Tag: China

  • China laps up Aamir Khan’s 3 Idiots

    China laps up Aamir Khan’s 3 Idiots

    MUMBAI: Since its release in China two weeks ago, the Aamir Khan, Madhavan and Sharman Joshi-starrer 3 Idiots has become a hit in China. The Vidhu Vinod Chopra-directed film was released in China with 900 prints.

    Confirming the same, Vinod Chopra Films (VCF) CEO Sameer Rao said, “Mainland China is the second biggest film market after the US. But it is very difficult to enter because only 20 foreign films can be screened in China in a year. After its success in just two weeks, the VVCF camp has built high hopes that the movie will have a very long run in the Chinese market.”

    “The message in the film has been the pull factor in the film. Such a great response from a non-traditional territory like China is a welcome phenomenon for the Hindi film market,” added Reliance Media Works CEO Anil Arjun.

    3 Idiots released in China two years after its 2009 worldwide release.

  • Third Eye Fest ends with Rang Rasiya

    Third Eye Fest ends with Rang Rasiya

    MUMBAI: The 10th Third Eye Asian Film Festival, that got underway on 22 December, screened as many as 100 feature films and 50 short films.


    The films were selected from among over 400 entries received from different Asian Countries including Iran, China, Japan, Israel, Philippines and Indonesia.


    The festival that had Turkey as the focus country, promoted and showcased several Turkish films like My Marlon And Brando, Uzak ( Distant) and Yamurta (Egg) that were earlier appreciated at other festivals around the world.


    The seven-day affair paid tributes to departed film luminaries like Ashok Kumar and Dev Anand whose cult film Guide was screened in the presence of his son Suniel. Tributes were paid to Ashok Kumar by screening of his B R Chopra-starrer Gumrah.


    The festival, that rolled with the premiere of the Chinese film 11 Flowers, ended with Ketan Mehta‘s Rang Rasiya.

  • Chinese govt snubs Christain Bale

    Chinese govt snubs Christain Bale

    MUMBAI: The Chinese government has snubbed Dark Knight star Christian Bale of creating a story when government-backed guards stopped him from visiting blind activist Chen Guangcheng ineastern China last week.

    The government said that Bale should feel embarrassed for trying to visit a human rights activist while he was in China to promote a movie the country has submitted for an Oscar, a Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Weimin said.

    He said Bale was invited by director Zhang Yimou to attend the opening ceremony of the film The Flowers of War. “But he was not invited to create a story or shoot film in a certain village,” Liu observed. “I think if you want to make up news in China, you will not be welcome here.”

    Bale, who won a best supporting actor Oscar for last year‘s The Fighter, said he wanted to shake Chen‘s hand and tell him “what an inspiration he is.”
    Chen documented forced late-term abortions and sterilizations and other abuses by overzealous authorities trying to meet population control goals in his rural community.

    He was later imprisoned for allegedly instigating an attack on government offices and organizing a group of people to disrupt traffic.

  • Bale in a scuffle with Chinese guards

    Bale in a scuffle with Chinese guards

    MUMBAI: Batman star Christian Bale suffered a nasty brush with Chinese guards who forcibly blocked him and a CNN crew from visiting a blind lawyer-dissident being held under house arrest.
     
    The star, who is in China to promote his upcoming Nanjing Massacre film The Flowers of War, was stopped on Thursday on the outskirts of the village in eastern China where the activist Chen Guangcheng has been detained.
     
    Describing Chen as a personal “inspiration”, Bale invited a CNN crew to accompany him on an eight-hour drive from Beijing to the village in Linyi district.


    The same guards in green military-style overcoats who attacked the CNN crew during a February visit to the village were again present and directed punches at Bale and the crew, it is understood.
     
    The Hollywood actor and CNN crew retreated to their van but were then chased down bumpy roads by the guards in another vehicle for 40 minutes, resulting in damage to the van, it is reported.

  • ‘Three Idiots’ to get massive Chinese release this month

    ‘Three Idiots’ to get massive Chinese release this month

    PANAJI: A total of 900 prints of Raj Kumar Hirani‘s ‘3 Idiots‘ are being released in China – making the largest release of any Indian film that country.

    Stating this, producer Vidhu Vinod Chopra also announced that the film is being made in Hollywood by a filmmaker there, and in Italian.

    He said the Chinese release comes on the heels of the huge success of this film in Hong Kong and Taiwan.

    He attributed the success of the film to the fact that human emotions were the same everywhere.

    He categorically said that the film was only inspired by Chetan Bhagat‘s book and not based on it as it was vastly different. 

  • Sundance Institute renews Film Forward program

    Sundance Institute renews Film Forward program

    MUMBAI: Sundance Institute has renewed its program-Film Forward: Advancing Cultural Dialogue initiative that was introduced last year.


    Film Forward connects contemporary US and international films and filmmakers with diverse global audiences and features documentary and narrative films.


    The films selected for the second year of the Film Forward program are: Another Earth, by Mike Cahill; Beginners, by Mike Mills; Bran Nue Dae, by Rachel Perkins; Buck, by Cindy Meehl;Grbavica, by Jasmila Zbanic; The Green Wave, by Ali Samadi Ahadi; On The Ice, by Andrew Okpeaha MacLean; Senna, by Asif Kapadia; Somewhere Between, by Linda Goldstein Knowlton; and Unfinished Spaces, by Benjamin Murray and Alysa Nahmias.


    The program with travel to India apart from China, Morocco, Columbia and France this year. Film Forward filmmakers will travel with the initiative to present their work and participate in master classes, discussion panels among other engagements with audiences.


    Last year, more than 1,18,000 people attended 116 presentations while more than 30 workshops and panels worldwide were conducted by Film Forward‘s filmmakers and other film professionals. 

  • Hyderabad to host 17th intl Children’s film fest

    Hyderabad to host 17th intl Children’s film fest

    MUMBAI: Hyderabad will host the 17th International Children’s Film Festival, organised by the Children‘s Film Society India (CFSI).


    Of a total number of 741 films from 86 countries, 170 films from 44 countries have been selected for screening.


    Said Children‘s Film Society India CEO Sushovan Banerjee, “For the children aged between 3 to 16 years of age, this film festival has feature films like Iran‘s The Other, France’s Tales Of The Night, China’s The Star And The Sea, Denmark’s The Great Bear, India‘s Chillar Party, Stanley Ka Dabba and I Am Kalam. Along with the feature films of various countries, many short films will also participate in the festival.”


    The competition has been divided into four parts, where 15 films from the International level, 10 films from the national level, and 25 short films (international/national) have been selected. Also, 10-12 films of small directors have been selected along with the said categories. It is also the first time that films directed by children between 3 and 16 years have been selected.


    Two other sections that will have 100 best films of the last decade have also been created. These sections are ‘Children’s World‘ while the other will have films directed by China’s Children’s Film Association.


    The festival will be held from 14 to 20 November.


    International Children‘s Film Festival (ICFFI), also popularly known as Golden Elephant in India, is a festival held every two years through which the children of the world are shown various films of best quality.


     

  • WPP’s billings up 5.2 per cent at ?21.4 billion

    WPP’s billings up 5.2 per cent at ?21.4 billion

    MUMBAI: WPP, the world’s largest advertising company, has reported a strong first-half financial performance.

    WPP declared revenue growth of 8.1 per cent in the first half (organic growth of 6.1 per cent), gaining from a robust advertising environment across the world. North American sales increased 5.4 per cent, and growth in the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India, and China) improved 15 per cent in the first half.

    The company‘s operating margins augmented to 11 per cent from 10.3 per cent in the first half of 2010, with higher profitability in all geographic regions.

    Billings were up 5.2 per cent at ?21.4 billion, while reportable
    revenue has increased by 6.1 per cent at ?4.7 billion.

    The Board of WPP announced its unaudited interim results for the six months ended 30 June 2011. “Despite recent uncertainties, these results continue the post-Lehman bounce-back seen in 2010 and the Group has now achieved levels of pro-forma revenues and profitability beyond 2008,” said an official statement.

    For the remaining 2011, the company states that slowdown in the growth rate in the United States should be compensated geographically by faster growth in the United Kingdom, Western Continental Europe, “from admittedly low levels”, and faster escalation in Asia Pacific, Latin America, Africa and the Middle East and Central and Eastern Europe.

    “Functionally, any slowdown in traditional media spending, is similarly forecast to be covered by increasing digital spending and, in our case, by continued growth in media investment management,” an official statement stated.

  • Latest Transformers-top grosser of series

    Latest Transformers-top grosser of series

    MUMBAI: With just a week gone after its release, Paramount‘s Transformers: Dark of the Moon became the top grossing film in the series, with a worldwide gross of $882.4 million this weekend.


    Dark of the Moon‘s performance has no doubt been helped by being the only one of the three to be released in 3D.


    The original Transformers grossed $709.7 million globally, while its sequel Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen roped in $836.3 million.


    The weekend tally of Dark of the Moon included $62 million in foreign grosses that was fueled by a $40 million-plus opening in China, the biggest three-day launch of all time for an American film.


    On the whole, Dark of the Moon has now earned $556.6 million at the international box office, becoming the No. 1 release in Paramount International‘s history.

  • CNN expands to Afghanistan, China, UAE with new appointments

    CNN expands to Afghanistan, China, UAE with new appointments

    MUMBAI: In a bid to expand its coverage and reach across Asia and the Middle East, CNN Worldwide is adding three new international correspondents in Afghanistan, China and the United Arab Emirates.

     

    The announcement was made by CNN senior VP president international newsgathering Parisa Khosravi.

     

    Over the past 12 months, CNN has appointed more than a dozen correspondents in seven new locations as part of an aggressive content ownership strategy. These latest hires boost CNN’s international newsgathering locations to 33.

     

    Khosravi says, “The resources available to CNN’s international newsgathering team have never been more robust. By adding correspondents in these three strategic areas, CNN underscores its international newsgathering heritage.”

     

    In Kabul, Afghanistan, Atia Abawi will serve as correspondent. He will be responsible for covering the country and the on-going war there. Abawi, a former assignment editor and producer for CNN’s international desk in Atlanta, joined CNN in 2004 and has worked on a number of stories including the assassination of former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, the Afghanistan-Korean hostage situation and Youssif, the young Iraqi boy burned by insurgents in Iraq.

     

    Meanwhile, Stan Grant has returned to CNN after spending two years in Australia and will take up the new post of UAE-based correspondent. He will serve to cover both the UAE and the surrounding region from his base in CNN’s new Abu Dhabi newsgathering and production center slated to open later this year. Previously, Grant served as a Hong Kong-based anchor for CNN International and later as the network’s Beijing-based correspondent, where he gained recognition for his exclusive coverage of the Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka in the aftermath of the South Asian tsunami.

     

    Emily Chang, who joins John Vause as the second correspondent in Beijing, boosts CNN’s presence in China at a time when many media outlets are reducing their coverage in the post-Olympic climate. Chang has already reported on a variety of stories including the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, the tainted milk scandal and the effects of the global financial crisis on China.

     

    Over the past year, CNN has also announced the opening of newsgathering operations in Chennai, India; Lagos, Nigeria; Mumbai, India; Nairobi, Kenya; and Santiago, Chile, where CNN Chile launched late last year. In addition, CNN has placed correspondents in Istanbul, Turkey; Islamabad, Pakistan; Johannesburg, South Africa; London, Great Britain and Tokyo, Japan.