- The numbers for the Japanese weekend box office doesn't come out until tomorrow, so we'll just going a bit into audience admission rankings for now. For the third weekend in a row, the drama adaptation Hero starring Kimura Takuya lead the rankings, keeping newcomers
Fantastic Four and Arthur and the Invisibles at second and third place, respectively. Also, Naoko Ogigami's Megane opened at 7th place, although I don't know how many screens it opened on.
Despite opening at only 4th place the first weekend, turns out the family film Miss Potter is considered to be doing quite well in Japan, with it being the second-highest-grossing region in the world behind the UK.
- From the (in)famous Johnny's Jimusho comes the newest disposable pop group Hey! Say! Jump! (Jump stands for Johnny's Ultra Music Power. Glad they're still about the music). As an expansion of Hey! Say! (Which debuted recently), there's more of them than ever by making it 10 members.
- This is the closest they got to being right - Hong Kong has chosen Johnnie To's modern western Exiled as Hong Kong's representative for an Academy Award for foreign film.
- After the success of the Korean blockbuster D-War (7.8 million admissions in South Korea, and US$8.5 million and counting in North America as the most successful Korean film in North American box office ever), it's inevitable that the filmmakers would do what every successful B-movie would do: the obligatory sequel!
- Did you know that it's actually legal to download Japanese content from the internet for private use? Of course, it's probably illegal to upload it, but it seems like the downloader carries no actualy legal responsibility. However, it might be too late to tell you this now, because the law is about to change.
- Under "your daily Lust, Caution news" today, Taiwan audiences apparently love Ang Lee's 156-minute erotic thriller. It's even expected to make more than Brokeback Mountain, which is Lee's highest-grossing film in his native country. I should be taking the plunge this weekend.
- It's trailers time! Both courtesy of Twitch. First, there's yet another trailer for Kenta Fukasaku's X-Cross, which finally locked down a release date of December 1st. Honestly, I don't even think he had a say in releasing another trailer, but that's just my opinion. Then there's a trailer for Mamoru Oshii-produced omnibus film Shin Onna Tachiguishi Retsuden. However, it all just seems really silly when a woman in the trailer says with seriousness - "I would like to eat it once more."
- There's a silent fight going on between the Pang Brothers and Andrew Lau about who will make the it's-taking-so-long-that-no-one-is-waiting-for-it-anymore sequel to the comic adaptation Storm Riders. With my hate for Andrew Lau, I would actually really like to see the Pangs take on something that's not horror.
- Lastly, Kaiju Shakedown presents the alternate (read: not as good) ending to Wong Kar-Wai As Tears Go By. It's worth watching just to see how Andy Lau can't even eat an orange the right way.
Tuesday, September 25, 2007
The Golden Rock - September 25th, 2007 Edition.
Posted by GoldenRockProductions at 10:16 PM
Labels: awards, box office, Hong Kong, Japan, music, news, review, South Korea, taiwan, technology, trailers, United States.
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