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Thread: Flowers of War

  1. #1
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    Flowers of War

    I'm not sure if this will have any martial arts, but it's certainly a player in rise of Chollywood and worthy of attention.
    Christian Bale to Star in Zhang Yimou Film
    3:03 AM 12/22/2010 by Jonathan Landreth


    Jon Kopaloff/FilmMagic/Getty Images
    The director of the Beijing Olympics opening ceremonies takes on his biggest production yet.

    BEIJING -- Christian Bale will star in Zhang Yimou's upcoming 600 million yuan ($90.2 million) Nanjing Heroes about the Nanjing Massacre, China's most famous director said at a press conference Wednesday.

    The budget is roughly equal to the budget of John Woo's Red Cliff, and approaches the total box office take of Aftershock, now China's most successful domestically-produced film.

    Zhang's film will pull in the Hollywood effects team behind Saving Private Ryan and The Dark Night. Zhang and his longtime producer Zhang Weiping (no relation) of the New Picture Film Company announced Bale's casting and the hiring of Joss Williams and Martin Asbury's Dark Side FX to a roomful of hundreds of Chinese reporters.

    The Nanjing Massacre, when Japanese troops killed thousands of Chinese citizens in what was then the nation's capital in 1937, has been the subject of several recent Chinese and co-produced films, each of which has included the character of John Rabe, a German businessman who helped save hundreds of Chinese refugees.

    Bale will not play Rabe but instead play an American priest called John who helps a great number of Chinese escape certain death.

    The script was written by Yan and Liu Heng, who wrote the novel upon which director Zhang's early hit Ju Dou was based.

    "I met Christian in America and was impressed with his serious book research for the role," director Zhang said after playing a five-minute video mash up of clips from Bale’s Hollywood films, few of which have ever played theatrically in China.

    The film will be shot about 40% in English and the rest in Mandarin Chinese, sources close to the project told The Hollywood Reporter. Zhang made no other cast or crew announcements.

    “There are no foreign investors,” Zhang said, noting that it was too early to confirm what company might sell the film’s international rights.

    Previously, Sony Pictures Classics distributed Zhang's films in the U.S. market, but Sony does not appear to be involved at this time. Bill Kong, head of Hong Kong-based EDKO Films, emailed The Hollywood Reporter to say: "Edko will be involved with dealing with the foreign territory" rights for the film Kong referred to by an alternate working title, 13 Flowers of Nanjing.

    Director Zhang's highest-grossing film ever was 2002 period war film Hero starring Jet Li, which took in almost $54 million in the U.S. His new film comes at a time when China's movie business is booming at home and dominant in parts of Asia, but receives little attention elsewhere

    Zhang, whose last film, Under The Hawthorn Tree, it was announced last week, will have its European premiere in February in the Generation sidebar at the Berlin Film Festival. Zhang competed at Berlin this year with A Woman, A Gun and a Noodle Shop and won the Golden Bear there in 1987 for Red Sorghum and the Alfred Bauer prize in 2002 for Hero.

    Zhang was twice nominated for an Oscar. No Chinese film or director has ever won a major category Academy Award.

    Asked if casting Bale was a move to raise Chinese cinema's profile in the U.S. market -- still 10 times bigger than China's box office -- director Zhang said "It's the overall strategy for Chinese cinema to approach the world and broaden its influence but casting Bale was a coincidence because the script happened to have an English-speaking part in the lead."

    Zhang will begin shooting the film on January 10 in a Republican Era (1911-1949) replica church built near Nanjing.

    In 2008, a slew of Nanjing-themed films came out in China, including Lu Chuan's City of Life and Death, from the China Film Group, and German director Florian Gallenberger's John Rabe, a co-production with Huayi Brothers Media.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  2. #2
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    see this is what im talking about. a film that has cross over appeal. especially since it looks more then likely after what i seen in the fighter bale has the oscar in the bag.

  3. #3
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    The Flowers of War

    I'm not retitling this thread right yet...soon probably, but not today.
    Toronto 2011: Christian Bale's China movie previewed for buyers
    September 9, 2011 | 11:14 am


    American films are doing gangbuster business in China this year, but no Chinese film has yet to land squarely with U.S. audiences in 2011. On Friday at the Toronto International Film Festival, buyers got a 20-minute glimpse of a big-budget Chinese title that’s hoping to break through with American movie audiences this winter.

    Starring Oscar-winner Christian Bale, the film -- previously known as “Heroes of Nanking” but now retitled “The Flowers of War” -- is directed by Chinese helmer Zhang Yimou, known for films such as “Hero” and “House of Flying Daggers” and as the creative force behind the 2008 Beijing Olympics. The movie’s Chinese backers, including producer Zhang Weiping, who was on hand for the screening, are aiming for a mid-December release in China, with a near simultaneous rollout in the United States.

    Set in 1937 as Japanese forces are taking over the then Chinese capital, Nanking, the film’s battle sequences unfold in a manner both grotesque and beautiful, like a live-action hand-colored postcard of war.

    Bale plays John Haufman, a salty mortician who apparently has come to town to bury the priest of a cathedral in Nanking. The cathedral also has a school for girls, and with war waging all around and the priest dead, John dons the priests’ vestments and works out a temporary reprieve from the rampaging Japanese soldiers.

    Things get complicated when a group of a dozen or so prostitutes from the city’s red-light district show up at the cathedral, demanding shelter. Bale is more than happy with the arrival of the beautiful, exotic women, who set up camp in the cellar of the church. But the chaste schoolgirls are discomfited by their arrival, and conflict bubbles up.

    That’s not John’s biggest problem, though. Soon enough the Japanese are back with an invitation to a “ceremony” to mark the complete occupation of Nanking. The implication is that the occupiers want the schoolgirls to attend the event as sexual playthings for the soldiers.

    But the prostitutes decide, in an act of selflessness that belies long-held stereotypes about those in their line of work, that they will take the place of the schoolgirls. John (perhaps using his mortician skills, but it’s not entirely clear) helps disguise them with plain outfits and prim hairdos.

    John falls in love with one of the women, even as he sees her and her compatriots off to their apparent demise. Meanwhile, he manages to spirit the schoolgirls out of the city.

    With a budget near to $100 million and Zhang’s knack for spectacle, the film’s visuals don’t disappoint -- the setting of a church under siege makes for some haunting imagery.

    There even seem to be even some humorous moments in the script: At one point, a prostitute promises John: “If you can get us out of here, I’ll thank you in ways you can never imagine. We all will.” To which John replies: “Can I get an advance?”

    American buyers will now have to weigh how U.S. audiences might receive the dual-language nature of the film (the 20-minute presentation seemed to split about 70% English, 30% Mandarin) and its somewhat earnest and sentimental feel. After the screening ended, there was applause, but it could hardly be described as sustained.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

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