For convenience, everything will be combined into one entry today:
- The Japanese box office numbers are out, and it's consistent with the audience admission rankings. As expected, the box office is fairly weak, with The Good Shepard managing only a third place opening with only 97 million yen from 290 screens. Even less lucky is The Invasion with only 560 million yen. Disastrous is the Hollywood action film The Kingdom, which lost almost 53% of business from last weekend. The only films that are still really hanging in there are Hero, The Sign of Love, and Pan's Labyrinth.
- Under "What silly thing will Jackie Chan do today?" news today, someone actually have the bad taste to ask Jackie Chan to sing the official countdown song for the Chinese Olympics. It's OK, it's one of the many songs the Olympic organizers plan to release to celebrate the Olympics. Seriously, how many songs does China need to celebrate the damn thing?
- Hideo Nakata is going back to Hollywood, this time adapting a Japanese novel for English-speaking audiences. No word on whether the adaptation will retain the Tokyo setting.
- Thai horror film Alone just won 4 awards at the Los Angeles Scream Fest, and no one had to censor the trailer for it to get attention either.
- I'm getting increasingly convinced that China is living in 60s United States with no racial tensions: a group of 40 conservative songwriters have signed a petition calling for a boycott of vulgar pop songs with "weird" lyrics and "lustful" themes. Next thing you know, they'll be complaining about hip gyrations.
- I take that back - they seem to be living in a timeless fantasy communist world where producers actually think that putting the Twins as voice talents would help sell a propaganda animated film in Hong Kong.
- There will be a Japan Film Council established by April 2009 to help foreign producers coordinate their shoots in Japan. One of the reasons: The Last Samurai could've been shot in Japan instead of New Zealand. They probably shot in New Zealand because a bottle of coke doesn't cost 140 yen there.
- Expect China to give The Knot its best film award at the Golden Rooster this week, because no way the film they picked to be their representative at the Academy Award would not be the best Chinese film of the year.
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
The Golden Rock - October 24th, 2007 Edition
Posted by GoldenRockProductions at 10:41 PM
Labels: awards, box office, China, festivals, Hong Kong, Japan, music, news, United States.
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