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Chinese fans of special effects eager for latest 'Planet of the Apes'

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(China Daily) Software-created on-screen magic has reached a new level with the sci-fi movie War for the Planet of the Apes. In clips of the new franchise movie, recently released by 20th Century Fox at a Beijing event, most viewers were amazed to see actor Andy Serkis' seamless transformation into Caesar, the story's leader of the apes.

When Serkis performs as an orangutan, he wears skin-tight clothing and his movements as well as emotions are captured with the help of sensors, making his act life-like. Though special effects have become a must-have for most big Hollywood movies, this film's behind-the-scenes footage still enthralled Chinese viewers.

"The scenes look incredibly realistic," says Lu Chuan, a Chinese film director who attended the event.

The third installment of the studio franchise the Planet of the Apes will hit Chinese mainland theaters on Sept 15, two months after its North American release.

In the new tale, Caesar and the other apes are forced into a war against a ruthless colonel and his soldiers. To avenge the murder of his wife and son, and rescue his captive fellow primates, Caesar embarks on a tough journey. So far, the movie is listed as one of the most anticipated films in September, according to the movie news portal mtime.com.

Anders Langlands, the visual effects supervisor of Weta Digital, a top company in the field from New Zealand, talks about how human actors are turned into primate fighters on screen.

"We spent a lot of time observing apes. A huge part of our job is just observing," says Langlands, who led the visual effects teams for X-Men: Days of Future Past and The Martian.

As the major characters in War for the Planet of the Apes are chimpanzees, artists of Weta Digital researched the animals' physical characteristics, moves and behavior. They used X-ray photos of some chimpanzees to get details about their skeleton and learn about their skin textures.

With nearly 1,000 people from Weta involved in the movie, the majority of the film was shot with visual effects. For the most complicated parts, more than 400 artists worked at the same time.

The hair on an ape's body was processed by software to ensure that changes in the environment, such as snow or bonfire light, are shown on the skin.

"In this film, we see Caesar go from just being a leader to people into being a legend in the ape world. So the film takes on a much grander scope because it becomes sort of an epic mythical journey," says Langlands.

One of his favorite characters is Bad Ape, an intelligent quiet chimpanzee who fled from a zoo.

"Bad Ape is such a different character ... He is so charming and he brings (out) very human and very innocent, curious qualities that the audience can identify with," he says.

"When all of your main characters in the movie are digital, it requires a very close collaboration between the director and the visual effects people to bring that to life."

US filmmaker Matt Reeves again directs this installment after he directed the Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (2014).

Meanwhile, for China, where the movie industry has taken off only in the past decade, achieving world-class special effects in domestic productions is an aspiration.

Xu Fei, the founder of Illumina, a Beijing-based special-effects studio, says, "The major problem is that most directors and producers don't know how to make such a movie. It needs imagination and a lot of pre-production communication."

But for some Chinese directors, a shortage of performing talent is the bigger problem.

Lu, the director of the effects-studded movie Chronicles of the Ghostly Tribe (2015), says it's difficult to persuade Chinese stars to play unconventional roles like the leader of apes, as they want their faces to be recognized by fans on the big screen only in mainstream roles.

"In Chronicles of the Ghostly Tribe, for example, I had to play the monsters myself," he says, adding that it did save him some time and money.

Source: By Xu Fan | China Daily

'Gintama' to debut in China in September

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(China Daily) Adapted from the popular manga series of Gintama, the Japanese action-comedy film of the same name is expected to hit screens in Chinese mainland on September 1.

Set in an alternate late Edo period, humans are attacked by aliens called Amanto.
Japanese samurais join the battle against the aliens, but when the Shogun realizes the power of the aliens, he betrays the samurai and surrenders.
The Shogun writes an unequal contract with the aliens allowing them to enter the country and place a ban on carrying swords in public. The swords of samurai are taken away so they can no longer resist the aliens.
The Shogunate then becomes a puppet to the government after this.
Against the backdrop, viewers follow Gintoki Sakata, who works as a freelancer alongside his friends Shinpachi Shimura and Kagura in order to pay the monthly rent.
Japanese actor Shun Oguri stars in the film, which was released in Japan on July 14 by Warner Brothers Pictures, achieving the box office of more than three billion yen ($270 million) by August 13, according to Mtime.com.
Meanwhile, the Gintama manga has sold 50 million units in Japan as of May 2016. Also, the animated adaptation of Gintama is the highest rated Japanese anime series on Douban Movie, the Chinese version of the Internet Movie Database, for its ironic yet moving plots.
Its derivative mobile games have been released only in China due to their enormous popularity.
Source: By Zhang Xingjian | chinadaily.com.cn

Wong Jing returns to comfort zone with new gangster film

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(China Daily) Wong Jing is a prominent figure in Hong Kong cinema. He has directed, penned and produced more than 100 films.

But in recent years, he has been in the news mostly for directing mainland productions such as the hit franchise The Man from Macao.

With Color of the Game, a thriller set to open across China on Friday, Wong will again be seen in his familiar zone of making films about gangsters in Hong Kong. The latest in the Color series has elements typical of such films: brotherhood, slums and street fights. The earlier films are Color of the Truth (2003) and Color of Loyalty (2005).

Starring Simon Yam and Jordan Chan, the Hong Kong actors known for their roles in gangster classics, Color of the Game is about a gang whose members get trapped in a conspiracy, pushing them to desperation.

The protagonists wear white clothes in the film, which Wong calls a "tribute to the cinematic art of violent aesthetics" created by Chang Cheh, a late master of Hong Kong cinema.

"I was fascinated with Cheh's movies when I was young. Most of his martial arts heroes wear white robes on screen, making it a sort of a symbol of top fighters," Wong, 62, said at a Beijing preview last week.

Wong is the movie's main producer.

In one of the film's funny scenes, a hooligan played by veteran Hong Kong actor Suet Lam is seen continuously eating rice to dodge questions from those whom he has betrayed.

"He fears answering the questions. If he opens his mouth to speak, it may get him and his family killed," Wong says.

The film is also a survival tale of people on the city's edges, not just a simple cat-and-mouse game between police and criminals, Wong says.

Hong Kong gangster movies helped establish a few actors in Hollywood once and inspired such films in the United States, but the genre has seen a decline over the past decade.

"It is a part of world cinema. I have faith that such movies with Hong Kong flavor won't vanish from the big screen," Wong says.

The film's characters speak Cantonese but it has been dubbed in Mandarin for the mainland market.

At a time when the Hong Kong film industry is facing a shortage of performers, directors and scriptwriters, Wong says he will focus on training new talent.

"I will reduce my directoral work on account of health, but help youngsters realize their dreams in cinema," he says.

And, Color of the Game does just that. While Wong has produced the film, he has helped younger filmmaker Kam Ka-wai direct it.

But the film will likely face some competition in the mainland market.

Thanks to the rapidly expanding industry, mainland filmmakers have shown growing interest in producing crime movies. Guilty of Mind, which is about a psychologist and a cop working together to hunt a serial killer, will also be released in September.

Source: By Xu Fan | China Daily

Venice Int’l Film Festival: Chinese films on tap in the City of Water

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(CGTN) The Venice International Film Festival kicks off on Wednesday night, starring a number of Chinese films and directors.

This annual bash among the canals of Venice is a major fixture in the film calendar. Signaling increasing recognition for China’s film industry on the world stage, “Angels Wear White”, a drama by award-winning Vivian Qu, is screening in competition for top awards including the Golden Lion for Best Film.
Meanwhile, Hong Kong auteur John Woo’s “Manhunt” appears to be a retro return to his earlier style of hardcore action films after a hiatus making Hollywood movies and Chinese epics. And Song Pengfei’s “The Taste of Rice Flower” is screening in the Venice Days side festival for smaller, independent movies.
‘What festivals like Venice are for’
Drama “Angels Wear White” is the second film as a director by Vivian Qu. Her first film, “Trap Street”, premiered to great acclaim at Venice in 2013, and she produced the thriller “Black Coal, Thin Ice”, which won the Golden Bear Award at the Berlin International Film Festival in 2014 and went onto be equally revered by regular audiences.
Raising awareness of films like “Angels Wear White”, “Black Coal, Thin Ice” and “The Taste of Rice Flower” is “what festivals like Venice are really essential for,” said movie critic and former Time Out Beijing film editor Aaron Fox-Lerner.
“Festivals really help small, independent films outside and within China. ‘Black Coal’ is a great example of this. Without the Golden Bear, this moody, artsy, low-budget crime thriller would never have come to the attention of so many people,” he told CGTN Digital.
“The Taste of Rice Flower” is Song Pengfei’s sophomore feature. Debut “Underground Fragrance” won a number of awards at international festivals and featured in Venice Days 2015.
Its follow-up is about an ethnically Dai woman who returns after working in the city to her village in Yunnan near the Sino-Myanmar border to take care of her troublesome 11-year-old son. These so-called “left-behind children” of migrant-worker parents are a big issue in China, as are the challenges of preserving ethnic culture in a modernizing country, so “The Taste of Rice Flower” is likely to get domestic audiences thinking, providing it secures wide enough distribution.
There is no such doubt about the commercial prospects of “Manhunt”. The movie’s tagline says it all – “The return of the maestro.”
Return to form
John Woo was an action movie pioneer in the 1980s and early 1990s with “A Better Tomorrow”, “The Killer”, “Bullet in the Head” and “Hard Boiled”. His subsequent thrillers made in Hollywood were less well received, and Chinese historical war drama “The Crossing” was not the kind of fare his original fans craved.
“Manhunt” is a remake of a Japanese classic which tells the story of a man accused of multiple crimes and trying desperately to clear his name. The new version stars Chinese actor Zhang Hanyu.
It’s reportedly scheduled for a release in the Chinese mainland during the Spring Festival holidays, almost guaranteeing big box office.
“If ‘Manhunt’ lives up to its promise, it should be very exciting and fun,” said Fox-Lerner. “Woo is a director in need of a return to form, and this is his chance to indulge a love of Japanese action films that he has had for a long time. A lot of international film fans have high hopes for this one.”
Source: CGTN

Six Chinese faces to delight 2017 Victoria's Secret Fashion show

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The annual Victoria's Secret Fashion Show will take place in Shanghai in November this year, marking the first time that the ultra-glam annual affair will take place in Asia.

Directed by Hamish Hamilton, a handful of veteran Angels, including Adriana Lima, Alessandra Ambrosio, Behati Prinsloo, Candice Swanepoel, Lily Aldridge, Elsa Hosk, Jasmine Tookes, Josephine Skriver, Lais Ribeiro, Martha Hunt, Romee Strijd, Sara Sampaio and Stella Maxwell have confirmed they will show off latest fashion trend this time in China.

The highlight of this year's show for Chinese must be the six Chinese models including He Sui, Liu Wen, Xi Mengyao, Ju Xiaowen, Xie Xin and Estelle Chen, a French model of Chinese descent, who will be involved in it, the most that have ever participated.

On the official website, it has put forward the slogan, "Ni Hao, Shanghai", saying that, "From its iconic skyline to its major fashion cred, China's vibrant, modern metropolis makes the perfect backdrop for the world's sexiest runway."

The new fashion show venue reflects the brand's aim to appeal to Chinese consumers and there are plans to expand in the nation's "fast-growing market," according to the official Victoria's Secret website.

Renowned as the "Oscar Awards in fashion circles," the 2017 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show, which will consist of a red carpet fashion show, model briefing, looks behind the scenes and superstar performances, will be broadcast in more than 190 countries and areas.

Now, let's take a closer look at some iconic moments from the show's stage made by Chinese Angels.

Models including He Sui, Liu Wen and Xi Mengyao are seen going to fittings for the 2017 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show in Midtown on August 26, 2017 in New York City.

Models including He Sui, Liu Wen and Xi Mengyao are seen going to fittings for the 2017 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show in Midtown on August 26, 2017 in New York City.

Model Estelle Chen is one of the newly-added Chinese faces in this year's Victoria's Secret Fashion Show held in Shanghai.

Model Xie Xin is one of the newly-added Chinese faces in this year's Victoria's Secret Fashion Show held in Shanghai.

Victoria's Secret model Xi Mengyao,He Sui, Ju Xiaowen, Liu Wen departs for Paris for the 2016 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show on November 27, 2016 in New York City.

Victoria's Secret angels Josephine Skriver, Alessandra Ambrosio, Xi Mengyao and He Sui pose in front of the Shanghai Bund.

Victoria's Secret angel Alessandra Ambrosio attends the grand opening of Victoria's Secret Shanghai flagship store on March 8, 2017, in Shanghai, China.

Four Victoria's Secret angels Alessandra Ambrosio (second left), He Sui (left), Josephine Skriver and Xi Mengyao (right) attend the grand opening of Victoria's Secret Shanghai flagship store.

Xi Menhyao, Ju Xiaowenand He Sui pose backstage during 2016 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show on November 30, 2016 in Paris, France.

Liu Wen and Xi Menhyao pose backstage during 2016 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show on November 30, 2016 in Paris, France.

He Sui walks the runway during the 2016 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show on November 30, 2016 in Paris, France.

He Sui walks the runway during the 2016 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show on November 30, 2016 in Paris, France.

He Sui walks the runway during the 2016 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show on November 30, 2016 in Paris, France.

He Sui walks on the runway at the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show at the Lexington Avenue Armory in New York City on November 10, 2015.

He Sui walks the runway during the 2016 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show on November 30, 2016 in Paris, France.

Victoria's Secret model He Sui walks the runway during the 2014 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show at Earl's Court exhibition centre on December 2, 2014 in London, England.

Liu Wen walks the runway during the 2016 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show on November 30, 2016 in Paris, France.

Liu Wen walks the runway during the 2016 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show on November 30, 2016 in Paris, France.

Liu Wen walks the runway during the 2016 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show on November 30, 2016 in Paris, France.

Model Liu Wen walks the runway at the Victoria's Secret Fashion show in New York City on November 19, 2009.

Model Liu Wen walks the runway during the 2010 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show at the Lexington Avenue Armory on November 10, 2010 in New York City.

Liu Wen walks the runway during the 2012 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show at the Lexington Avenue Armory on November 7, 2012 in New York City.

Model Liu Wen walks the runway during the 2010 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show at the Lexington Avenue Armory on November 10, 2010 in New York City.

Liu Wen walks the runway during the 2011 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show at the Lexington Avenue Armory on November 9, 2011 in New York City.

Model Liu Wen walks the runway during the 2010 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show at the Lexington Avenue Armory on November 10, 2010 in New York City.

Model Xi Mengyao from China walks the runway during the 2015 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show at Lexington Avenue Armory on November 10, 2015 in New York City.

Victoria's Secret model Xi Mengyao walks the runway during the 2014 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show at Earl's Court exhibition centre on December 2, 2014 in London, England.

Xi Mengyao walks the runway during the 2016 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show on November 30, 2016 in Paris, France.

Xi Mengyao walks the runway during the 2016 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show on November 30, 2016 in Paris, France.

Model Xi Mengyao from China walks the runway during the 2015 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show at Lexington Avenue Armory on November 10, 2015 in New York City.

Model Xi Mengyao from China walks the runway during the 2015 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show at Lexington Avenue Armory on November 10, 2015 in New York City.

Model Qin Shupei walks the runway during the 2012 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show at the Lexington Avenue Armory on November 7, 2012 in New York City.

Ju Xiaowen walks the runway during the 2016 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show on November 30, 2016 in Paris, France.

Ju Xiaowen walks the runway during the 2016 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show on November 30, 2016 in Paris, France.

Source: China Daily By Zhang Xingjian

Chinese documentary ‘Borof’ focuses on children of refugees in India

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(Global Times) In late July, Chinese director Liu Juan prescreened a rough-cut version of her India-focused documentary Borof in Beijing. With the event also live-streamed on websites including v.qq.com and v.ifeng.com, more than 300,000 people tuned in to watch.

The word borof means "eyes" in Bengali. An independent documentary two years in the making, it focuses on the young descendants of refugees who relocated to India after partition, a majority of whom are still living as second-class citizens in India today.

"Many of them are having trouble just staying alive," the 34-year-old director told the Global Times on Sunday. "Their poverty has historical roots and the Indo-Pakistan wars just aggravated the situation,"

Traveling all the way from India's northeastern border cities to the western city of Mumbai, generally considered a haven by many refugees and their descendants, Liu and her two assistants spent a month in 2015 following the route refugees once walked to better record their experiences.

Focus on children

A veteran director who won the New Asian Talent Competition for her film Singing When We Are Young at the 16th Shanghai Film Festival in 2013, Liu said that a photo of the dead body of Aylan Kurdi, a 3-year-old Syrian refugee boy whose corpse was found on a Turkish beach in 2015, pushed her to film Borof

"I once met a homeless mother who was traveling with her kids to Mumbai," Liu recalled. "One of her babies was seriously ill. After praying over the child, she left him by the roadside and continued on her journey. She told me that God would take care of him."

Watching the boy's family march on while he lay there left Liu feeling shocked and numb.

The photo of Kurdi brought this memory back into clear focus, leading Liu to decide that she had to do something helpful.

"I simply want to use what I am good at, filming in this case, to help them. I hope more people will learn about them and want to give them aid after the film gets its wide release," Liu told the Global Times.

Liu decided to present a children's perspective when delving into this group's stories. The documentary focuses on four children whose grandparents were once forced to flee their homes in Pakistan and Bangladesh to head to India: 7-year-old Dano lives in Varanasi, 8-year-old Paump is from a village near Jaisalmer, 12-year-old Wine calls Mumbai home, while 18-year-old Chris resides in Barasat.

Liu and her team stayed with the children's families during the shoot, recording their relationships with their siblings and parents, who are generally considered second-generation immigrants into India.

But why the focus on children? Similar concerns arose during their stay in India, Liu said, when some locals accused them of taking advantage of the children - which Liu said is not true.

"We chose them, because children are sensitive to social impacts. The influences of even the smallest moves of the people around them, good or bad, are rapidly reflected in them - as such you can actually learn some very rich lessons from these children," Liu said.

Changing and growing

Paump was one of the children from whom Liu learned a great deal.

Liu met the now 10-year-old Paump on a tourist trip to India in 2013 when she and her companions got lost in a desert near the village where the girl lived. The girl, who was then playing nearby, showed them the way back to civilization.

"She was so different," Liu recalled. Unlike other kids that Liu met in India, who wouldn't let tourists go until they handed over some money, Paump asked for nothing after she helped them.

However, when Liu met the girl again in 2015, Paump was no different than other kids begging for money.

"Her experience kind of reinforced my resolution to carry on this project," Liu said.

Borof reveals that Chris, like his grandfather who moved to India from Bangladesh during the war, wants to go to Mumbai. What sets the young man apart from his grandfather is that he dreams of working in Bollywood.

"This is another reason I want to continue to document their lives," Liu said. "I want to see for myself how these kids change and grow."

An ongoing project

Liu told the Global Times that she is currently working to expand the 60-minute rough-cut version that was screened in July, with the goal of adding more scenes to help make these children's stories more complete. She noted that before she left India, she gave Dano, Chris and Wine GoPro cameras and told them to film whatever they wanted.

The director said that she currently plans to turn this into a long-term project by going back every year to film the kids and collect the footage they shot that year to use in making new documentaries.

Source: Global Times by Huang Tingting

"Dunkirk" hits Chinese silverscreens this weekend

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(China Plus) The film, "Dunkirk", directed by Christopher Nolan hits theaters in China this Friday.

Nolan arrived in Beijing, along with others connected to the film, to promote the movie.

Although "Dunkirk" is set during World War II, Nolan says he believes it's better to describe it as a suspense thriller, rather than a war film.

According to data on wepiao.com - an online movie ticket website - the box office for Dunkirk already reached over US$4 million just hours after its release on Friday.

Source: China Plus

2017 Venice Film Fest opens with Payne's ‘Downsizing'

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(China Plus) The world premiere of "Downsizing" by American director Alexander Payne has opened the 2017 Venice Film Festival.

Starring Matt Damon and Kristen Wiig, the satirical film tells of a surprising "near future" in which Norwegian scientists discover how to shrink people to five inches tall in order to make life on the planet more sustainable, and the human community less resource-consuming.

Damon and Wiig, who play the roles of a middle-class couple, decide to go through this irreversible path, and to begin a new life with the first community for small people in New Mexico.

Besides Payne's new feature, the opening day was marked by a premiere screening of "Nico, 1988" by Italian director Susanna Nicchiarelli, competing in the Horizons section devoted to new cinema trends.

The biographical movie focuses on the last years of German musician and actress Christa Paffgen -- best known by her artistic nickname "Nico" -- singer in the Velvet Underground band and one of Andy Warhol's muses.

Presiding over the 2017 jury of the main competition is Hollywood actress Annette Bening who spoke about her love of cinema.

"Along with my fellow jury members we bring all of our passion and enthusiasm and hopefully some knowledge but most importantly our deep love of cinema to every film that we see. I'm deeply honored to be president of the jury," said Bening.

The Venice Film Festival runs through September 9 when the winner of this year's Golden Lion award will be announced.

Overall, this 74th edition of the Venice Film Festival will feature 21 world premieres contending for the Golden Lion.

China is represented in the main competition by director Vivian Qu's “Jia Nian Hua,” or “Angels Wear White,” which is a China-France co-production starring Wen Qi, Zhou Meijun and Shi Ke, among others.

Source: China Plus/Xinhua

Four Chinese VR movies nominated at Venice Film Festival

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(China Daily) Four Chinese virtual reality films have been nominated for the 74th Venice International Film Festival, and will compete with their foreign rivals for three major prizes.

This year’s festival has unprecedentedly included VR into its official selections category where directors and content makers can be recognized for their work. The festival board has nominated 22 VR movies worldwide, offering three prizes including best VR film, grand VR jury prize, and best VR creativity award.
“Compared to our foreign counterparts, we still lag behind in terms of VR creation. If we focus on creating short VR films, centralizing resources, our work may be on par with Hollywood productions. But Hollywood’s advantages will emerge after it embraces the technology, which requires even more complicated procedures,” Mi Li, director of Pinta Studio, whose VR animation The Dream Collector has been nominated, told Thepaper.cn.
According to Mi, China have many talents in VR art creation, but the lack of cooperation and teamwork has become a shortcoming for the country’s VR movie industry.
“VR movie requires much more investment than traditional ones, thus our current goal is to focus on short VR movie production. No matter how advanced the technology is, it cannot reduce the time of making a good work,” said Mi. The Dream Collector, a 11-miniute-long VR movie that tells the story of an elderly dream collector and his dog, has impressed many internet users with its beautiful design and thought-provoking storyline.
The movie’s trailer has garnered over 200 million views on Sina Weibo as of press time, and has received positive reactions."
By using VR technology, the movie offers foreign audiences a unique angle to understand Chinese people’s perception of dreams. VR films may become a new trend in the future, and Chinese artists should seize the initiative and lead the emerging industry,” wrote a netizen.
Source: China Daily 

Stills from A Chinese Odyssey: Love of Eternity

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A Chinese Odyssey: Love of Eternity to premiere 28 September


Source: Xinhua

Five mega-hit TV dramas in August

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August marks a golden opportunity for the TV drama market as Chinese students enjoy their summer holiday, having more time to involve themselves in the TV plot, and closely follow their favorite superstars.

In this month, a variety of TV drama materials emerge on the small screen, including romance story, historical play, costume drama and urban drama, all targeted at different groups of TV viewers.

Now, lets' take a look at five most-watched TV dramas. If you have time, do not miss them!




1. Nothing Gold Can Stay


Nothing Gold Can Stay is a 2017 Chinese television series directed by Ding Hei and starring Sun Li and Chen Xiao.
The drama tells a positive story of a woman called Zhou Ying who transforms from an innocent girl into a powerful and successful business woman.
The female role is played by Chinese TV drama queen Sun Li. Following the great success of Empresses in the PalaceThe Legend of Miyue, she again challenges the role of a legendary woman.
The series is airing on Dragon TV and Jiangsu TV starting August 30, 2017.

2. Shall I Compare You to a Spring Day


Shall I Compare You to a Spring Day is a 2017 Chinese television series based on the novel Beijing, Beijing by Feng Tang.
Starring Zhang Yishan and Zhou Dongyu, the series is a coming-of-age story about young love and brotherhood among a group of youths, who lived during the revolutionary times of Beijing.
It premiered on Youku on July 21, 2017, and airs one episode every day from Monday to Friday.

3. The King's Woman
The King's Woman is a 2017 Chinese television series starring Dilraba Dilmurat and Zhang Binbin.
It is adapted from the novel The Legend of Qin: Li Ji Story.
Gong Sunli is the grand-daughter and disciple of military commander Gong Sun Yu. Jing Ke and Gong Sunli are childhood lovers and were forced to escape when Qin troops attacked.
However, Gong's wall-shattering beauty catches the interest of the Qin Emperor, Ying Zheng, and she's captured and sent to his palace.
It's then that she discovers she's pregnant with Jing Ke's child. Ying Zheng treats him as if he's his own child. The tragic day arrives when Jing Ke tries to assassinate Ying Zheng…
The series is airing on Zhejiang TV every Monday to Wednesday, starting August 14, 2017.

4. WuXin: The Monster Killer


WuXin: The Monster Killer represents one of the most successful online TV dramas in China.
The web series is based on Ni Luo's novel of the same title.
Produced by Chinese web streaming company Sohu TV, it stars Elvis Han and its 20 episodes first aired on July 6, 2015 via Sohu TV web streaming site.
Now, the second season has retuned in 2017 and tells some fantasy stories between Wuxin and mysterious monsters, evils and souls.

5. Love Actually

 It is a 2017 Chinese television series starring Tong Dawei, Joe Chen and Wang Yibo.

This is a story about modern youths and how they deal with the success and failure of life, self-growth and transformation; and their pursuit of love.
The female lead An Qinghuan is a career-oriented woman who only focuses on two things: her career and getting ahead in life.
Ding Renjian is an IT engineer who is carefree and unconcerned about the future, choosing to deal with life situations as they come.
When they meet each other, they could not be more diametrically opposed. As they struggle together in the hustle and bustle of Beijing, they realize they have more in common than they once thought.

The series is airing on Hunan TV channel starting August 15, 2017.
Source: China Daily By Zhang Xingjian 

Leah Dou promotes new MV

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Singer Leah Dou set to release new MV


Source: Xinhua

China Forecasters Again Turn Bold as August Box Office Surges

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(Variety) Chinese authorities have once again begun forecasting that China will be the world’s largest box office territory by 2020.

Such grandiose forecasts of world dominance ceased in mid-2016 when China’s box office abruptly slowed down. But the renewed confidence appears to be another side effect of the recent “Wolf Warrior II” smash hit.

China’s box office sales will reach $8.36 million (RMB55 billion) in 2017 and the Chinese film market is expected to be the world’s largest by 2020, said the State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television (SAPPRFT), as reported by state media.

The forecast for the current year implies a return to 20% growth. Two further years of 20% growth would suggest a total of $12 billion by 2020. The Motion Picture Association reported North American theatrical takings as $11.4 billion in 2016.

he record breaking RMB5.5 billion score for “Wolf Warriors II” fell almost entirely within August (it was released on July 27), giving a huge boost to that month and reinvigorating figures for the first eight months of this year.

July delivered box office of $2.48 billion (RMB16.3 billion) according to data from Ent Group, propelled by the stratospheric performance of “Wolf Warriors II.” That put the total for the first eight months of the year at $6 billion (RMB39.6 billion), an increase of 16% for the year to date.

Source: Variety by Patrick Frater

Chinese Film ‘End of Summer’ Makes It To Busan International Film Festival

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(CFI) Chinese film ‘End of Summer’ has been selected as one of the first ten titles selected for competition at the 22nd Busan International Film Festival in October.

The 2017 family drama by emerging director Zhou Quan was the winner of HAF Award at the 13th Hong Kong-Asia Film Financing Forum in 2015 and was Zhou’s feature debut. This time the film will play in the showcase New Currents section which is reserved for up and coming Asian film makers.

‘End of Summer’ is one of four from the Greater China region that has made the list, joining ‘Somewhere Beyond The Mist’ from Hong Kong, ‘The Last Verse’ and ‘One Night on the Wharf’ from Taiwan.

The film tells the intertwining, coming-of-age stories of a fifth-grade boy, a middle-aged Chinese teacher and an old man in a Chinese small town in 1998. It stars Zhang Songwen, Tan Zhuo, Gu Baoming, and Dong Jing.

6 other titles also to screen and compete in the New Currents section are from India, Iran and host nation South Korea.

One of Asia’s most prestigious film events, the festival will run from October 12th to the 22nd in the southeast Korean city of Busan. Competition categories also include Gala Presentation, a celebration of 2017’s most talked-about filmmakers, and A Window on Asian Cinema which provides a peek into cinematographic styles and visions in Asia.

Busan International Film Festival founder Kim Dong-Ho and festival director Kang Soo-Youn are stepping down after this year’s edition, the two officials said in a statement last month. The announcement follows an open letter from festival staff calling for the return of ousted fest director Lee Yong-Kwan.

The Festival lost half of its government funding after it screened a controversial documentary last year which criticised the government’s response to the 2014 Sewol ferry disaster which occurred when now disgraced former president Park Geun-hye was in power.

Meanwhile, Chinese virtual reality short film ‘The Dream Collector’, which is about an elderly dream collector and his beloved dog, was officially selected to compete in the Venice Film Festival’s VR section.





Source: China Film Insider

Xu Jiao and Celina Jade at Venice Film Festival

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Xu Jiao and Celina Jade at Venice Film Festival


Source: Xinhua

HK singer Jackson Wang poses for fashion magazine

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HK singer Jackson Wang


Source: China Daily

Jin Chen poses for fashion magazine

Eason Chan at drinking and driving event in Beijing

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(China Plus) Eason Chan has helped launch a charity road safety video at a campaign event in Beijing.

The famous Hong Kong singer and actor urged people to make smart drinking choices to avoid danger, harm and tragedy.

He said the 'No drinking-driving' message was important to everyone and was a must-do. To get the message across, he's acted in a charity video alongside traffic police officers and families of victims of drinking-driving accidents.

At the launch event Eason Chan was also given an award from the Transport Management Bureau in the Ministry of Public Security for his long-term contribution to promoting safe driving.

His efforts have included acting in China's first 'No drinking-driving' TV commercial, which promoted the idea of 'designated drivers,' and using his songs and music to spread the idea.

Source: China Plus

Press conference for “Nothing Gold Can Stay”

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Nothing Gold Can Stay is a 2017 Chinese television series directed by Ding Hei and starring Sun Li and Chen Xiao.

The drama tells a positive story of a woman called Zhou Ying who transforms from an innocent girl into a powerful and successful business woman.

The female role is played by Chinese TV drama queen Sun Li. Following the great success of Empresses in the Palace, The Legend of Miyue, she again challenges the role of a legendary woman.

Source: Xinhua/China Daily

Stills from Li Chen's Sky Hunter

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Sky Hunter (Chinese: 空天猎) is an upcoming Chinese war film directed by Li Chen. It is Li's directorial debut. The film is produced in collaboration with People's Liberation Army Air Force and is China's first aerial warfare film.

It is scheduled to be released on September 30, 2017.

Source: Xinhua/Wikipedia
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