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Taiwanese romance “Our Times” is biggest Taiwanese release in Korea

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(Variety) Fresh from Cannes, “The Wailing” remained on top of the Korean box office for the second week, accounting for 58% of the total weekend box office. The Fox release earned $9.57 million from 1.33 million admissions between Friday and Sunday, extending its total to $31.4 million after two weekends.

UPI released “The Angry Birds Movie,” on Thursday and scored $1.7 million over four days.

That was some 69% ahead of the opening of “Home.”

Disney’s “Captain America: Civil War” slipped to third, with a drop of 67%. It earned $1.29 million between Friday and Sunday for a cumulative of $60.5 million after four weekends.

Two newcomers “Canola” and “Sing Street” opened on Thursday and landed in fourth and fifth, respectively. Local director Chang’s “Canola” made $1.41 million over its opening four days. Musical drama “Street” earned $1.21 million.

Taiwanese hit romance “Our Times” was in sixth. It earned $605,900 between Friday and Sunday, for a total of $1.28 million after two weekends. It is by far the biggest Taiwanese release in Korea.

CJ’s crime action drama “Phantom Detective” slipped to seventh from the previous week’s third. It made $571,000 for a total of $9.41 million after three weekends. Sci fi action film “Hardcore Henry” debuted in eighth, with a soft opening score of $280,000 over four days.

Source: Variety by Sonia Kil

Song Qian covers fashion magazine

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Song Qian, better known as Victoria Song or mononymously as Victoria, is a Chinese singer, dancer, actress, and model. Over the years, Victoria has been active in various Korean and Chinese entertainment outlets.


(Wikipedia)

Stills from "The Precipice Game"

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Stills and posters from "The Precipice Game"


Source: Xinhua

Beijing Style: Embrace the summer

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Summer is here on the streets of Sanlitun in Beijing’s Chaoyang District, May 24.


Source: china.org

Co-production movie enjoys booming development

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(CRI) A report issued by the China Film Association is suggesting the number of co-production movie projects initiated last year have achieved a record high in history.

A total of 94 co-production movie projects were initiated in 2015, which is 17 more than that of the previous year. Among all projects initiated, 60 were approved by Chinese film authorities.

Filmmakers from 11 countries around the world have collaborated with Chinese filmmakers, including those from the US, UK, India, France, Japan, South Korea, Italy and Australia.

The report says co-production between Chinese mainland and Hong Kong makes up the majority, with 48 projects initiated and 38 approved.

Among them, the blockbuster Monster Hunt broke Chinese box office records with a startling income of over 2.4 billion RMB.

Source: CRI

Bibi Zhou Honored to Be Yunfat Chow’s Minion

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(MSN) Bibi Zhou showed up as the writer and singer at the presser to promote the theme song of “Cold War 2”.


Source: MSN

Fiona Sit Wears Swimsuit for New MV

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Fiona Sit appeared in a radio interview to promote her new song “Miss Fiona”.


Source: MSN

Street shots of Yang Zi


A-Lin covers fashion magazine

Charlene Choi, Gulnazar attend TV show

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Charlene Choi, Gulnazar attend TV show


Source: Xinhua

How ‘Warcraft’ Could Open Up Another Niche In China’s Box Office

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(IBTimes) Based on presale numbers, “Warcraft” is one of China’s most anticipated films of all-time.

But more importantly, it could give Hollywood another avenue to capitalize on a nearly $7 billion movie market that’s growing at nearly 50 percent a year — but has a select few preferences.

Industry analyst Jonathan Papish of China Film Insider noted Universal Pictures’ “Warcraft,” based on the video game series from Activision Blizzard has reeled in $2 million in ticket presales for its midnight premiere 12 days before it happens, which is already the sixth-best ever.

That doesn’t necessarily mean “Warcraft” will be a long-tail hit in China like “Furious 7” or “Zootopia.” After all, “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” also had strong China presales numbers but ended up being a major disappointment, dropping 80 percent in its second weekend amid reports of bored crowds playing on their phones.

But while Disney has hit a trifecta in China this year with “Zootopia,” “The Jungle Book” and “Captain America: Civil War” winning over critics as well as audiences, Warner Bros.’ “Batman v Superman” was beloved by neither and fell short of its box office projections. “Warcraft’s” abysmal 33 percent score on movie review site Rotten Tomatoes and some blisteringreviews could curb that initial enthusiasm.

China may have the world’s biggest box office as soon as 2017 and Hollywood films make up about half of that, but only a select few genres really travel well. Disney is in a great position with its animation division and the Marvel Cinematic Universe, both of which have churned out films with a track record of success there. The “Fast and Furious” movies are also hugely popular in China. But live action comedies and Western period films don’t do much.

Video games, though, may present another opportunity to crack that code. Sony’s “Angry Birds,” an animated film based on the mobile video game that may have been the world’s leading idle workplace activity during its peak, soared to a solid $30 million opening this past weekend to top China’s box office, according to BoxOfficeMojo. That’s nothing compared to the nearly $100 million debut weekend of “Captain America,” for example, but came out on the higher end of predictions.

And China is a massive gaming market for titles such as Riot Games’ “League of Legends” and especially Valve Corp.’s “Dota 2,” a multiplayer online battle arena game where two teams of five compete to capture the opposing team’s “Ancient” building. Dota 2 is its own game, but its roots can be found in Activision Blizzard’s “Warcraft” canon. The original “Defense of the Ancients” was first created as a mod for “Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos,” and Valve hired its lead designer to develop “Dota 2.”

The “Warcraft” movie is the product of a partnership between Activision, Atlas Entertainment and Legendary Entertainment, the production company Dalian Wanda Group — the conglomerate led by China’s richest man, Wang Jianlin — bought in January for $3.5 billion. Legendary was behind several films that played relatively well in China, including last year’s “Jurassic World,” which made $229 million there.

Wanda’s Legendary swoop remains the biggest cross-border deal in the last two years, a period in which studios from Universal to Lions Gate have signed co-production deals with Chinese partners seeking improved access to China’s rapidly growing but restricted box office. Only 34 Western films are currently permitted to play there per year. If “Warcraft” delivers on its presale promise at the gate, that genre could prove to be another route to the gold at China’s cinemas. That’s clearly not a game for Hollywood.

Source: International Business Times by Matt Pressberg

Shu Qi in ‘My Best Friend’s Wedding’

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Stills from ‘My Best Friend’s Wedding’


Source: Xinhua

Fan Bingbing ‘all smiles'

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Actress Fan Bingbing


Source: Xinhua

Ying Er covers fashion magazine

Summer girl Wang Ziwen

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Actress Wang Ziwen


Source: Xinhua

Actor Li Yifeng goes abroad after crashing Lamborghini

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(china.org) Popular Chinese actor Li Yifeng crashed a Lamborghini race car in downtown Beijing in the early hours of Friday morning, his agent confirmed.

Li was going to his parents' home when his Lamborghini race car hit a pillar under the Dajiaoting Bridge in eastern Beijing at around 3:00 a.m.

After making sure no one was injured, Li called an insurance company to handle the necessary matters and left the scene. He then caught a plane to Monaco.

Li's studio issued an online statement later on Li's behalf. It said that the trip to Monaco was arranged long before the crash, and that Li was not drunk when the crash took place.

Li said he is sorry for his actions and is willing to receive the corresponding punishment.

No one was hurt and no public property was damaged in the crash, the statement said.

However, Li's Lamborghini was found to carry a temporary license, which has been invalid for two weeks. He may be fined 200 yuan (US$30.5) for using an expired temporary license according to the law.

Li gained fame in 2007 on the popular "My Hero" TV talent show. In 2014, he garnered the "Most Commercially Valuable Actor" award. He was ranked ninth on the 2015 Forbes Chinese Celebrity list with an estimated revenue of 69 million yuan.

Source: china.org by Chen Xia

Legendary Wins Bidding War for China-Set Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson Action Movie (Exclusive)

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(THR) In a major seven-figure deal, Legendary has won the furious bidding war for the China-set action movie Skyscraper that has Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson attached to star.

The package also includes Rawson Marshall Thurber as director and writer (he directed Johnson in June’s New Line comedy Central Intelligence) and producer Beau Flynn, who has worked with Johnson on several major projects, among them Journey 2: The Mysterious Island, San Andreas and the recently wrapped Baywatch.

Skyscraper hit the town earlier this week and immediately caused a sensation, with bids quickly hitting the seven-figure mark as Universal, Sony and Paramount joined Legendary in the fray. 

Legendary, acquired by Chinese conglomerate Dalian Wanda in January, came out on top, paying at least $3 million for the script alone.

Based on an original idea of Thurber’s, the project logline is being kept under wraps but has been described as an adventure thriller that takes place in a mega-skyscraper set in China. The planned project also is said to have shades of Die Hard, the classic Bruce Willis action movie set in an office building, as well as Towering Inferno, the 1974 disaster movie that starred Paul Newman and Steve McQueen and featured a gargantuan office building engulfed in flames.

Johnson and Flynn seem to be doing their part to keep original tentpoles alive in a town awash in remakes, reboots and sequels. Johnson's Central Intelligence is being released in June, with The Conjuring 2, Now You See Me 2,Finding Dory and Independence Day: Resurgence among the other high-profile releases that month. Johnson and Flynn were also behind San Andreas, the earthquake disaster movie which was Warner Bros.' highest-grossing movie last year.

Flynn will produce Skyscraper via his FlynnPictureCo. with Johnson's Seven Bucks Productions. Thurber will also produce. Universal will distribute per its deal with Legendary.

Wendy Jacobson will oversee for FlynnPictureCo.

Johnson is repped by WME and Gang Tyre, while Thurber is repped by WME and Hansen Jacobson.

Source: The Hollywood Reporter by Borys Kit

Tencent invests in YG Entertainment

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(China Daily) China's internet giant Tencent Holdings Ltd is investing in YG Entertainment to better tap South Korean stars' influence on Chinese fans.

YG Entertainment, which owns several famous k-pop bands, including Big Bang, announced on Friday that the company will raise a total investment of $85 million from Tencent and a Chinese online ticketing firm Weiying Technology.

The deal will be officially inked in Seoul on May 31st, said a statement released by Tencent. The three companies will jointly announce their strategic investment and plans for future growth in China based on collaborative efforts.

Weiying Technology and Tencent will respectively invest $55 million and $30 million and hold 8.2 percent and 4.5 percent in YG, becoming the third and fourth largest shareholders of YG after L Capital Asia, the investment arm of LVMH Group, said the statement.

YG Entertainment said the company has seen growth of more than 30 percent every year for the past ten years and in order to maintain such strong growth, it must expand its business to the Chinese market.

YG also said it will establish a joint venture in China with Tencent and Weiying Technology to expand the activities of YG artists, actors and actresses and discover and nurture local Chinese artists.

Tencent said it looks forward to working with YG to meet the huge appetite in China for popular Korean entertainment such as music, concerts and variety shows, and to explore new business opportunities.

Weiying Technology operates the mobile ticketing application called Wepiao, which runs on Tencent's platforms including QQ and Weixin. The company sells tickets for movies, shows and sporting events online and has over 20 million active users.

Source: China Daily

Scandalous Outfits We Will Never Forget

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Oh, what a little skin can do.


Theda Bara, 1917: The actress Theda Bara — one of Hollywood's first ever sex symbols and femme fatales — starred in the title role of the 1917 silent film Cleopatra, wearing expensive and racy costumes that included a coiled snake bra that wrapped around her bare breasts. Censors required cuts of scenes that included Bara's "objectionable costume" and "costume exposing body." Sadly, most of the film is now lost because the last remaining prints were destroyed.

Josephine Baker in the 1920s: The dancer and civil rights activist Josephine Baker found fame in Paris in the 1920s. Her most iconic routine was the danse sauvage, in which she wore a skirt made out of artificial bananas and twerked before twerking was even a term. Audiences didn't know what to do with their feelings of attraction, fascination, and disgust. Baker's contemporary, the anthropologist Essie Robeson, called it "this ridiculously vulgar...wiggling." Ernest Hemingway remembered her as being "the most sensational woman anybody ever saw. Or ever will."

Jean Harlow, 1933: It's hard not to think of the Art Deco age and bias cut gowns without picturing this costume gown by Gilbert Adrian that Harlow wore in the film Dinner at Eight. It had a low back and beautiful criss-crossing straps in the front, and it looked like it had been poured right over Harlow's body. Fun fact: Harlow couldn't actually sit down in the dress because of the way it was cut so close to her figure.

Rita Hayworth, 1941: Rita Hayworth wasn't yet known as the "Love Goddess" when she sat for this alluring image for LIFE Magazine in 1941. It became "arguably the single most famous and most frequently reproduced American pinup image ever" (that's according to LIFE, though I'm not going to disagree). She wore a lacy silk negligee — definitely inside clothes back then — and knelt on top of a bed in the photograph by Bob Landry. It was too risqué for the cover, according to someone who worked at LIFE at the time, but it was fine to run inside the magazine. More than five million copies of the image ended up in the hands of American troops fighting in World War II.

Marilyn Monroe, 1955: Marilyn Monroe wore her most famous white halter dress (with two pairs of underwear for safety) in the film The Seven Year Itch. "Ooh, do you feel the breeze from the subway? Isn't it delicious?" she asks in the scene as the pleated skirt of her dress by costume designer William Travilla blows up. The scene was first shot on location in New York City, but thousands of onlookers were making so much noise that it had to be re-shot on a set. Monroe's then-husband Joe DiMaggio was on set during filming and was reportedly so upset by it that it caused the breakdown of the marriage.

Jayne Mansfield, 1957: There's a more famous photo than this from the same party in which Sophia Loren (pictured here on the left) gives Jayne Mansfield the stankiest side eye ever captured. Why the contempt? Mansfield had arrived in a dress that stole the spotlight, which was supposed to be on Loren that night. (The move was a publicity stunt; Mansfield knew that the dress would expose her boobs.) "Look at the picture," Loren recently told EW. "Where are my eyes? I'm staring at her nipples because I am afraid they are about to come onto my plate. In my face you can see the fear. I'm so frightened that everything in her dress is going to blow — BOOM! — and spill all over the table."

Marilyn Monroe, 1962: Here's a closer look at the dress, which Monroe was still wearing when she hit up the after-party with President Kennedy and Robert F. Kennedy. The lore is that she skipped underwear for this dress. It might explain why the president isn't looking at the actress at all but keeping his eyes on the floor. The dress later sold at auction for $1.26 million.

Cher, 1974: Cher collaborated on many indelible looks with the designer Bob Mackie, but this is one that really got people talking — and wanting a copy for themselves. She first wore this feathery naked dress to the Metropolitan Museum in 1974, then again on the cover of TIME Magazine in 1975. "When Cher was on the cover of Time, in her see-through dress, every tired old broad in Hollywood called asking me for one just like it," Mackie said in 2014. Kim Kardashian paid homage to Cher's dress when she attended the Met Gala four decades later.

Mary Tyler Moore, 1975: In the fifth season of The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Moore's character Mary Richards wears a green dress designed by a friend (a former prostitute). Upon seeing Mary in the revealing cutout dress, the live audience responded with shrieks and cheers. Mary's friend Ted Baxter says, "Get me a glass of water," because ~thirst~. Mary thinks it looks horrible, Ted thinks it looks fantastic. Whatever the case, the dress was certainly memorable.

Carrie Fisher, 1983: Carrie Fisher would become a sex symbol after she wearing this copper bikini as Princess Leia in Return of the Jedi. It has had plenty of critics who say it is sexist, among other things, and "a bit of soft-core porn dropped in the middle of a kids' adventure story." Fisher herself has warned Star Wars actress Daisy Ridley against wearing any similar costumes. "You keep fighting against that slave outfit," Fisher told Ridley.

Cindy Crawford, 1991: For her first red carpet with her then-boyfriend Richard Gere, supermodel Cindy Crawford dominated the red carpet at the Academy Awards. For her all-eyes-on-me moment, she wore a scarlet Versace halter dress that featured a low cut in the front ...

Sharon Stone, 1992: In one of the most famous scenes in Basic Instinct, Sharon Stone wears a sleeveless turtleneck dress made of winter white wool crepe. Costume designer Ellen Mirojnick made a choice to clothe Stone's femme fatale in pale neutrals instead of dark, vampy colors. Stone famously crosses and uncrosses her legs in the white dress, exposing her uncovered genitalia. (The actress later claimed this happened without her knowledge.) The graphic sexual nature of the scene (and the film) led to protest and criticism.

Jennifer Lopez, 2000: Along with David Duchovny, Jennifer Lopez presented the first award at the Grammys in 2000. She wore a sheer green silk chiffon dress by Versace that had been worn previously by model Amber Valletta and Spice Girl Geri Halliwell. But nobody wore it like Lopez. You could hear someone in the audience yell out, "Oh my god!" as people cheered appreciatively. "Well, Jennifer," Duchovny said, "this is the first time in five or six years that I'm sure that nobody is looking at me."

Toni Braxton, 2001: The actor Jimmy Smits and singer Joe ogled Toni Braxton as they walked across the stage to present an award at the Grammys in 2001. "We are speechless," Smits said. The Richard Tyler dress had a panel going down the front and another going down the back, with a belt of sorts keeping the two panels together but leaving a large gap in between. "Things were up – the boobies were perkier, the cellulite was less," Braxton told People in 2014. "You got to do it when you're young. I think the funniest thing was 'Is she naked under there?' Like, what is she wearing under that?"

Gwyneth Paltrow, 2002: Gwyneth Paltrow herself called this unflattering look (but memorable precisely for this reason) a fashion faux pas. "There were a few issues; I still love the dress itself but I should have worn a bra and I should have just had simple beachy hair and less makeup. Then, it would have worked as I wanted it to – a little bit of punk at the Oscars."

Kate Middleton, 2002: According to CNN, the size 8 dress started out as a skirt, and was made with two turquoise bands at either end of a column of knitted black-and-gold silk. The designer said she created the dress with "the art of seduction" in mind. "So, in a way, if that's what she wanted, she definitely bagged her prince, so it got her what she wanted."

Bella Hadid, 2016: Bella Hadid set the temperature rising in this smoking hot Alexandre Vauthier gown as she attended 'The Unknown Girl (La Fille Inconnue)' Photocall during the 69th annual Cannes Film Festival on May 18, 2016. She showed off her toned body in this red silk gown which she paired with diamond drop earrings and braclet.

Kim Kardashian, 2016: Kim Kardashian West arrived for the Vogue 100 Festival Gala on May 23, 2016 in London in this embroidered and ultra sheer Roberto Cavalli gown. She completed her look with a huge khaki belt, nude peep-toe heels and neutral make-up.


Kate Moss with Naomi Campbell, 1993: A 19-year-old Kate Moss wore a silver slip dress by Liza Bruce to an Elite Models party in London in 1993. It remains one of Moss's most famous looks because it was, as the BBC called it, "startlingly sheer." There was no bra involved, just panties. But Moss might not have intended to provoke. "Underwear as outerwear was the mood of the moment," Bruce told the Daily Mail. 'The dress did come out more transparent in the picture (than in reality), which is maybe why she had the confidence to wear it ... It wasn't a come on ... it was just 'this is me.' Her body language was so much like a kid's."

Source: MSN

Eve Ai Gets a Bikini from Tiger Huang at New Album Presentation

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Eve Ai Gets a Bikini from Tiger Huang at New Album Presentation

Tiger said Eve was a powerful little gun and admitted that she appreciated Eve’s creative talent, saying, “Because we both come from Taiwan.”

Source: MSN
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