Bright Shadow Films

Tag: movie production china

Application materials for a Sino-foreign co-production

by admin on Dec.11, 2009, under Film Production

The following application materials are required for all modes of Sino-foreign co-production except stated otherwise.

Approval of co-production project

Application memorandum prepared by the Chinese party, stating among others Chinese and English names of the parties to the co-production, contact details of the parties, film title, brief description of the film, brief introduction to the main cast, production schedule and filming location;

Certificate of Incorporation (photocopy) and bank reference letter of the foreign party (original);

Introduction to the foreign party’s business activities and history in film production, as appropriate;

  • Synopsis in Chinese;
  • 5 sets of the screenplay in Chinese;
  • Letter of intent or co-production agreement between the parties (photocopy);
  • Name, citizenship, brief resume and role of the principal cast;\
  • Name, citizenship and brief resume of principal crew, namely director, screenwriter, director of photography and art director.

Approval of completed film

  • Completed film embodied in tapes or discs;
  • Confirmation letter stating the actual investment made by the respective parties (not required for assisted production);
  • 6 stills in electronic, discs or printed form.
相关文章:

中文关键字:
Leave a Comment :, , , more...

In need of cash, Hollywood looks to India, China

by admin on Sep.02, 2009, under Film Industry

This Article Originally From:Reuters

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Disney’s $4 billion purchase of “Iron Man” moviemaker Marvel Entertainment signals a possible wave of media industry consolidation, but the cash to do deals may come from India or China, not Hollywood or Wall Street.

Even before Walt Disney Co (DIS.N) and Marvel Entertainment Inc (MVL.N) made their announcement on Monday, Hollywood watchers said Indian firm Reliance ADA Group’s recent $325 million investment in Steven Spielberg’s DreamWorks movie studio was a sign that opportunity exists for similar deals.

As the recession took hold in late 2007, Hollywood saw financing from U.S. hedge funds and banks dry up, and experts say Indian and Chinese firms are now in a better position to invest. For its part, Hollywood needs overseas cash to continue expanding globally where growth opportunities are strongest.

“If you have capital to invest, you can probably cut a better deal now than any time in the last ten years,” said Larry Gerbrandt, principal at consultancy Media Valuation Partners.

“A lot of Indian and Chinese companies have excess capital these days and Hollywood, aside from the fact there’s a certain glamour factor, those (Indian and Chinese) markets also need content, so there’s interesting deals to be made.”

Sky Moore, an attorney who worked with Reliance as it put together the DreamWorks financing package, said a bigger deal could be in the offing within two years.

“I think the bigger move is buying a studio, and I don’t know if it will be (a company from) India or China, but I think somebody is going to buy a studio,” Moore said.

STUDIO TARGETS

The Disney/Marvel deal fueled speculation DreamWorks Animation SKG Inc (DWA.O), maker of the “Shrek” movies and a separate company from DreamWorks Studios, could be next on the acquisition target list because of its solid position in the marketplace and focus on the lucrative family market.

Moore and Gerbrandt also named Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc as a potential acquisition target, although they said they had no specific information of any deal in the works.

Rumors of MGM’s potential sale have surfaced for years. The storied Hollywood studio faces looming payments on $3.7 billion of debt from a 2005 buyout of the firm, and earlier this week it replaced its CEO and hired a turnaround expert.

Chinese film studios are strengthening ties with their peers across the Pacific. The Huayi group, which Morgan Stanley called “China’s Warner Bros for tomorrow,” has said it is seeking capital to expand and has developed movies with Hollywood majors such as Sony Pictures. Its larger rival, The China Film Group, is reportedly keen on developing projects in the United States as well.

India’s expanding reach into Hollywood has included Reliance’s purchase of about 50 U.S. theaters and Indian entertainment company UTV’s investment of tens of millions of dollars over the last three years in several movies, including “The Happening” and “The Namesake,” Moore said.

“It’s not about bringing Bollywood to Hollywood, it’s about mainstream worldwide English-language entertainment,” he said.

Hollywood studios have also made big investments in India. Warner Bros, a division of Time Warner Inc (TWX.N), has signed multi-picture deals with Indian companies People Tree Films and Ocher Studios.

Twentieth Century Fox, a division of News Corp (NWSA.O), has started a joint venture with Asian broadcaster Star to create films for India under the name Fox Star Studios.

Foreign investment in Hollywood is nothing new, of course. In the 1990s, German tax credits spurred production of U.S. movies, and before that Japan’s Sony Co (6758.T) in 1989 bought Columbia Pictures. Sony also has a stake in MGM.

David Molner, managing director of Screen Capital International, a media and entertainment financing firm, said that absent foreign investment, Hollywood could simply have to endure a slowdown due to lack of capital.

“Either the Asians lead the pack or we have a lull,” he said. “Mostly because they’re probably going to be the fastest out of the blocks as the economy recovers.”

(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte and Tim Dobbyn, Phil Berlowitz)

相关文章:

中文关键字:
Leave a Comment :, , , , , , , , , , , , , , more...

Transformers II Getting Huge in China

by admin on Jun.29, 2009, under Film Industry

If you are in China and you are planning on watch Transformers II in the cinema, you will see how popular this film it is in China, I just found this article in Variety.com and it seems this movie’s box office has gone huge all over the world.

Transformer Movie

Here is the article from Variety(By PAMELA MCCLINTOCK)

Aside from its whopping five-day domestic tally — the second highest of all time — Paramount’s “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen” broke records in several countries overseas, leading to a massive $387.3 million worldwide through Sunday, one of the best global launches ever.

The five-day opening gross of $201.2 million from 4,234 theaters domestically easily eclipsed the $152.4 million earned by “Spider-Man 2,” which previously held the five-day record for a Wednesday launch. And “Transformers 2″ nearly matched the best five-day gross of all time: $203.8 million for WB’s “The Dark Knight.”

Overseas, the action tentpole opened to an estimated $162 million, the fourth best international opening of all time, after “Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End” ($216.3 million), “Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix” ($193 million) and “Spider-Man 3″ ($164.9 million). The sequel’s foreign cume was $186.1 million when factoring in the $24.1 million earned the previous weekend in the U.K. and Japan.

Although the Michael Bay-helmed pic sucked up most of the oxygen at the box office, other pics scored notable numbers. Disney-Pixar’s “Up” surpassed Par’s “Star Trek” to become the year’s highest-grossing title at the domestic B.O. (The film’s cume through Sunday was an estimated $250.2 million, boosted by the added charge for 3-D tickets.)

Warner Bros.’ “The Hangover” passed $200 million at the worldwide B.O. Domestically, it saw $17.2 million from 3,525 for a cume of $183.2 million. Abroad, film earned $10.1 million from 1,250 runs in 29 markets for a cume of $46.2 million and worldwide tally of $229.2 million.

Several specialty titles popped, including Summit Entertainment’s “The Hurt Locker.” Directed by Kathryn Bigelow, the film posted a per-screen average of $36,000 as it opened in four theaters in L.A. and New York, grossing an estimated $144,000.

The weekend’s only wide release besides “Revenge of the Fallen” was Cameron Diaz-Abigail Breslin drama “My Sister’s Keeper.” The film saw modest biz in grossing $12 million from 2,606 runs to come in No. 5 for the weekend.

In other holdover action, Fox’s “Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian” crossed the $200 million mark internationally as it grossed $5.2 million from 4,000 runs in 62 territories for a foreign cume of $202.3 million and worldwide tally of $365.5 million.

Sony continued to see strong international results for “Terminator Salvation,” which grossed $10.1 million for the sesh from 7,470 theaters in 70 markets for a foreign cume of $193.7 million. Accounting for territories where Sony isn’t distributing, pic’s total foreign gross is $219.5 million.

The romantic comedy “The Proposal,” from the Mouse House, continued to click. The Sandra Bullock-Ryan Reynolds starrer dipped 45% to an estimated $18.5 million from 3,058 runs; cume is $69 million. The pic grossed another $7.2 million overseas for the weekend, putting the worldwide cume at $91.7 million in its first 10 days.

On the domestic front, Focus Features’ dramedy “Away We Go” landed in the No. 10 spot in its fourth week, grossing $1.7 million as it expanded into 495 locations for a per-screen average of $3,390 and cume of $3.4 million.

And Woody Allen’s “Whatever Works,” from Sony Pictures Classics, grossed $386,286 in its second frame for a per-screen average of $11,036 and cume of $765,433.

Miramax’s Michelle Pfeiffer period piece “Cheri” grossed $408,000 as it opened on 76 screens for a per-location average of $5,368.

Not having such a good weekend domestically was Sony’s Jack Black-Michael Cera laffer “Year One,” which tumbled 70% in its second frame to $5.8 million for a domestic cume of $32.3 million.

But the big news, of course, is the “Transformers” sequel, the first tentpole since “Dark Knight” to truly rocket into the B.O. stratosphere.

Paramount co-chair Rob Moore said the pic played to a much broader audience than its predecessor, noting that the first time around, males made up 60% of the audience. This time, that number dropped to 54%.

More important to Moore: Despite negative reviews, more than 90% of those polled as they left theaters said the sequel was as good as, or better than, the first.

“To us, that’s the most compelling data point,” Moore said. “The thing that works so much about this franchise is the level of optimism and fun that’s inherent in it. It transports you to a world that stretches reality but is a ton of fun.”

Par execs were particularly pleased, since the studio pegs the pic’s production and worldwide marketing at $350 million — which the film already surpassed in five days.

In terms of just the three-day weekend, “Transformers 2″ grossed $112 million domestically. That, plus the $163 million international opening, makes for a worldwide weekend bow of $274 million, the third best after “Pirates of the Caribbean: At World End” ($356.1 million) and “Spider-Man 3″ ($315.9 million).

The international haul was led by China at $21.9 million — the biggest opening of all time for an English-language movie. While it played strongest in Asia, “Revenge of the Fallen” performed ahead of the first film in almost every market, proving that the franchise has taken hold, Paramount prexy of international distribution Andrew Cripps said.

“Transformers,” which Par and DreamWorks debuted over the Fourth of July holiday in 2007, opened to $70.5 million domestically on its way to cuming $319.2 million in North America and $700 million worldwide.

Imax also participated in the “Transformers 2″ bounty. The pic played on 169 Imax screens domestically. Five-day opening gross at Imax sites was a record $14.4 million.

The “Transformers” franchise was among the projects that reverted to Paramount after its split with DreamWorks, although Steven Spielberg remained an exec producer on the sequel and DreamWorks’ logo appears at the opening of the pic and in ads.

Adam Goodman, who arrived at Par six months ago from DreamWorks, helped guide both “Transformer” pics. Just days before the “Transformers” sequel opened, Paramount chair-CEO Brad Grey announced that Goodman was being upped to Paramount Film Group prexy as production toppers John Lesher and Brad Weston were exiting the studio.

Grey also lauded Bay’s ability to connect with audiences. He said the entire Par family is “proud to be behind him, and we look forward to our collaboration with him in the future.”

“Transformers 3″ is tentatively slotted to open July 1, 2011.

In the meantime, “Revenge of the Fallen” is expected to remain a sizable B.O. force in the coming days, looming over such new fare as 20th Century Fox’s 3-D toon “Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs,” which opens Wednesday.

Also opening Wednesday is Universal’s Johnny Depp gangster pic “Public Enemies.”

相关文章:

中文关键字:
Leave a Comment :, , , , , , , more...

Suggestions for Fresh Film Directors

by admin on Jun.17, 2009, under Film Industry

This Post Originally from here.

Yu Nan, one of the jury members for the Asian New Talent Award during the 12th Shanghai International Film Festival, had an exclusive interview with correspondent from Daily News yesterday. As a jury member, Yu Nan expressed her excitement to see so many spirited works, and she hoped these fresh film directors could stick to their own style, not to be distracted by material gain. Besides work, for the first time, Yu Nan replied to questions related to love in her real life and confessed that she was hoping for true love.

Yu Nan has already had some experience of being a jury member on International Film Festival overseas ahead of the 12th Shanghai International Film Festival (continue reading…)

相关文章:

中文关键字:
Leave a Comment :, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , more...

China boxoffice keeps climbing

by admin on Jun.03, 2009, under Film Industry

Fifth straight year of growth for Chinese exhibitors

By Jonathan Landreth and Frank Segers

June 2, 2009, 08:56 AM ET

You can find the original link here.

BEIJING — Moviegoing is getting to be a habit with the Chinese — and Hollywood is clearly taking a closer look.

China produced 406 feature films in 2008 and saw its boxoffice jump 30%, the fifth consecutive year of more than 25% growth.

In its annual report on the nation’s media industry progress, the State Administration of Radio Film and Television said overall 2008 boxoffice receipts reached 4.3 billion yuan ($635 million), led by such companies as the state-run China Film Group, Huayi Brothers Pictures, the Shanghai Film Group and the New Picture Co.

Hollywood too is becoming more bullish about prospects in that country of 1.5 billion potential moviegoers — despite still stringent regs and many restrictions on rentals.

“It’s a fantastic market full of people who love movies,” said Mark Zucker, president of Sony Pictures Releasing International.

He pointed to the optimism his studio feels toward the June 9 China opening of action title “Terminator Salvation” on 1,200 screens and the release later this summer of director Tony Scott’s “The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3″ with Denzel Washington and John Travolta.

Securing a play date in itself is something of a coup for a Hollywood major given the market’s strict import restrictions. Despite these, “China is a territory of increasing significance,” added David Kornblum, Disney vp international theatrical sales and distribution.

Five years ago, China was off the radar as a significant boxoffice revenue source for studio features. Now it ranks among the world’s top 25 largest boxoffice hauls for the big six — Warners, Disney, Paramount, Fox, Universal and Sony.

According to the MPA, the studios extracted from China $25 million in theatrical rentals out of boxoffice grosses of $194 million in 2007. In other words, the China market still has one of the lowest rations of rentals to grosses of any foreign territory — roughly 13 cents of each dollar spent for a ticket is returned to the U.S. distrbutor as rental revenue.

Still, five years earlier, the rental figure was just $7.9 million. In short, the market has more than tripled for Hollywood studio films.

As impressive is China’s enthusiastic embrace of digitalization. The market has the second largest number of 3-D screens overseas, after the U.K. — which is by far the largest international feature territory for the Hollywood studios.

China now has 209 3-D situations (the U.S. has about 1,560). This means that China is a growing source of studio boxoffice distributors of films in 3-D.

Kornblum noted that Disney’s “Bolt” last year generated $6.7 million in grosses exclusively from 3-D situations in China.

Although data shows that China’s newly built urban multiplex theaters filled faster than ever before, the final 2008 tally was lower than industry estimates of 4.6 billion yuan.

Leading the way was “If You Are the One,” director Feng Xiaogang’s comedy about a middle-aged man’s hunt for love, which raked in $47.6 million. Starring Ge You, the film beat out Hong Kong- and Hollywood-based John Woo’s war epic “Red Cliff,” which ranked second with $46.9 million.

SARFT said that despite the popularity of imported films like “Kung Fu Panda” and the Bond films (seen in a booming business for pirated DVDs and illegal downloads), domestic movies took the lion’s share of theatrical boxoffice sales. One reason is that SARFT limits screenings of imports to 20 a year — a practice that is a centerpiece of an ongoing U.S. lawsuit against China in the World Trade Organization.

Of the 10 highest-grossing films in China in 2008, seven were homegrown or made as co-productions with a Chinese partner.

After Feng’s and Woo’s films, the homegrown hits were “Painted Skin” ($34 million), Steven Chow’s “CJ7″ ($29 million) and the Jackie Chan-Jet Li starrer “The Forbidden Kingdom” ($27.5 million).

Imports “Kung Fu Panda” and “Quantum of Solace” followed, ranked sixth and seventh, respectively. They were followed by the domestic productions “Kung Fu Dunk” and “Forever Enthralled,” with the import “The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor” rounding out the list.

On the exhibition side, China’s 36 theater chains, led by firms like Beijing-based Wanda Cinemas, built 118 multiplexes in 2008, raising the nationwide total to 1,545, up 8% year-over-year.

China has 4,097 screens, SARFT said, up 16% from 2007. The report acknowledged that moviegoing was slower in China’s second- and third-tier cities, which lag Shanghai, Guangzhou and Beijing, where the total boxoffice in 2008 hit $75 million in 2008, up 42% from 2007.

SARFT’s final 2008 boxoffice tally does not include discounted tickets sold in China’s ongoing government-subsidized program to screen films for rural communities and factory workers.

China remains the third most-prolific filmmaking nation in the world after India and the U.S., but SARFT data shows that revenue from all Chinese films sold overseas added up to just $378 million in 2008. By comparison, “Iron Man” alone grossed $318 million worldwide in 2008, and it was Hollywood’s second-highest-grossing film of the year after “The Dark Knight.”

相关文章:

中文关键字:
Leave a Comment :, , more...

Our Sound Work Showreel

by admin on May.25, 2009, under Film Production

We worked with 37 digital for this video, the video was made in 3D, we made all the sound in this video in 2 days, if you have a speaker, feel free to turn it louder and listen to the amazing work we have done, sametime you are welcome to visit Birght Shadow Films and watch this video with our German imported monitoring speaker.

If you can see this, then you might need a Flash Player upgrade or you need to install Flash Player if it's missing. Get Flash Player from Adobe.

相关文章:

中文关键字:
Leave a Comment :, , , , , , , , , , , more...

Looking for something?

Use the form below to search the site:

Still not finding what you're looking for? Drop a comment on a post or contact us so we can take care of it!

Visit our friends!

A few highly recommended friends...

Archives

All entries, chronologically...