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'Great Wall’ may crumble, but more China-US films are coming

SHANGHAI — When Matt Damon bursts onto US theatre screens this weekend, in a fantasy epic fighting monsters along China’s Great Wall, he’s going to get a tougher reception than usual from movie fans.

Cast members Matt Damon and Jing Tian pose at the premiere of The Great Wall in Los Angeles, California on Feb 15, 2017. Photo: Reuters

Cast members Matt Damon and Jing Tian pose at the premiere of The Great Wall in Los Angeles, California on Feb 15, 2017. Photo: Reuters

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SHANGHAI — When Matt Damon bursts onto US theatre screens this weekend, in a fantasy epic fighting monsters along China’s Great Wall, he’s going to get a tougher reception than usual from movie fans.

The film from Chinese director Zhang Yimou will probably generate just US$17.5 million (S$24.8 million) in its US debut over the four-day President’s Day weekend and US$40 million through its entire US theatrical run, according to Mr Shawn Robbins, an analyst at BoxOfficePro.com. That’s far short of what Damon brought in as Jason Bourne or The Martian.

As the costliest Chinese-American co-production ever, The Great Wall from Dalian Wanda Group’s Legendary unit and Universal Pictures marks a big effort to win over fans from the two biggest markets — and a potential misfire that failed to bridge cultural differences. While China’s domestic movie industry has grown exponentially in recent years and is challenging US dominance in sales, its filmmakers have yet to churn out global hits.

“This is setting the table for the future,” said Mr Jeff Bock, senior box-office analyst at Exhibitor Relations. “If this is the first attempt it’s OK that they didn’t knock it out of the park.”

With a production budget of US$150 million, The Great Wall will need to generate about 400 million in ticket revenue to break even at the box office — taking into account the share of sales theatres keep and millions spent marketing the picture, according to Robbins. It’s collected US$224.5 million so far, mostly in China.

The Great Wall tells the story of an army battling rapacious beasts called Tao Tie, which symbolise greed in Chinese folklore. The effects-heavy film, with huge set pieces and elaborate costumes, is set in an alternate ancient China featuring Damon as a warrior and ace archer searching for a new explosive known as “black powder.” He’s captured and joins an order of Chinese fighters defending the wall against the monsters.

GROWING TIES

Hollywood studios such as Comcast’s Universal are teaming up with Chinese media in a variety of ways, including film financing, marketing and more recently local co-productions that let them keep a bigger share of ticket revenue in China and lower movie-making costs.

Next year, Warner Bros will release Meg, — pairing Chinese star Li Bingbing with Jason Statham and Ruby Rose — as part of a venture with China Media Capital. The Chinese government approved a record 89 co-productions last year, of which 10 are with US studios, according to state media. And with Wanda building what it bills as the world’s largest movie studio in China, more such projects are on the way.

For The Great Wall, the filmmakers worked to develop a picture that could bridge the tastes of two nations.

AMERICAN WRITTEN

“The script was written by Americans, and I provided suggestions from a Chinese perspective,” Mr Zhang said in the production notes for his first English-language film. “It was revised and polished, trying to make it acceptable and likable to both Westerners and Chinese. That was the hardest job.”

The picture also employed top Hollywood talent behind the camera, including Industrial Light & Magic, the effects team behind Star Wars, and Mr Tony Gilroy, the screenwriter from Bourne. It was filmed on Wanda’s Qingdao Movie Metropolis, the biggest film lot in the world, under Mr Zhang, whose credits include House of Flying Daggers and Raise the Red Lantern.

The Great Wall was the brainchild of Mr Thomas Tull, the founder of Legendary Entertainment and co-producer of hits like The Dark Knight and Godzilla. He sold the company for US$3.5 billion last year to Wanda and its billionaire Chairman Wang Jianlin, who also controls the AMC theatre chain, the largest US circuit. Wanda, which plans to offer US filmmakers subsidies and direct flights from Los Angeles to attract talent, declined to comment on the movie.

DOMESTIC SLOWDOWN

The Chinese release of the movie coincided with a slowdown in the domestic box office, depressing its haul. In the US, it faces competition from John Wick: Chapter 2, featuring Keanu Reeves, and an animated Lego Batman film.

On the popular aggregator website Rottentomatoes.com, the reception was mostly negative, with just 32 per cent of critics having positive reviews.

“It may be a landmark film for the Chinese and US film industries, but it’s hardly a creative breakthrough for anyone involved,” Mr Clarence Tsui wrote in the Hollywood Reporter.

The critical responses speak to the challenges ahead for US and Chinese filmmakers looking to succeed in both markets. The Great Wall is largely in English but the Chinese actors often speak in Mandarin, with subtitles. Another issue is a lack of internationally well known Chinese actors, said Bock.

“Once that happens you will see the synergy, I think, work a lot better,” he said.

Filmmakers also have to navigate the complicated rules for Chinese co-productions, including greater use of domestic talent and more local investment, according to Mr Stanley Rosen, a University of Southern California political science professor who studies the relationship between the mainland and the US film industry.

“The problem is more from the Chinese side,” he said. “When you go out of your way to make a film that is going to be epic, with capital letters, and try to check off all the boxes, you are basically doing something by a formula. There is no creative stuff going on.”

The goal of the filmmakers is to generate more sales outside of China than at home and eventually turn a small profit, according to Mr Zhang Zhao, chief executive officer at Le Vision Pictures, one of the Chinese distributors.

“Filmmakers in both countries need to understand the audience tastes in each others’ territory,” Mr Zhang said in a Jan 24 interview in Beijing. “Over time, through practices like this, we’ll be able to find the methodology for co-productions.” BLOOMBERG

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