial experts predict.
The end of times a great beginning for Qu Wanting
Posted in China Music, China Pop Music, Uncategorized on December 24, 2012 by infoseekchina
It’s risky for a singer who has released only one album to have a concert at the MasterCard Center in Beijing, the venue that just hosted Elton John and his band. Adding to the drama, the Harbin-born and Vancouver-based singer-songwriter Qu Wanting staged her first concert on Friday – even though December 21, 2012 was the “end of days” according to Mesoamerican eschatological beliefs.
Qu’s two-and-a-half-hour concert proves that her musical talent goes far beyond her hit song, “You Exist in My Song”, which made her one of the most popular newcomers on the country’s music scene in 2012.
The concert opened with three of Qu’s English songs from her debut album, “Everything in the World”, which clinched a platinum rating in the first week via a distribution deal between Universal Music China and Vancouver-based label Nettwerk in early 2012.
In a pair of tight black leggings and a golden tank T-shirt, the 29-year-old Qu looked skinny and shiny. Before she opened her mouth, she took off her high heels. Barefoot, she jumped and ran around the stage along with her band, which comprised one of her longtime friends, Zhang Xiahao, who is also Qu’s Beijing concert producer.
The venue was not packed – around 70 percent of the seats were filled – but it’s still exciting for a newcomer to have the audience singing along, especially the Chinese songs “Admit” and “Today”.
After singing “Jar of Love”, “Star in You” and “Life Is Like a Song”, she dedicated the song “Shell” to her strict mother, who sent her to study business in Vancouver at 16.
“I felt useless then because I had to follow my mother’s arrangement to study business. I was rebellious and did things against her wishes,” she nervously says onstage. “But now she is very supportive and she is sitting down in the crowd. Mom, I love you.”
For her father, who Qu describes as a quiet type, she wrote the song “Hide Away”. “I know you are not good at saying ‘I love you’ but I know you love me,” she says in the song.
Qu realized early that her true passion was to become an influential recording artist.
She completed her degree in business, but also tried her hand at songwriting in both Chinese and English, and began performing in the Toronto area, especially Vancouver, where she caught the attention of Nettwerk Music Group, home of such stars as Sarah McLachlan and Dido.
She also sang “I Only Care about You” and “Fix You”, to pay tribute to her idols, the late singer Teresa Teng and the British rock band Coldplay.
“Joker Needs Laughter Too” and “Say the Words”, which Qu wrote several years ago in English, were performed for the first time by Qu for a Chinese audience. Both songs will be recorded on her upcoming second album.
For Qu, December 21, 2012, was not the end of the world but a brand-new start, a chance to fly high.
Source: CRI

























