Wednesday 3 January 2007
The Contenders/China's A-list directors compete for this year's Oscar glory
By Thomas Podvin, Wednesday 3 January 2007 at 16:21 :: Features - Essays - English - that's Shanghai - China - Asian Cinema - that's Guanzhou/PRD




After the Oscars ceremony on March 2001, CTHD’s cumulative US box-office takings were in the neighborhood of USD 100 million. That’s a pretty decent neighborhood. The film ended up being a USD 130 million blowout stateside. No wonder that even before they started shooting Curse of the Golden Flower, Zhang Yimou and his producer, Zhang Weiping, had already planned to vie for the Oscars. Curse was simultaneously distributed this December in China and in the US by Sony Pictures Classics (the CTHD distributor) and expectations for Oscar success run high.
Producer Wu’s concern is, however, legitimate. It’s always historical dramas, or wuxiapian, that are selected. “Chinese producers think they stand the best chance of winning with big-budget martial arts epics,” says Elley, “as voters go for ‘exotic’ movies or ones that fit their clichéd perception of a country, like costume pictures showing Old Europe or films with Jewish themes.” Sad but true, international markets only accept a single Chinese film genre – period, costume and martial arts movies. “Taking the international market as a big dining table, Chinese movies are seen as a small plate of peanuts, an appetizer or cold dish, which cannot be served for every meal,” deplores Zhang Yimou, who has had three films nominated at the Oscars, all of them period dramas, though not all kung fu orientated (Judou; Raise the Red Lantern; Hero). In retrospect, the modern Curiosity Kills the Cat and The Road stood virtually no chance of being selected for national submission. Western audiences still prefer martial arts fantasies and historical tragedies, genres rooted uniquely in Asian culture. “It is very much like we prefer Japanese sushi or French wine,” says Easternlight Films director Ying Ye, who distributed The Road worldwide. Even so, to propose a genre ‘accepted’ by voters isn’t necessarily a guarantee for success. Last year, China’s submission was Chen Kaige’s slick and expensive wuxiapian The Promise, which got very poor press in the US and wasn’t even nominated.
The odds of correctly forecasting the five nominees out of 61 official submissions for the Best Foreign Language Film Award are quite low. But luck isn’t the only determining factor. “To stand a chance of even being selected into the final five, you need a US distributor for your film and/or a savvy Hollywood PR, plus lots of money for screenings, trade ads etc.”, explains Elley. “The Banquet doesn’t yet have a US distributor (at least at the time this article went to print), creating a huge problem for the production companies, Huayi Brothers and Media Asia, who will have to push the film themselves. At least, Curse is distributed by Sony Pictures Classics, which has a history of opening Chinese films in the US (House of Flying Daggers in 2004 on 1,500 screens; Kung Fu Hustle in 2005 on 2,500 screens). Another obstacle to overcome is the taste of voters. The bottom line is, according to Elley, that “foreign language Oscar winners have simply something which appeals to specifically American tastes [and they] have often not been hits in their home countries.” Although Zhang Yimou has never won so far, he’s received three nominations. His latest kung fu epics Hero and House of Flying Daggers, widely distributed in the US, were branded as ‘wuxiapian for foreigners’ and received the cold shoulder from Chinese audiences and critics alike. Judging by Zhang’s history, Curse of the Golden Flower, a new lavish historical drama designed for foreign eyes, stands every chance.
For more information see http://www.oscars.org/
All interviews and research by Thomas Podvin.
Special thanks to Derek Elley.
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SIDE BAR
Oscar facts
by Thomas Podvin
• 5,800 is the current number of voting members from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS). When AMPAS was founded in 1927, it consisted of 230 members.
• 16.5 in (42 cm) and 8.5 lb (3.86 kg) are the height and weight of an Oscar.
• 2,300+ statuettes have been awarded so far.
• On January 23, 2007, the nomination results will be announced.
• On February 25, 2007, the Oscars ceremony will take place at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood, California.
• The Chinese mainland, Taiwan, and Hong Kong have respectively received 3, 3 and 2 Oscar nominations in the Best Foreign Language Film category. Only Taiwan province won an award.
• 61 foreign language films were submitted for this years’ 79th Academy Awards – a record.
• Rule 14 serves as the ‘Ten Commandments’ of the Oscars, a strict and rigid set of rules to be followed by filmmakers when submitting a foreign language film.
• Oct. 1, 2005 to Sep. 30, 2006 is the period during which the submitted foreign language films for the 2007 Oscars should be publicly released in their home country for seven consecutive days.
• Zhang Yimou was nominated three times as Best Foreign Language Film (Ju Dou, 1990; Raise the Red Lantern, 1991; Hero, 2002), while Chen Kaige was nominated only once (Farewell My Concubine, 1993). Ang Lee was nominated three times and won once in 2000 (The Wedding Banquet, 1993; Eat Drink Man Woman, 1994; Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, 2000).
• RMB160 was the ticket price for Zhang Yimou’s Curse of the Golden Flower during the mandatory one-week public screening held to meet the requirements for the Best Foreign Language Film application.
(c) that's Shanghai Magazine
Chief editor: Steven Crane
January 2007 issue
(c) that's PRD Magazine
Chief editor: Phil Boyle
February 2007 issue


