- Variety likes to end their first paragraph of film reviews with a little prediction of their box office takes, because apparently being professional means you can watch movies early enough to predict their box gross, not analyze (like yours truly). A Korean film critic apparently likes to follow Variety's vein by predicting the highly anticipated new film by Park Jin Pyo (You Are My Sunshine) "Voice of a Murderer" would flop. Despite, you know, "You Are My Sunshine" being the highest-grossing Korean melodrama ever, and that a crime film that tries to cash in on major collective memory happens to hit box office jackpot (read "Memories of Murder").
Then comes news that "Voice of a Murderer" made $10.1 million with 1.46 million admissions, AND screen counts actually increased day by day.
I'll bet a certain someone in Germany is happy about that.
Source: Twitch, Variety Asia.
- Those silly censors at the Chinese government strikes again. They have approved a heavily-cut version of Li Yu's "Lost in Beijing" (starring Tony Leung Ka-Fai) to screen in Berlin. Apparently, the censors demanded 53 cuts (totaling about 15 minutes), include a scene of a car driving down a dirty alleyway with water since it gives a bad impression of Beijing. Man, people must think America is a pigsty after all the dirty alleyways with water they show in their movies.
Now producer Feng Li has to consider showing the approved version or open defy status quo and showed the original version in Berlin. Of course, he has to consider the last filmmaker that did that got banned from making films for 5 years.
Source: Variety Asia
- Japanese box office rankings for the past weekend is out. Dororo remains in the first place, as Pursuit Of Happyness in second. The biggest major opening this week would be Andy Lau's A Battle of Wits. I don't have an official screen count or numbers, but this is considered a pretty major opening for a Hong Kong film (It did get nominations at the Hong Kong Film Awards, so it's a Hong Kong film, yeah? Good), let alone an Andy Lau film. This is probably due to the fact that it's based on a popular Japanese comic, not the fact that Andy Lau is prominently featured in the poster
Source: Eiga Daisuki!
- Rinko Kichuchi from the brilliant "Babel" (that's right, the more you hate it, the more I'll love it) has signed up for a role in Rian Johnson's (who made a great debut with Brick) con-man noir drama The Brothers Bloom. Here's to hoping she just won't become the fetishized Asian femme fatale there to satisfy the male gaze.
Source: Twitch
Ah hell, it's Hollywood, that's what probably will happen.
Wednesday, February 7, 2007
Critics? What's that?
Posted by GoldenRockProductions at 2:10 AM
Labels: box office, casting, China, Hollywood, Japan, South Korea
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment