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Thread: Ava

  1. #1
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    Ava

    Geena Davis, Joan Chen Joining Jessica Chastain in Action Film 'Eve'
    11:00 AM PDT 10/19/2018 by Etan Vlessing


    Courtesy of Getty Images; Steve Zak Photography/FilmMagic

    Geena Davis; Joan Chen

    The character-driven film from Voltage Pictures and Chastain's banner Freckle Films also recently added Colin Farrell and John Malkovich.

    Geena Davis and Joan Chen have joined Jessica Chastain in Eve, the action drama Tate Taylor is directing for Voltage Pictures, which made the announcement Friday.

    Davis and Chen join an already impressive call sheet that features Colin Farrell, Common and John Malkovich.

    The story centers on a cold-blooded assassin (Chastain) who is being hunted by her former employers, while also trying to tell her family the truth about the nature of her job.

    Character details are being kept tight, but one source said that Davis may be playing Chastain’s mother. Chen may be playing a gangster who runs an underground poker game.

    Production is underway in Boston. Chastain will produce with Freckle Films' Kelly Carmichael alongside Nicolas Chartier and Dominic Rustam.

    Voltage is financing Eve and handling international sales. Voltage will co-handle domestic with CAA.

    Davis is the Oscar-winning vet from such classics Beetlejuice and Thelma & Louise as well as TV’s Commander in Chief. Chen recently starred in Netflix series Marco Polo and just wrapped Netflix movie Tigertail with John Cho.
    Interesting project for Chastain, especially with 335 in a weird limbo.
    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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    Changing the title from 'Eve' to 'Ava'

    Or maybe I should go with Hard Working Big Sister?

    The next Warcraft Redemption?

    Dec 19, 2020 2:00am PT
    Jessica Chastain’s ‘Ava’ Set to Make Big Impact on Chinese Streaming Release


    By Patrick Frater


    Photo courtesy of YouTube
    Jessica Chastain’s “Ava” has skipped a theatrical release in China, but is instead to get the widest possible online outing in the Middle Kingdom. From Saturday it is available on China’s four largest generalist streaming platforms: Tencent Video, Alibaba-owned Youku, iQIYI and Mango TV.

    The maneuver was piloted by Los Angeles and Beijing based Leeding Media. The David U. Lee-headed company licensed the rights from Voltage Pictures, steered it through Chinese censorship and picks up a “presented by” credit.

    Directed by Tate Taylor, “Ava” sees Chastain as an assassin who has to fight for her own survival after one of her missions goes wrong. It enjoyed staggered theatrical releases around the world from June onwards. Its limited U.S. release started from Sept. 25 and was followed by premium VoD outings on Amazon and iTunes.

    There have been very few American films sold into China this year. And everything about this deal was hard unusually difficult, Lee says. Hurdles included finding a date, getting the film through censorship, and simply establishing the trust necessary to get the transaction done.

    The litany of problems reflects the way that Chinese cinemas were closed for nearly six months between late January and July, ruining the finances of Chinese companies, and having a knock-on-effect on cross-border corporate relations. “A lot of Chinese distributors defaulted on deals this year. Others refused to take delivery, leaving titles in limbo,” Lee told Variety.

    “Our company may have succeeded because we’ve been doing this for many years, we are involved locally in the community in both China and the U.S., and we have people on the ground in both countries,” he said. Leeding Media has marketed 14 feature films theatrically in China and controls exclusive digital distribution rights to nearly 500 titles in China, including “Million Dollar Baby,” “Whiplash,” “Rush” and the Divergent series.

    The release date in China for “Ava” has less to do with government controls than the wrangling and co-ordination necessary to get four platforms to work together, Lee explains. China’s streaming platforms have become hugely powerful operations with at least three of them each able to claim more than 100 million monthly subscribers to their paid tiers. While they consider themselves as rivals, especially in matters of original production, the big platforms also occasionally cooperate as a means of risk-sharing.

    “Censorship was challenging” said Lee, underlining the previously established trend of ever-tightening controls that has stalled and diverted the normal routes to approval and release for both local and foreign titles. That was most graphically highlighted earlier this month when “Monster Hunter” was ripped from Chinese theaters after only a day, due to a fit of nationalist hysteria over a line of dialog seen as racist by bloggers. “The (U.S.-China) trade war seems to have put a strain on relations,” he said.

    Still, Lee is optimistic that “Ava” has what it takes to succeed in China. “First, it is a rare piece of fresh western content reaching Chinese audiences in 2020. Second, we expect the female empowerment angle to play well in China. The story examines family and social issues in addition to its crime-driven action elements,” Lee said.

    Chastain, who will soon be seen alongside China’s biggest female star Fan Bing Bing in “355,” is also a western star who has a sufficiently established fan base in China that she has a local nickname, rather than a Chinese transliteration. To Chinese audiences she is known as “劳模姐,” which translates loosely into English as “Hard Working Big Sister.”
    I have seen this and plan to come back to review it later.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  3. #3
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    First forum review

    It was okay. Jessica redeemed a lot with her acting. The drama was engaging, albeit predictable. The choreo was one move, one cut - some Jessica but hairstyle concealed a multitude of stunt women. We can't all be Charlize. I did enjoy the botched kill in the red dress and subsequent escape. The final showdowns between master and student, and between proteges, left too many openings for high level assassins. Killers of that caliber wouldn't be so sloppy, you'd think. I hardly recognized Joan Chen, but I knew she looked familiar. That whole underground casino was a dumb side arc.

    It was another story of an alcoholic chess player like in The Queen's Gambit (in the opening intro montage, Ava is listed as being a chess player in her high school yearbook).

    And it's open for a sequel.

    There is a sword fight in that intro montage. Sure, it was fencing in masks so it might not have been Jessica - it was probably another stunt woman. But it's all about sword fights for me and even though this didn't redeem the film, I found it notable.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

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