Director stresses indie spirit
Updated: 2014-05-07 09:16
By Xu Jingxi (China Daily)
|
|||||||||||
Film poster for Jia Zhangke's A Touch of Sin. Photo provided to China Daily |
A win for sin? |
Chinese art-house film wins at the box office |
However, $6.59 million of that was spent for The Grandmaster starring Zhang Ziyi, while the box offices of the remaining 21 added up to only $1.25 million. Lost in Thailand, a comedy whose boxoffice in the Chinese mainland was nearly 1.3 billion yuan ($208 million), made only $57,400 in North America.
Cameron Bailey, artistic director at the TIFF, admits that kung fu is still the most popular element of Chinese movies for overseas audiences because "action can be understood beyond language barriers".
But he thinks that what tripped up Lost in Thailand in the North American market was more than the difficulty of understanding comedy in a foreign language and the lack of a global star like Zhang.
"It needs much stronger promotion. Few people in North America heard about it before it was put on show," Bailey says.
"To succeed in an overseas market, a film needs to tell a story of universal values to overcome language barriers, feature global stars familiar with foreign audiences and have good promotion."
Related Stories
Cannes Film Festival announces official selections 2014-04-21 10:21
Zhang Ziyi awarded best actress at APSA 2014-04-20 09:59
Zhang Yimou's 'Coming Home' hits screen in May 2014-04-18 08:12
Film finds ups and downs in 'golden era' 2014-04-18 07:23
Renowned French actor to make first Chinese film 2014-04-17 17:32
Today's Top News
Ukraine moves special forces to Odessa
Slovenian PM resigns
Disclosure of military secrets becoming bigger risk
China, AU to deepen co-op
UN hosts China Shanxi Food Festival
Chinese Parents: For some, it's 'Harvard, Harvard'
Japanese writer Junichi Watanabe dies at 80
Vietnamese veteran reminisces victory in the Battle of Dien Bien Phu
Hot Topics
Lunar probe , China growth forecasts, Emission rules get tougher, China seen through 'colored lens', International board,
Editor's Picks
Variety is the spice of academic life |
Documents prove the truth can't be buried |
Race to remember story of resistance |
Strait talking: From enemy to friend |
Welcome to the world’s largest garbage dump |
The latest word on books: Keep those pages coming |