Page 2 of 3 FirstFirst 123 LastLast
Results 16 to 30 of 34

Thread: The Foreigner

  1. #16
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,028

    srsly?

    Jackie Chan’s New Film Sparks Outrage Because His Character is ‘Vietnamese’
    By Ryan General Posted on July 3, 2017



    The trailer for Jackie Chan’s new film “The Foreigner” has since been released to much acclaim, but another issue with Chan’s character is now creating a buzz online.

    Based on the 1992 novel “The Chinaman” by Stephen Leather, the new thriller is directed by “Casino Royale” director Martin Campbell. Chan’s latest role marks a departure from his usual comedic action style in favor of a brooding serious tone that shows off his acting prowess.



    But while many are understandably excited about the action legend’s return to the big screen, some people have expressed criticisms over his casting.

    The negative reaction apparently stems from the interpretation that Chan’s character in the film is Vietnamese. A scene in the trailer showed a passport identifying the character as a Vietnamese immigrant in London named Ngoc Minh Quan.




    Twitter user @linhtropy posted a series of tweets pointing out how “You can’t mix-and-match people’s ethnicities.”

    @Linhtropy further explained that having a Chinese actor play a Viet character can be a form of erasing Vietnamese culture, especially since China has been one of the countries that colonized Vietnam in the past.



    Asian-American user @Reappropriate added that the film itself is a problem as it is based on a book titled with a racial slur.



    Both critics also pointed out that while having an Asian actor star in a Hollywood movie already means a lot for representation, miscasting ethnicities misses the whole point.



    However, a representative for the film revealed that Chan’s character is actually Chinese, and the plot involves some mysteries on the hero’s real identity.

    In a statement released to Teen Vogue, a spokesperson for STX Entertainment said:

    “SPOILER ALERT: The character is Chinese in the movie and is being brought to life on screen by Jackie Chan, one of the most beloved and popular actors known throughout the world. We can’t wait for audiences to see Jackie in this extraordinary role (with extraordinary plot twists about his true identity).”

    We’ll all find out soon enough how well all this plays out as “The Foreigner” opens stateside on October 13, 2017.
    Twitter is just a place to ***** about stuff nowadays.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  2. #17
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,028

    The EW interview

    Good Jackie interview - best I've read lately.
    Jackie Chan talks battling Bond and learning to build (fake) bombs for The Foreigner
    The martial arts icon plays a grieving father hunting down the terrorists who killed his daughter
    SHIRLEY LI@SHIRKLESXP
    POSTED ON AUGUST 17, 2017 AT 9:30AM EDT


    CHRISTOPHER RAPHAEL/STX

    Jackie Chan may be a martial arts legend, but he admits he could use a break from the stunts.

    The 63-year-old actor says he had been searching for more dramatic roles when the perfect project arrived in the form of The Foreigner, a thriller based on a 1992 novel titled The Chinaman by Stephen Leather about a despondent immigrant who sets out to hunt down those responsible for the London terrorist attack that killed his daughter. Chan leaped at the opportunity to play Quan, the soft-spoken-but-deadly antihero, even if it meant some new bruises along the way. “I’m too used to injuries,” he admits. “But if I want to keep making movies, I have to change.”

    EW spoke with Chan in July about filming the action-drama opposite Pierce Brosnan (who plays British government official Hennessy, a man who knows more about the bombing than he lets on) and getting a chance to flex his acting muscles along with his literal ones. (Note: This interview was conducted in Mandarin, and has been translated below.)

    ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: What drew you to The Foreigner, to doing a drama?

    JACKIE CHAN: To put it simply, I’m not young anymore. [Laughs] If I still want to keep making movies, I have to be, like, an Asian De Niro, Dustin Hoffman, or Clint Eastwood, who at 80 can still be actors. When you think about it, in Japan, Hong Kong, China, U.S., there are so many action stars, but a lot of them now are no longer working.

    So that’s why I’m saying I have to change. After all these decades, I’m sure you’ll understand, I’m always changing, looking for a good story. I believe that after these years the audience will understand that Jackie Chan is an actor and no longer just an action star, just a kung fu star. So today I’m still working in action, and it’s not easy, but if I want to keep making movies, I have to change.

    What about the story itself attracted you to this role? Did you read the novel?

    Yes. A few years ago, the screenwriter was talking to me about the story, and he said to me, “If you don’t do this role, no one can.” And I really liked the story, I liked the character. He’s someone who’s been through a tough past, but found a comfortable life and stays out of trouble, he retired and he doesn’t want to let anyone know about his past, but very sadly, he meets another tragedy. Because of that, he has to rely on his old skills and use them to protect other innocent people, and take revenge on what happened to his daughter.

    But even then, this method of revenge isn’t good either, you know? It’s not the best solution. I hope through this film people will understand that violence shouldn’t be the only answer. You can’t say, you screwed with me and now that you’ve done that I’m going to also hurt your people. That’s not right either.

    A lot of the stunts in The Foreigner aren’t huge set pieces, but smaller, hand-to-hand combat scenes that take place in corridors and confined spaces instead of, say, through entire hotels or major landmarks.

    Yes, because at this age, that helps with my work. And I play the owner of a restaurant in the film, who has spent many years not moving around… So my fighting style in this has to be believable. He’s old, so in the beginning I’m walking slowly. And after I set out for vengeance, then I could start to bring out the force of my fighting style. Just, depending on what scene it is or situation it is, you have to match your fighting style to it.

    How intense were those fight scenes? Any injuries?

    I’m too used to injuries. To me, if you don’t end up in the hospital, then those don’t count as injuries. [Laughs] That happens very little, but of course, I definitely got some in this; they always happen when you do action films.



    Let’s talk about your character a little more. He’s a father who decides to hunt down the terrorists who bombed an ordinary street in London, killing his daughter (Katie Leung). Why do you think a story like this, adapted from a novel published in 1992, is important to tell now?

    Because when you look at these past decades, how many innocent people have been killed by bombings and by terrorism? They were innocent, and it’s devastating, and I hope this film will open hearts and help people see that they shouldn’t hurt people and shouldn’t do anything like this. Through The Foreigner, and through the music I write, I want to make it clear that it’s devastating to see so many innocent people hurt in these attacks. Why isn’t it possible for the world to find peace? We can’t let a small group of people hurt this many people. That’s why I filmed this…. The Manchester bombing hadn’t happened yet when we were filming. After we finished, it happened. And something like what happened in Manchester, around there, all around the world, in every corner, things like that are happening.

    So filming this was a chance to talk about peace. We, all of us, need peace, in order to build a peaceful world and live a peaceful life. I filmed that, and then I looked around and saw there were bombings everywhere…. I really think, if what I do can help spread peace, then I’m happy! I hope that this movie, after people see it, hopefully there will be fewer bombs, maybe it’ll take away one or two. Even that I feel like would be a positive effect on the world.

    Well, speaking of bombs, Quan does build quite a few intricate homemade ones throughout the film to threaten the officials keeping information from him. Was there someone on set who helped you through those sequences?

    Yes, on set, there was an expert who taught me.

    Wait, so you know how to build a bomb?

    Oh, no, no, no. I don’t know how to build them, that’s way too hard. [Laughs] It’s just for appearances.

    What was it like working with Pierce Brosnan and director Martin Campbell (Casino Royale)?

    Martin is, out of all the directors I’ve met over the years and worked with over the years, one of the most hard-working directors I’ve met. Really! He’s even more hard-working than I am. [Laughs] He works hard, he’s always prepared.

    Pierce Brosnan, well, he’s excellent, very focused on his work. He’s an actor who, I’ll tell you this, there was one day he woke up at 6 [in the morning] and got dressed and ran lines and trained with me and then I said, “Okay, now you’re off to hair and makeup?” And he said, “No, I’m going back to bed,” and I said “What?! You came here just to help me rehearse?! Wow!” I was very emotional; I mean these days, how many actors are there who would do that for you? So I felt, I thought my partners and collaborators were very professional, very hardworking. I was very happy.

    Did it ever cross your mind that you were in scenes with a former James Bond?

    No, we’re just two actors… I’ve met him before, actually. We were in Africa together once for Miss World [in 1993, when Chan was a judge and Brosnan a presenter], but I never thought we’d get a chance to work together. And I remember through Michelle Yeoh, I’ve also met him, so I’m very happy to get to work with him. On set, he could teach me and help me with my English, and when it came to fighting, I would help him. We worked together really well.

    What’s next for you, after this film?

    I hope every year I can get to make different films and do different things, maybe voice more animated films, or make films where you see me doing things you haven’t seen me try before, or even ones where you see me do familiar things. And on top of that, I want to continue singing songs. It’s all to demonstrate that I can do more [than fighting]. I hope the more you see me, the more you can understand that I’m capable of many things.

    The Foreigner arrives in theaters October 13.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  3. #18
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,028

    The Foreigner (2017) - Ordinary People - Official Exclusive Song Video HD - Jackie

    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  4. #19
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,028

    The Foreigner | "Assault" Extended Look | In Theaters October 13, 2017

    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  5. #20
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,028

    The Foreigner | Final Trailer | In Theaters October 13, 2017

    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  6. #21
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,028

    Jackie on Conan

    Jackie Chan Wants To Be Play A Romantic Lead

    September 14, 2017

    Jackie wants to star in a movie where he kisses women on the beach in slow motion, but he fears he’s too old — like Conan.
    Jackie is great with Coco.

    The Foreigner (and Rush Hour)
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  7. #22
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,028

    I just got invited to the screener. YES!!!

    You must follow the link to see the vid (although at this rate, we'll see all the fight scenes before the film comes out).

    Exclusive
    Jackie Chan fights his way out of a tight corner in The Foreigner clip
    Shirley Li@shirklesxp
    Posted on September 29, 2017 at 11:00am EDT

    Even at 63, Jackie Chan can still kick ass.

    In the exclusive clip above from upcoming thriller The Foreigner, Chan stars as Quan, a father hunting down the terrorists who carried out the bombing that killed his daughter (the Harry Potter franchise’s Katie Leung). Here, a group of men hoping to keep him quiet have found him first, but he makes a brutal escape, taking them down one by one until he crashes through a window.

    It’s one of several fight scenes in which Chan says he tried to capture his character’s (and his own) age. “I play the owner of a restaurant in the film, who has spent many years not moving around,” he told EW. “So my fighting style in this has to be believable.”

    The Foreigner, also starring Pierce Brosnan, hits theaters Oct. 13.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  8. #23
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,028

    Never Say Die

    I got nothing on Never Say Die but it beat out both Jackie's The Foreigner and Donnie's Chasing the Dragon (and Orlando's S.M.A.R.T. Chase, which we do care about because Orlando is cool and rocks Feiyues) for the Moon Fest movie rush, so I guess I should check it out.

    China Box Office: Martial Arts Comedy Opens to $46M, Topping Jackie Chan's 'The Foreigner'
    2:46 AM PDT 10/2/2017 by Patrick Brzeski


    'The Foreigner'

    Local comedy 'Never Say Die' outperformed Chan's STX-backed action thriller, which earned $21.9 million on Saturday and Sunday.
    Martial arts comedy Never Say Die came out swinging at the Chinese box office over the weekend, opening with $46.2 million on Saturday and Sunday.

    The slapstick hit relegated Jackie Chan to a rare second-place finish, as his STX-produced action thriller The Foreigner opened with $21.9 million over the same two days.

    Sunday was the start of one of China's so-called "Golden Weeks," a lucky succession of national holidays that results in most Chinese employees getting a full seven days off work. In recent years, this reprieve has translated into brisk business at Chinese multiplexes. In response, Chinese regulators have taken to blocking Hollywood movie openings during the holiday, putting the focus on Chinese culture while giving local studios a boost.

    Never Say Die was produced by Beijing theater group Mahua Fun Age, the creative force behind last year's comedy smash Goodbye Mr. Loser ($226 million). Never Say Die tells the story of a boxer and a journalist who mysteriously swap bodies after they are zapped by electricity, sending the duo spinning through a series of slapstick misadventures. The film is an adaptation of a hit Mahua stage comedy of the same name. Directed by Song Yang and Zhang Chiyu (the director pair behind the play), the film stars Ai Lun and Ma Li, two of the leads from Mr. Loser.

    Directed by Martin Campbell and co-starring Pierce Brosnan, The Foreigner finds Chan in "serious Jackie Chan" mode, playing a humble London businessman whose mysterious past erupts in a revenge-fuelled vendetta when his teenage daughter dies in a terrorist attack. The English-language film earned just shy of $2 million on Imax screens over the weekend. Respectable word of mouth suggests the movie will hold onto second place throughout the week. A U.K.-China co-production, The Foreigner is set to open in North America on Oct. 13.

    Chasing the Dragon, a slick martial arts drama starring Hong Kong favorites Donnie Yen and Andy Lau, landed in third place with $14.2 million. It was followed by Sky Hunter, a patriotic air force action flick directed by and starring Li Chen, which earned $13 million. Fan Bingbing, Li's real-life fiance, co-stars as the romantic lead.

    Although Hollywood movies are blocked from opening over National Day, one other familiar Western face did pop up on Chinese screens over the weekend. S.M.A.R.T. Chase, a Chinese road race thriller produced by Shanghai-based Bliss Media and starring Orlando Bloom, also debuted Saturday. The film hit the track with a sputter, however, taking just $1.5 million for the frame.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  9. #24
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,028

    From being 'topped' to 'kicking butt'

    Funny how perspective plays out on the same data.

    OCT 1, 2017 @ 11:00 AM
    Box Office: Jackie Chan's 'The Foreigner' Kicks Butt In China, 'Flatliners' Flatlines
    Scott Mendelson , CONTRIBUTOR I cover the film industry.
    Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.


    Christopher Raphael/Courtesy of STXfilms
    Jackie Chan and Pierce Brosnan in 'The Foreigner'

    First, a digression over in China, where Jackie Chan and Pierce Brosnan's The Foreigner scored $11.4 million on its opening day in China on Saturday, before earning around $8.5m on Sunday for a $19.9m two-day total, or $21.1m with online ticketing fees. The Martin Campbell action thriller, about a former government agent who puts his skills back to work to avenge the death of his daughter, is one of a few big releases in advance of National Day.

    The top movie was actually a Chinese comedy titled Never Say Die, which earned $20.1 million on Friday. But since The Foreigner is the first live-action Jackie Chan movie in seven years to get a major North American theatrical release (STX Entertainment opens it here on Oct. 13), I am beyond curious as to whether this is his first big (recent) Chinese hit to also cross over into American cinemas as well. With a $35m budget, it doesn't really have to.

    The $11.4 million opening day (not counting online fees) is lower than the $18.7 million opening day of Dragon Blade, but it's worth noting that Kung Fu Yoga earned $39m in its first two days before exploding for what would be a $254m Chinese total earlier this year. The Martin Campbell-directed thriller, which I haven't yet seen, is (presumably) less of a family-friendly crowdpleaser compared to Kung Fu Yoga or even the Jackie Chan/Johnny Knoxville action comedy Skip Trace which earned $133m in China last year.

    But, again, those films had limited domestic theatrical releases and made pennies in theaters while testing their fates in the VOD markets. We'll see if a post-Karate Kid absence has made the heart grow fonder.

    The only "big" domestic opener this weekend aside from American Made was Flatliners, which snuck into theaters sans pre-release reviews or even Thursday night advance screenings. Yeah, I'm wondering if the whole "no Thursday previews" thing is a new way to hold off a terrible Rotten Tomatoes score too, but we'll see how that goes. As of this morning, the ill-advised and allegedly quite flat Flatliners remake had a 0/35 score with an average critic ranking of 3.5/10.

    The Niels Arden Oplev-directed picture is a remake of a 1990 Joel Schumacher movie that is famous for both a pretty great premise and a white-hot cast (Keifer Sutherland, Julia Roberts, Kevin Bacon, Oliver Platt, William Baldwin). This remake actually has both, with the same "med students kill themselves to bring themselves back to life and tell of the afterlife" premise and a pretty decent cast in Ellen Page, Diego Luna, Nina Dobrev, James Norton and Kiersey Clemons.

    But star power isn't what it used to be and the whole "remake an old movie because it's now IP" thing isn't nearly as sure of a bet as Hollywood thinks. The new film didn't look any bigger or more outlandish than the original, and the original is available to rent on Amazon Prime for $3 right now. So, anyway, sans good reviews or any real buzz, the film grossed $6.7 million over the weekend, an admittedly strong weekend 3x multiplier.

    Sony is only on the hook for around 75% of the film's $19m budget, but this is still not a good look for the studio. Once again, one cannot survive on Spider-Man alone, so fingers crossed for Only the Brave, Denzel Washington's Roman J. Israel Esq, The Star and Jumanji.

    There were two blink-and-you-miss-them newbies this weekend as well. Newbie distributor Novus opened Til Death Do Us Part in 550 theaters this weekend. The Chris Stokes (You Got Served) thriller, starring Jessica Vanessa DeLeon, Taye Diggs and Stephen Bishop, is a loose variation on Julia Roberts' Sleeping with the Enemy.

    Had it done better this weekend, I could have opined about the value of the rip-off versus the remake. It earned $1.533 million for the weekend, again with an oddly strong 3.3x weekend multiplier. Still, there is a case to be made that, relatively speaking, the remake was no more successful than the loose rip-off, with the difference being that folks might actually discover Til Death Do Us Part in the years to come while most folks will opt for the original Flatliners.

    Pureflix’s faith-based film A Question of Faith opened in 661 theaters and grossed $1 million for the weekend.
    Never Say Die vs. The Foreigner.

    Dragon Blade
    Kung Fu Yoga
    Skiptrace
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  10. #25
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,028

    Seen!

    I saw the screener last night but am under embargo until Friday, when I'll drop my review. I will say this - best Jackie film in years.

    Also those netizens that trolled this film because of racism or whatev that was based on the trailer were so wack. The film explains this very intelligently and anyone who knows about Asian history will see that it's totally valid. Just goes to show you can't judge a book by its cover or a film by its trailer.

    The Late Show with Stephen Colbert
    Jackie Chan Has Done Everything But 'Mamma Mia!' S3 (7:59)
    'The Foreigner' star has done it all in his illustrious career on the silver screen. Well, almost everything... except sing ABBA.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  11. #26
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,028

    Kill Tucker

    More Rush Hour 4 buzz from Jackie's Foreigner press appearances but this one is hilarious - of course Tucker is going to do it - Tucker would pay to do it now.

    Jackie Chan hypes up Rush Hour 4, threatens to kill off Chris Tucker to make it happen
    BY SHANGHAIIST IN NEWS ON OCT 11, 2017 8:30 PM



    It's been ten years since the last Rush Hour movie opened in theaters to the universal disgust of critics but relative enthusiasm from moviegoers, making $258 million at the box office. Now, Jackie Chan is looking to get the band back together for a sequel.
    The 63-year-old actor and self-defense instructor tried to stir up some hype for Rush Hour 4 during an appearance yesterday on the Today Show to promote his latest martial arts flick, The Foreigner. During that broadcast, and another appearance following it on Live with Kelly and Ryan, Chan repeatedly tried to bully his former co-star Chris Tucker into signing onto a sequel, threatening that if he does not, the new movie will open with his funeral.
    "If you're not going to do it, the beginning of the movie: funeral, he died," Chan said. "His son take over."



    Chan first teased Rush Hour 4 in a radio interview last Thursday, saying that he had already agreed to a script and was just waiting for his partner-in-crime-fighting to sign on as well.
    "For the last seven years we've been turning down the script, turning down the script... yesterday we just agreed. Probably end of this month they'll have a second draft. Next year, they'll probably start, I hope -- if Chris Tucker agrees," Chan said.
    In the first Rush Hour film, Chan played a dedicated Hong Kong detective who is teamed up with a loud, over-the-top LAPD detective, played by Tucker, and tasked with rescuing the Chinese consul's kidnapped daughter. The premise made for a bearable action-comedy that was even somewhat enjoyable at points. However, not so much for the sequels, which stretched the premise thin and repeated gags and jokes from the first movie with limited success. There is likely little hope that a fourth movie would help to redeem the series.



    A decade ago, Chan also blamed his buddy Tucker with delaying Rush Hour 3, which took six long years to come out. Since the turn of the century, Tucker has only acted in four movies: Rush Hour 2, Rush Hour 3, Silver Linings Playbook and Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk.
    By Máté Mohos
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  12. #27
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,028

    Wth?

    Still got nothing on this film. But we do have a thread on Goodbye Mr. Loser

    China Box Office: 'Never Say Die' Hurtles Past $200M
    9:08 PM PDT 10/8/2017 by Patrick Brzeski


    'Never Say Die'

    STX Entertainment's Jackie Chan thriller 'The Foreigner' came in third place in its second weekend, with its total climbing to $67 million.
    Local comedy Never Say Die dominated China's Golden Week autumn holiday period this year.

    The body-swapping comedy from Mahua Funage, a Beijing theater troupe turned box-office powerhouse, earned $65.3 million in its second weekend, taking its nine-day total to a massive $220 million. The blockbuster pulled in around $25 or more every day of the weeklong holiday, nearly tripling the individual totals of the various local titles that trailed it.

    The film will easily surpass Goodbye Mr. Loser, Mahua's debut release, which wildly surpassed expectations by earning $226 million in 2015.

    Jackie Chan's gritty English-language thriller The Foreigner slipped to third place in its second weekend, earning $15.2 million behind Hong Kong martial arts drama Chasing the Dragon with $17 million. A U.K.-China co-production, backed by STX Entertainment, The Foreigner has earned $67 million after nine days. That's well below Chan's recent martial arts action comedies, such as Kung Fu Yoga ($254.5 million) and Railroad Tigers ($101.5 million), but it's less surprising given that the foreign-themed thriller sits far outside Chan's usual family-fun wheelhouse.

    Although it's nudged ahead in daily earnings recently, Chasing the Dragon, which stars Donnie Yen and Andy Lau, is still a step behind The Foreigner for the full holiday period, with its nine-day total sitting at $59.7 million as of Monday.

    Musical movie City of Rock, directed by and starring Chengpeng Dong (Jian Bing Man, $186 million in 2015), added $12 million in its second weekend. After 10 days, it has earned $38.7 million.

    Fan Bingbing's patriotic air force movie Sky Hunters is the fifth-place finisher for the holiday, having earned $10.6 million in its second frame and $37.8 million overall.

    STX Entertainment will be back in the China market later this week, with the studio's local partner Huayi Brothers set to release The Space Between Us on Friday.
    Never Say Die
    Jackie's The Foreigner
    Donnie's Chasing the Dragon
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  13. #28
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,028

    Our latest review

    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  14. #29
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,028

    $100M+ Worldwide

    OTT 15, 2017 @ 11:00 AM 20,340 2 Free Issues of Forbes
    'The Foreigner' Box Office: Jackie Chan Actioner Tops $100M Worldwide
    Scott Mendelson , CONTRIBUTOR
    I cover the film industry.
    Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.


    STX Entertainment
    'The Foreigner'

    With the all-important caveat that budgets matter, The Foreigner may prove to be an important little B-movie potboiler. The $35 million action drama, starring Jackie Chan as a grief-stricken avenger and Pierce Brosnan as the government bureaucrat who becomes an incidental target, earned $12.84m this weekend. That's not an insane figure, heck it's less than the $15m that American Assassin snagged last month or the $14m that John Wick opened with three years ago. But the STX Entertainment release is both a much-needed win for the upstart distributor that has suffered in the Netflix-and-Chill era and a prime example of an American/Chinese two-hander that will be a hit on both shores.

    Again, that's as much to do with the budget as anything else, but The Foreigner is already a hit. The Martin Campbell-directed film has already earned $78 million from China, and STX and friends expect an $88m overseas cume by today, meaning that the picture is right at $100m worldwide, or almost triple the production budget. Unlike Matt Damon's The Great Wall which earned $334m worldwide on a $150m budget after scoring $171m in China but underperforming essentially everywhere else, and the $165m Warcraft which earned $220m in China after striking hot and fast with fans of the game and flopped everywhere else, this one isn't so expensive that it needs to be a blockbuster on both coasts.

    Huayi Brothers Pictures and Wanda Pictures' The Foreigner opened in China two weeks ago to decent results, holding its own against the blockbuster comedy Never Say Die. And yeah, since this is a grim, R-rated action drama, it was never going to do Kung Fu Yoga or Skip Trace business in China. This is closer to A Walk Among the Tombstones than Taken. The film snagged a decent $5,105 per-location average in 2,515 theaters as well as a solid 2.7x weekend multiplier (it went up 3% on Saturday) and an A- from Cinemascore. It played 59% male with (to quote STX's press release) Asian audiences significantly overdelivering. "Imagine that...," he said with a droll smile. Oh, and it earned 8.4/10 from Mao Yan, which is a leading Chinese audience metric.

    Where it will go from here is an open question. It may leg it to $35 million+, which would make it Jackie Chan's second-biggest import, even adjusted for inflation, behind Rumble in the Bronx ($32m in 1996, $65m adjusted). Or maybe it'll burn out once the fans get their fill. Obviously, the extent to which this one is an American success depends on if you view it as an American Jackie Chan movie like Shangai Noon or The Tuxedo (Rush Hour and The Karate Kid are on different planets) or an import like Super Cop or Operation Condor. But the key is that this American-Chinese co-production was cheap enough that it didn't need to break records in either territory to break out. But this is a promising performance for Chan's first wide theatrical release in over seven years. And unlike Edge of Darkness (Mel Gibson's similar comeback vehicle, courtesy of Martin Campbell, after nearly a decade away), it didn't cost $80m.
    I wouldn't have called this a little B-movie potboiler. Critics always look down on Jackie and action film.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  15. #30
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,028

    Jackie Chan: "The Foreigner" | Talks at Google



    Check out my Kung Fu Shidi & Dragon Crewman Mahn-Tong at 30:57 rocking his got qi? shirt.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •