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Taipei Film Festival Going Ahead Without Overseas Visitors

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(Variety) The Taipei Film Festival will go ahead in June, making it one of the first significant festivals to do so in the post-coronavirus era. While its film selection is international, audiences will be entirely local.

Organizers announced Monday that the festival will open on June 25 with the world premiere of Taiwan-made “Silent Forest.” It will close on July 11, with a screening of “Days,” by Tsai Ming-liang, which appeared in competition in Berlin and earned a special mention in the Teddy section for gay film.

Based on real events, “Silent Forest describes a cruel game in which deaf teenagers discover the last row of the school bus, and how the joy of integrating into a new life instantly becomes fear. Festival organizers called it “one of the most stunning and shocking movies of 2020.”

Berlin, in late February, was one of the last major film festivals to take place before the COVID-19 outbreak became a pandemic that struck Asia, Europe and North America. Since then a string of high profile festivals including those at Cannes, SXSW, Hong Kong and Shanghai, have been canceled or postponed. Others, such as Sydney and Melbourne, initially canceled this year’s program, but then reversed tack and will become online-only events.

Taiwan, despite being one of the first places in the world outside mainland China to uncover virus cases, has an exemplary track record of tracking, controlling and treating the disease. The island has recorded just 441 cases and 7 deaths.

The festival will be run in accordance with recommendations and regulations of the Central Epidemic Command Center. Organizers warned that if a large-scale group infection occurs in Taiwan within two weeks before the film festival starts, or during the film festival, the event will be immediately cancelled.

One of the government’s key disease control measures has been to close the territory’s borders. These restrictions have not yet been lifted.

“All overseas filmmakers and judges originally scheduled to be invited during the festival will have their invitations canceled. Since there are no overseas filmmakers in the international new talent competition, the physical award ceremony will be canceled and the winner lists will instead be announced online,” organizers said.

Taiwan’s only film competition for international feature movies, the new talent competition this year includes: “The Cloud in her Room,” by Zheng Lu, which won the Tiger Award at Rotterdam; Tokyo Grand Prix winner “Uncle,” by Denmark’s Frelle Petersen; and “Scales” by Shahad Ameen, which debuted in International Critics’ Week” at the Venice Film Festival.

2020 Taipei Film Festival’s International New Talent Competition line-up

“Ainu Mosir,” dir. Fukunaga Takeshi, 2020 Japan, USA, China
“The Cloud in Her Room,” dir. Zheng Lu Xinyuan, 2020 Hong Kong, China
“Desterro,” dir. Maria Clara Escobar, 2020 Brazil, Portugal, Argentina
“Exile,” dir. Visar Morina, 2020 Germany, Belgium, Kosovo
“Leaving Virginia,” dir. Lin Li-shu, 2020 Taiwan
“The Metamorphosis of Birds,” dir. Catarina Vasconcelos 2020 Portugal
“The Painting of Evil,” dir. Chen Yung-chi, 2020 Taiwan
“Scales,” dir. Shahad Ameen, 2019 UAE, Iraq, Saudi Arabia
“Song Without a Name,” dir. Melina Leon, 2019 Peru, Spain, USA
“This Is Not a Burial, It’s a Resurrection,” dir. Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese, 2019 Lesotho, South Africa and Italy
“Uncle,” dir. Frelle Petersen, 2019 Denmark
“Window Boy Would Also Like to Have a Submarine,” dir. Alex Piperno, 2020 Uruguay, Argentina, Brazil, Netherland, Philippines

Source: Variety by Patrick Frater

Liu Tao poses for photo shoot

Li Qin poses for photo shoot

Chen Yuqi poses for photo shoot

Stills from Get Married Or Not

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Stills from Get Married Or Not starring Tong Yao, Pan Yueming, Chen Shu, Yuan Wenkang, Xu Fangyi and Li Shen.


Source: Weibo

Xuan Lu poses for photo shoot

Zhang Ruonan poses for photo shoot

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Actress Zhang Ruonan


Source: Weibo

Tong Yao poses for photo shoot


Marvel to Rerelease 'Avengers', 'Iron Man 3' in Hong Kong

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(THR)  Hong Kong is the place to be right now for superhero movie fans, with Marvel Studios the latest company to join the rerelease bandwagon.

Marvel is set to rerelease The Avengers and Iron Man 3 in Hong Kong cinemas from May 28 until June 10 as the industry attempts to lure back wary customers after virus-related lockdowns were lifted earlier this month. Although only two titles have been announced so far, The Hollywood Reporter understands more Marvel films could be rereleased in the coming months.

The move follows a pattern being repeated across Asian countries that have tamed the novel coronavirus and have reopened cinemas. Warner Bros. is rereleasing Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight trilogy in Hong Kong and Taiwan this summer, including in Imax theaters. Warners also rereleased a 4K remastered version of The Matrix in Hong Kong.

In China, all four of Marvel's Avengers movies are being rereleased and Hollywood blockbusters Avatar and Warner Bros.' Nolan films Inception and Interstellar are also getting a second outing on the big screen.

In Japan, Toho Cinemas, the country's largest multiplex chain, has decided to lean heavily on the classics. Among the titles the company has brought back are Ben-Hur (1959), The Wizard of Oz (1939), East of Eden (1955), Bonnie and Clyde (1969) and Blade Runner (1982). Westside Story (1961) and Rio Bravo (1959) also were playing at several locations, along with other favorites of the 1980s and 90s, like E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982) and The Shawshank Redemption (1994).

Source: The Hollywood Reporter by Abid Rahman

New posters and stills from Trident

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Trident's cast includes Chen Jianbin, Tao Hong, Zhao Ziqi, Hou Yansong, Dong Yong, Hao Ping, He Dujuan, Xu Shaoying, Hu Ke, Wang Xiao, Wu Gang, Zhai Xiaoxing and Ding Yongdai.


Source: Xinhua

Song Qian poses for photo shoot

Guli Nazha poses for photo shoot

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Actress Guli Nazha


Source: Weibo

Peng Xiaoran poses for photo shoot

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Actress Peng Xiaoran


Source: Weibo

Is the future of the Chinese film industry online? With cinemas shut, films released for screening earn big profits fast, and the potential market is vast

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(SCMP) While the cinemas in China are closed as part of government measures to contain the spread of coronavirus, films have been making a splash online.

The Thousand Faces of Dunjia, a special-effects-laden film available online since March, has been viewed over 100 million times. Made on a budget of some 20 million yuan (US$2.8 million), the period fantasy, which features no recognizable stars, smashed the record for online revenue in China, earning the producers 50 million yuan after splitting proceeds with online video platforms.

Its producer Wei Junzi, who produced two other online movies this year, As God and Sword and Fire, told the Post that he recently co-founded an online-film production house because of the boom in online movie viewing.

“The reputation of the Chinese online-movie industry was very bad before, as it was filled with [pirated] works based on [existing famous film] franchises. I started to get involved in online movies in 2018 when [online-movie-making firm] Qishuyouyu approached me about the copyright of The Thousand Faces of Dunjia.”

Another recent online movie hit, The Enchanting Phantom , has been streaming since May 1 and has earned over 38 million yuan after also splitting earnings with online video platforms. Adapted from A Chinese Ghost Story , the classic 1987 supernatural romance starring Leslie Cheung and Joey Wong Cho-yin, the movie was made on a budget of 23 million yuan.

Its director, Lin Zhenzhao, who specializes in making online movies, told the Post that, unlike producers of films for the big screen, who have to split profits with distributors, cinemas and promoters, online-film producers can pocket most of the 38 million yuan that the film has made.

“Around 40 per cent of proceeds of traditional movies go to the producers. But only a small part of the 38 million yuan earned by The Enchanting Phantom went towards tax payment and other miscellaneous costs,” he says.

Lin also directed Snake, a 2018 online film that was the first in China to make a profit of more than 50 million yuan. Snake revolves around the adventures of a scientist specializing in prehistoric creatures, who comes across the title character in a forest. A sequel named Snake 2 was made in 2019.

Yin Chao, founder of Tmeng Pictures, the online-movie production house behind Snake and Snake 2, told an online-movie forum last year in the southern Chinese city of Xiamen that Snake’s 50 million profits surpassed those attained by 78 per cent of movies shown in cinemas that year.

“We made Snake based on our analytics. While there are many foreign movies [about monsters] like King Kong and Jurassic Park, there’s no such genre in China … As the competition for cinematic slots gets very intense, there’s more room [for us] to release movies online,” he says.

“[The combined 2019-2020 revenue of online movies] made by the three major Chinese video platforms is [estimated to be] around 3 billion yuan. This is a very good figure,” Yin adds. Total box office revenue for films in China in 2019 was 64.3 billion yuan, Variety reported.

The closure of cinemas means online movies are having a field day. According to Chinese media, during the Lunar New Year period from January 25 to February 8, the three main online video platforms in China – Tencent, Youku and iQiyi – released a total of 42 online movies.

According to a recent report by Alibaba Pictures on China’s online movie market for the first quarter of 2020, at least 24 online movies earned more than 10 million yuan for producers after splitting proceeds with online video platforms, nearly twice as many as in the same period in 2019. A recent report by iQiyi, a video streaming platform, on the 2019 online-movie industry showed the overall viewing audience for 2019 reached 4.82 billion, a 24 per cent increase on the previous year’s 3.89 billion. (Alibaba Pictures is a unit of Alibaba, which also owns the South China Morning Post.)

Qishuyouyu’s founder Dong Guanjie told Chinese media last year that the production house’s analytics show that action and fantasy online movies sold better than those with crime, detective and romance themes. “There are many untapped internet users for online movies, as the overall paying subscribers for video platforms account for less than 20 per cent [of the population],” Dong says.

Wei says an online movie can earn profits from a video platform within six months of its release online, and that a film’s first six minutes are critical to its success.

“The first six minutes are for free viewing. Users need to pay after this six-minute mark. Veteran [Hong Kong filmmaker] Ng See-yuen used to say it didn’t matter if a [traditional] movie was bad at the beginning, as a cinema-goer will sit through it after paying for the ticket. Ng thinks the ending must be good, as the viewer will leave the cinema feeling touched or shocked. Such thinking can’t work for online movies.”

Wei says that as online movies have gained further momentum during the pandemic, online video platforms have put more resources into supporting them. “Take The Enchanting Phantom as an example. It is the main online movie for Tencent this year. When you open the Tencent [video app], the advertisements for it are overwhelming. Such advertising input far surpasses the production cost of the film.”

Lin says the 23 million yuan production budget for The Enchanting Phantom is unprecedented in the history of Chinese online-movie production.

“When I started making online movies five years ago, the production cost for each was less than one million yuan. The Enchanting Phantom is an Oriental visual feast and yet its 23 million yuan budget does not compare with that for traditional movies, which cost upwards of 500 million yuan [to make].

“The online-movie industry is advancing fast and making films a lot less risky [once the ban on cinemas opening is lifted]. Every mobile phone screen is a cinema screen for online movies,” Lin says.

“The current online-movie market is only the tip of the iceberg, with still much room for expansion. In the past, people saw online movies as second-rate. When looking for artists to star in our movies, many of them were not interested. But that has changed. Now even traditional filmmaking companies invest in online movies,” Lin adds.

The rapid growth of online movies has come at the expense of films made for the big screen. Since the end of January, the coronavirus outbreak has forced production companies to cancel cinematic releases and push out new films on streaming platforms.

The first film to have its cinematic release cancelled was Lost in Russia, which cost 300 million yuan to make and was bought for 630 million yuan by Bytedance, which owns streaming platform Xigua Video and short-video apps Douyin and Huoshan. Hong Kong filmmaker Wong Jing, who produced and co-directed Enter the Fat Dragon , starring martial arts superstar Donnie Yen Ji-dan , then struck a deal with iQiyi to show the film on the streaming platform from February 1.

With the Chin’ese government’s recent announcement that attendance at performance venues and cinemas must be capped at 30 per cent as a post-coronavirus precautionary measure, the prospects for the Chinese online-movie market look set to grow further.

Source: South China Morning Post Elaine Yau in Beijing

Explainer | Hong Kong martial arts cinema: starring Bruce Lee, Jackie Chan, Jet Li and Donnie Yen, everything you need to know about the popular genre

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What is a martial arts film?

Hong Kong martial arts films fall broadly into two categories, wuxia and kung fu. Wuxia films feature armed combat, usually swordplay, while kung fu films mainly feature unarmed combat. The two types of film are quite distinct, although kung fu films will sometimes feature a scene that includes fighting with poles (also called staffs), the favoured weapon of Shaolin monks , and the villains will often use weaponry.

The word wuxia translates roughly as “martial heroes” and has its origin in the rich tradition of martial arts literature from Hong Kong, Taiwan, and mainland China.

The wandering swordsmen and swordswomen who serve as the heroes and heroines of the genre inhabit the semi-mythical martial arts world of jianghu (which translates as “rivers and lakes”, although that description is metaphorical rather than descriptive). These “knight errants” and “lady knights” come in many different shades, although they are generally chivalrous, and almost always end up on the side of good.

Kung fu is a collective term that describes a variety of Chinese martial styles. Kung fu is broken down into two main traditions, Northern and Southern, and two conceptual approaches, internal and external.

Within this, there are many distinct styles, such as Hung Gar (a popular southern style) and wing chun (the style which Bruce Lee first learned). Martial arts in kung fu films are also heavily influenced by the acrobatics of Peking Opera, which are themselves heavily stylised forms of northern-style kung fu.

Thanks to the phenomenal success of Bruce Lee in the early 1970s, kung fu films are much better known internationally than wuxia films. Indeed, most casual foreign viewers are unaware of the existence of Hong Kong’s long and plentiful tradition of wuxia films.

Before the early 1970s, most martial arts films were wuxia films. (A notable exception was the long-running Wong Fei-hung film series which ran from 1949 and to 1970.) The popularity of wuxia films declined in Hong Kong in the early 1970s and, bolstered by Lee’s success, producers switched to making kung fu films instead. Kung fu films became internationally famous in 1973 with the success of Lee’s films, including Enter the Dragon .

Wuxia films made something of a comeback in the 1990s, when filmmakers including Tsui Hark reimagined the genre with films such as Swordsman II . Conceptually, the 1990s films draw on the much older “fantastique” genre of swordfighting films, which originated in Shanghai in the 1920s.

Such films give the swordsmen and -women heightened powers which verge on the magical, and the films rely just as much on special effects as swordfighting techniques. (Although more traditional wuxia heroes and heroines can perform death-defying feats, incredible acrobatics, and leap large distances, their powers fall short of being superhuman).

The 1990s also saw a resurgence of interest in kung fu films, spurred by the success of Tsui Hark’s Once Upon a Time in China films, which featured Jet Li as Wong Fei-hung. Swordplay migrated into the big historical action films of the early 2000s, such as Zhang Yimou’s Hero , while kung fu became popular again with the Ip Man series of films, which debuted in 2008 and concluded with last year’s Ip Man 4: The Finale .

Who are the big stars of the genre?

The big stars of kung fu films are household names – Bruce Lee, Jackie Chan and Jet Li Lianjie.

Bruce Lee , a bit of a philosopher in the realms of martial arts , was a phenomenon in the early 1970s. Once an outsider in the United States , the actor, who died in 1973, has grown in stature even in unexpected parts of the world over the years. Lee remains the martial artist that others aspire to be.

Jackie Chan , who started out as a stuntman , became successful in the 1980s. Attempts to promote him as the new Bruce Lee failed, and he found fame when he developed his own jocular image, accompanied by acrobatic martial arts and dangerous stunts. Chan’s popularity in Hong Kong slumped when he aligned himself with the communist authorities in Beijing and attacked Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement.

Jet Li , born in northern China, saw a burst of success in the 1980s, but established his fame in the 1990s in the films of Hong Kong director Tsui Hark. Li went on become an internationally successful star.

Sammo Hung has been a powerful force in the Hong Kong film industry for half a century, as an actor, director, martial arts choreographer and stuntman. Hung is a big guy, and part of the fun is seeing him perform acrobatic that seems to break the laws of gravity.

Along with Sammo Hung, veteran performer Donnie Yen Ji-dan is the biggest martial arts star today, and the success of the popular Ip Man films pushed him close to superstar status.

Big names from the kung fu films of the 1970s include Lo Lieh and Gordon Liu, among many, many others. Further back in the past, the kung fu hero was defined by Kwan Tak-hing, who portrayed Wong Fei-hong in around 80 films from 1949 to 1970. Kwan generally used the popular southern fighting style of Hung Gar.

Wuxia films had their own stars, too, the most famous being cool and classy Jimmy Wang Yu, the star of early classic films by Chang Cheh. Wang later transitioned to kung fu films, and directing. David Chiang, who was hired to replace Wang at Shaw Brothers studio when he left, also became a big star under Chang Cheh’s guidance, as did Ti Lung. The charismatic Alexander Fu Sheng, another protégé of Chang Cheh, was also popular.

Wuxia films featured many female stars. In the 1950s and early 1960s, before the arrival of the New Wave of Wuxia films in 1966-1967, Hong Kong cinema was aimed at female audiences – melodramas were the popular hits – and swordfighting films always featured female heroines, even if they were not portrayed as independent women.

The new wave martial arts films of King Hu continued this trend, making stars of two Taiwanese actresses, Hsu Feng and Cheng Pei-pei. Although neither had been trained in martial arts – Cheng had trained as a dancer – both performed like experts in films such as Come Drink with Me (Cheng) and A Touch of Zen (Hsu). Wuxia films abound with impressive female fighters.

In the 1990s, Brigitte Lin Ching-hsia , a dramatic actress from Taiwan, leapt to fame as the hermaphrodite martial artist Asia the Invincible in Tsui Hark and Ching Siu-tung’s Swordsman II. Along with Jet Li, Lin became the biggest star of the new style of martial arts films. Lin brought a charisma and dramatic intensity to her roles which transcended her lack of martial arts technique.

In contrast, the “female Bruce Lee” Angela Mao Ying, the greatest female kung fu star of the 1970s – and probably of all time – had trained in martial arts. Mao knew hapkido, a Korean style, and could really fight. Mao achieved fame in the US during the kung fu boom of the early 1970s, and was second in popularity abroad only to Lee himself.

Since the mid-1980s, Michelle Yeoh (billed as Michelle Kwan in her early films) has been a popular female action star, although she has spent much of her time working abroad. Yeoh appeared in films such as Fong Sai Yuk and The Tai Chi Master, both with Jet Li, and Ang Lee’s Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon .

Yeoh, another former dancer, does all her own stunts and learns the martial arts styles required for each martial arts film she makes. A durable actress, she recently starred as Captain Philippa Georgiou in the Star Trek: Discovery series.

There used to be numerous martial arts schools and masters in Hong Kong, and these provided a steady stream of talent for moviemakers. For example, martial arts director/choreographer Lau Kar-leung was the son of Hung Gar master Lau Cham, who taught Gordon Liu, who later appeared in Lau’s 36th Chamber of Shaolin . With the decline of such schools, the pool of potential martial arts actors and actresses has decreased.

Who are the most famous martial arts film directors?

The two towering giants of the wuxia genre are Chang Cheh and King Hu.

The prolific Chang Cheh, working at Shaw Brothers, redefined the genre in the mid-1960s in numerous ways. He made the action more realistic and used modern cinematography and editing techniques to make the fight sequences more cinematic. He brought gore and violence to the genre, and developed the idea of a rebellious masculine hero who was in tune with the times.

When the wuxia genre faded, Chang moved successfully into directing kung fu films, although the quality of his output became patchy.

King Hu was equally important. Hu drew on literature and Peking Opera to make aesthetically pleasing, literate and literary historical works which featured graceful and powerful martial arts choreography. He also made innovative use of editing techniques. Hu’s A Touch of Zen transcended the genre to become a masterpiece of world cinema.

One important facet of martial arts films is that most directors are not experts in martial arts, and consequently hand over the martial arts scenes to specialized martial arts choreographers. By and large, the choreographers take full control of the action scenes, choreographing the movements of the performers, and deciding the camera movements.

This level of autonomy does not exist in Hollywood. Chang Cheh, for instance, worked with choreographer Lau Kar-leung for the first part of his career.

Some martial arts choreographers go on to become directors in their own right. Lau Kar-leung went on to become a powerful force in kung fu films as a director, with a mission to showcase the purity of the southern styles of kung fu in his films.

Another famed martial arts choreographer who has also directed is Yuen Woo-ping , whose colleagues once called him “the greatest martial arts director under all of heaven”. Yuen also choreographed the action scenes in The Matrix.

Ching Siu-tung, who worked with Tsui Hark on some of his 1990s hits – such as A Chinese Ghost Story – as director, is also an expert martial arts choreographer.

Bruce Lee didn’t have much luck with directors, falling out with the veteran Lo Wei, who directed his first two martial arts movies, and directing most the martial arts sequences himself. Lee also directed himself in Way of the Dragon. Similarly, Jackie Chan has often directed himself, and he always designs the fight sequences in his local work, whether he is the film’s director or not.

Which Hong Kong martial arts films should I watch?

How much time do you have? The world of martial arts cinema is boundless under heaven. For wuxia films, Chang Cheh’s One-Armed Swordsman and Golden Swallow are good places to start, along with King Hu’s Come Drink with Me and A Touch of Zen.

For kung fu, Bruce Lee’s films are, of course, essential viewing – Fist of Fury may be the best introduction – as are Jackie Chan’s Project A and Police Story. The best films from Chang Cheh’s kung fu period include Heroes Two and Men from the Monastery.

Lau Kar-leung’s Executioners from Shaolin is a superior work with solid dramatic qualities drama as well as action, while his 36th Chamber of Shaolin is an essential primer on the ethos behind the practice of southern-style kung fu, as well as an informative compendium of its techniques. Lau’s relentless The Eight-Diagram Pole Fighter features truly amazing pole fighting.

Jet Li’s early Shaolin Temple features impressive displays of wushu – which is a non-combat version of martial arts sanctioned by the authorities in China – while his work in the two Once Upon a Time in China films is the highlight of his later collaboration with director Tsui Hark.

For comedy and kung fu, Sammo Hung is a lot of fun in Pedicab Driver, and Jackie Chan’s Drunken Master is a good synthesis of his cheeky on-screen persona and martial arts prowess.

The special-effects-laden Swordsman III – The East is Red is a wildly enjoyable example of the fantasy kung fu films of the 1990s.

Source: South China Morning Post by Richard James Havis

Zhang Jianing poses for photo shoot

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Actress Zhang Jianing


Source: Weibo

Zhao Lusi poses for photo shoot

Zhuo Tan poses for photo shoot

Posers from Get Married Or Not

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Posters from Get Married Or Not starring Tong Yao, Pan Yueming, Chen Shu, Yuan Wenkang, Xu Fangyi and Li Shen.


Source: Weibo

China’s Fan Bingbing Set for Comeback in Youku TV Series

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(Variety) Disgraced Chinese superstar Fan Bingbing has spent the past two years off the radar following an explosive 2018 tax evasion scandal. But she is expected to reemerge soon in a period drama on Chinese streamer Youku.

The $70 million-budgeted TV series “Win the World” is one of the most expensive TV series ever to be made in China, according to the South China Morning Post — yet that didn’t stop it from almost never seeing the light of day when its two main actors fell foul of the law. China takes cancel culture to the next level by often permanently shelving projects affiliated with scandal-plagued stars, no matter what the investment.

“Win the World” was supposed to have debuted in 2018, but was put on hold indefinitely after Fan was found guilty of tax fraud and hit with an order to pay more than $100 million in fines and back taxes. Its upcoming release is even more surprising because it also stars Gao Yunxiang, another Chinese celebrity to have fallen from grace after he was arrested in Sydney on accusations of sexual assault.

In March, Australian courts acquitted him of five counts of sexual assault and two counts of indecent assault after legal proceedings that dragged on for nearly two years.

Produced by Talent TV and Film, “Win the World” is a lavish historical costume drama set in the Qin dynasty. Gao plays Qin Shi Huang, the first emperor of a unified China, and Fan a widowed woman in his orbit.

At one point, the production firm even floated the idea of digitally editing out Gao entirely, and replacing him with Fan’s significant other at the time, actor Li Chen. Other films and shows featuring Fan have been iced or have not yet announced plans for release, including director Feng Xiaogang’s  “Cell Phone 2.”

The South China Morning Post cited Chinese reports as saying that neither disgraced thespian will be edited out in the Youku series, although the show will be cut down from 76 episodes to around 60.

The star has kept an extremely low profile over the past year, but has in recent months has begun appearing on the covers of a smattering of less prominent international lifestyle and fashion magazines like Harper’s Bazaar Vietnam and the New York Times Style Magazine Singapore, at times offering a few fluffy, milquetoast comments to accompany the images. The appearances seem to be paving a way for her comeback by focusing only on the high fashion side of her image, and seeking to put the past behind her one teased updo at a time.

Source: Variety by Rebecca Davis
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