Tuesday, July 24, 2007

The Golden Rock - July 23rd, 2007 Edition

- After what's been a somewhat disappointing summer for Hong Kong cinema, there's finally some good news to report. According to the Sunday numbers from Hong Kong, Benny Chan's actioner Invisible Target made an impressive HK$1.31 million on just 36 screens (and it's been sent off to the smaller screens in almost all the multiplexes it's playing in thanks to Harry Potter). After 4 days, the Nicholas Tse-Shawn Yu-Jaycee Chan starrer has made HK$4.6 million and word-of-mouth may bring it to the HK$10 million mark, which has become a sad sad standard for success.

Meanwhile, Harry Potter did actually win Sunday, making HK$3.1 million on 83 screens (see what I mean about Invisible Target getting shafted?) for a 12-day total of HK$37.03 million. Now that it'll be passing the HK$40 million mark in a day or two, let's start looking towards 50 mil, which I'm sure no one will be surprised about. Meanwhile, the Japanese animated film Keroro 2 (which apparently is only out on a Cantonese dub in theatres?!) makes HK$790,000 on 28 screens, many of them not playing it past 5 pm, for the 4-day total of HK$2.32 million.

From Hollywood, the Nicholas Cage sci-fi thriller Next makes HK$220,000 on just 15 screens for HK$780,000 after 4 days, and Quentin Tarantino's talky Death Proof director's cut makes just another HK$60,000 on 5 screens for a 4-day total of just HK$300,000. I'm not surprised that more visually exciting Planet Terror will end up doing better, especially when Tarantino's self-indulgent talk about grindhouse movies won't translate quite well in Chinese.

US$1=HK$7.8

- This week, Lovehkfilm has a review of the aforementioned Invisible Target, the straight-to-video (at least in America) stinker Kung Fu Fighter, the Singaporean comedy Just Follow Law by Jack Neo, the Japanese blockbuster sequel Limit of Love: Umizaru, Korean-Japanese filmmaker Sai Yoichi's Korean debut Soo, and the Shunji Iwai-directed documentary Filmful Life (with the last two by yours truly).

- In Japan audience rankings, who honestly didn't expect Harry Potter to take the weekend? That bumps everything down a spot, except for 300, which gets bumped off of the top 10 along with Zodiac by the animated film The Piano Forest.

- In the Chinese city of Nanjing, the American-made documentary Nanking is a hit, with theaters lowering ticket prices and donors pouring money to make sure as many people get to see it as possible. Anyone see an agenda in Chinese people making a Chinese government-approved documentary a hit?

- Time for endless analysis of Japanese drama ratings. Fuji's big Monday drama First Kiss gets a Joudan Janai-sized drop from a promising 19.7 rating (about 12.8 million) the first week straight down to a 13.2 (about 8.6 million) for its second week. The "Taiwan got them first, now we're taking them back" comic adaptation dramas Hana Zakari No Kimi Tachi He and Yamada Taro Monogatari saw one fall slightly and the other got a bit of a bump. Hana lost about 200,000 viewers, while Yamada gained about 400,000 viewers. Don't worry, they're on different nights and different time slots anyway.

Meanwhile, the critical favorite/Freaky Friday-ripoff Papa To Musume No Nanakakan got a season high of 14.1 rating (roughly 9.15 million), and Fuji's experimental Saturday 11pm time slot drama Life hangs on with a 10.9 (7.1 million), which is the same as last week. Oh, and Yama Onna Kabe Onna continues its slow drop to a 12.1 rating (7.9 million viewers) this week for its third episode.

As always, all the information for this season's drama can be found on Tokyograph.

- After the earlier reported Joey Yung=Mandy Moore MTV discovery, netizens have found yet another MTV by the same director that seems to be derived from an original Japanese source. Except unlike the Joey Yung incident, where EEG and Yung herself seem to simply ignore the complaints, the Taiwanese pop star actually released a statement within hours acknowledging the complaints. Then her manager released his own statement, apologizing and stating that he has asked video play to stop immediately. And then after all of that does the director finally apologize, saying that he did watch YUI's MTV as a learning tool, but didn't intend to copy. However, he has not acknowledged copying Mandy Moore's video.

Nevertheless, this is worth mentioning because the star knows that it's not her fault, but at least she took the effort to clear her name and apologize, unlike the EEG/Gold Label attitude, where they use "coincidence" as the ultimate excuse for everything.

- That was fast. Milkyway screenwriter Yau Nai-Hoi's directorial debut Eye in the Sky literally just left theaters this past weekend, and a DVD has already been announced for August 4th.

- playwright-screenwriter-sometimes-director Koki Mitani is back with a new film after the ensemble hit The Uchoten Hotel (a great comedy, by the way). This time it's a darker piece about a gang thug who brings in an actor to pretend to be an assassin when he can't find a real one. Apparently he's promising three laughs a minute (at least that means it won't run too long like Uchoten Hotel did). Sanspo also does some over-reporting and predicts it might make 12 billion yen based on the Mitani's films' box office pattern. Please fuck off with that kind of stuff already.

- Speaking of "what the fuck?" The Los Angeles Times is reporting that Hong Kong comedy legend Stephen Chow will play Kato in the Green Hornet movie alongside.......Seth Rogan?! Who the hell put together that dartboard?

Thankfully, a closer look shows that the news is from an LA Times blog that reports Seth Rogan WANTS Stephen Chow for Kato. Chow has NOT officially signed on. In fact, he probably hasn't even been pitched the idea yet.

- Oh, my bad. The controversial Bangkok International Film Festival got under way last Thursday, but hasn't really seen much clear success in attendance.

- Speaking of festivals, the Toronto Film Festival has announced most of its midnight madness lineup, which includes Wilson Yip's Flashpoint and Hitoshi Matsumoto's Dai Nipponjin.

- Lastly, Hollywood Reporter gives brief reviews of Shinya Tsukamoto's Nightmare Detective and Lee Sang-Il's Japanese Academy Award winner Hula Girl.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Actually, that wasn't Sanspo over-reporting - it was based on a quote from Mitani himself. He said (probably half-jokingly) that he's aiming to take in twice as much as The Uchoten Hotel did. The number isn't actually based on any kind of predictive measure, other than Mitani's optimism.

GoldenRockProductions said...

Hi, Tokyograph,

Ah, that explains quite a bit, because 12 billion guesstimate has to be some kind of joke. Thanks!

Anonymous said...

Stephen Chow should not be playing Kato. Period. Full stop.

If anything, they should have a movie where Stephen Chow is the hero with an American sidekick.

If I had to guess, I would say that the dreaded Weinsteins came up with the Green Hornet idea.

I'm sick of their pillage of Asian entertainment. Same with Tarantino. Come up with an original idea for once rather than remake, redub, recut, reedit, and rescore better films for mass American consumption.