"/>

      亚洲аv天堂无码,久久aⅴ无码一区二区三区,96免费精品视频在线观看,国产2021精品视频免费播放,国产喷水在线观看,奇米影视久久777中文字幕 ,日韩在线免费,91spa国产无码

      Spotlight: China taps Hollywood writers to create better films for Chinese market

      Source: Xinhua    2018-05-22 03:19:50

      by Julia Pierrepont III

      LOS ANGELES, May 21 (Xinhua) -- A new trend is hitting Hollywood. Pundits have noticed the exodus of a growing number of screenwriters and directors heading East... far East. To China, in fact.

      Xian Li, a prominent Hollywood studio executive, is impressed by how fast the Chinese film industry has evolved. "But their scripts aren't quite there yet. China still needs Hollywood writers," she told Xinhua in a recent exclusive interview Monday, "And they're getting them."

      One Belt One Road Productions, a Hollywood film production and writer management company co-owned by producer, Michael Tiberi, is one of the growing number of U.S. companies helping China to bridge that skill gap.

      They are doing more deals with Chinese producers looking to do U.S.-China co-productions and hire Hollywood screenwriters to write films destined primarily for the Chinese market.

      The company's recent sale to China was an option for a goodhearted, goofy comedy called, "Smith Family Robinson," about two feuding Chinese and American families competing in a reality show while marooned on a deserted island. The combatants have to learn to work together in order to survive.

      The company is also negotiating two other script deals with Chinese film companies in Chengdu and Beijing to be written by Gavin Scott, the writer of "Mists of Avalon" and the veteran Hollywood screenwriter who penned great scripts for Hollywood A-Listers, Steven Spielberg ("Ready Player One") and George Lucas ("Star Wars").

      "China has a fascinating history rich with stories the West has never heard before. Hollywood writers can work with Chinese writers to help bring that cultural heritage to the world in the most compelling way," Gavin Scott told Xinhua.

      AMG Films, a joint U.S.-China production company that makes movies and TV shows in China and the United States, recently co-produced a 40 million U.S. dollars 30-episode Chinese TV show, shot in both countries, written and directed in part by American writer/director, Shaun Picconino ("Call of Duty: Black Ops, "American Fighter") and co-produced with Jun Zhao and Sanping Han, the prolific producer and former head of China's largest film studio, China Film Group.

      AMG CEO/producer, Alan Noel Vega, told Xinhua it had been a privilege to work with such talented Chinese producers.

      "There is no question that China holds a bright future for the global film industry. But Hollywood has had 100 years to perfect its writing and film techniques, so the best way for China to rise to the top is to tap into Hollywood's talent now and learn from them what makes their films so successful," Vega advised.

      Orb Media, another international production company with offices in Beijing and Los Angeles, routinely taps Hollywood writers for their Chinese productions.

      Orb CEO, Peter Shiao, told Xinhua, "Currently, we have Hollywood screenwriter, Rita Augustine, on an extended assignment in Beijing to write American-style scripts such as 'Chronicles of the Immortal Swordsman' for my Chinese Company, Immortal Studios."

      Augustine's other Chinese-content screenplays include, "Ghost of the Gobi," "Eastside Story," and "It Happened in Beijing."

      To promote collaborative script development between China and Hollywood, Orb Media also hosts an annual U.S.-China screenwriting competition to incubate viable cross-cultural projects.

      Plucky 'Gen Z-ers' are getting into the action too. Two young, entrepreneurial Chinese producers that are wading into the Hollywood talent pool are Baihui Chen, 25, and Katherine Shen, 26. Both are optioning scripts by American writers to produce in China.

      Katherine Shen, from Shanghai, is a graduate of the film directing/producing program at UCLA in California and former Associate Producer at Shanghai Canxing Culture Media Co, one of China's largest TV stations, home to China's version of the hit TV series "The Voice." She is negotiating to option an English-language script called, "The World Revolves Around You," by writer/director Dominique Othenin-Girard, set in China's hit singing-competition TV show, where two competing contestants fall in love despite their families' objections.

      Shen told Xinhua, "I've worked in production in both China and the U.S. and I am learning how to combine the best parts of each system to make the most successful movies."

      Baihui Chen, also from Shanghai and a recent graduate of the Syracuse University film master's degree program, is optioning "Orson's Final Cut," a thriller about a young Chinese actress starring in her first Hollywood movie who is attacked by a demonic entity posing as the vengeful spirit of one of Hollywood's most legendary directors.

      "Hollywood makes great movies and I want to use their writers' skills to improve my Chinese projects. That's a win-win," Chen told Xinhua.

      She also plans to hire a Hollywood writer to pen a script entitled, "Iron Destiny," about the thousands of Chinese immigrants who built America's Trans-Continental Railroad in the 1860s, a project proposed by California Assemblyman Kansen Chu, who represents Silicon Valley.

      "It's a perfect cross-cultural project that chronicles the Chinese contribution to opening the American West to transcontinential settlement and trade," Assemblymen Chu told Xinhua at the recent U.S.-China Summit in Los Angeles. "Historical collaboration can pave the way for future U.S.-China collaboration as well," he concluded.

      Editor: yan
      Related News
      Xinhuanet

      Spotlight: China taps Hollywood writers to create better films for Chinese market

      Source: Xinhua 2018-05-22 03:19:50

      by Julia Pierrepont III

      LOS ANGELES, May 21 (Xinhua) -- A new trend is hitting Hollywood. Pundits have noticed the exodus of a growing number of screenwriters and directors heading East... far East. To China, in fact.

      Xian Li, a prominent Hollywood studio executive, is impressed by how fast the Chinese film industry has evolved. "But their scripts aren't quite there yet. China still needs Hollywood writers," she told Xinhua in a recent exclusive interview Monday, "And they're getting them."

      One Belt One Road Productions, a Hollywood film production and writer management company co-owned by producer, Michael Tiberi, is one of the growing number of U.S. companies helping China to bridge that skill gap.

      They are doing more deals with Chinese producers looking to do U.S.-China co-productions and hire Hollywood screenwriters to write films destined primarily for the Chinese market.

      The company's recent sale to China was an option for a goodhearted, goofy comedy called, "Smith Family Robinson," about two feuding Chinese and American families competing in a reality show while marooned on a deserted island. The combatants have to learn to work together in order to survive.

      The company is also negotiating two other script deals with Chinese film companies in Chengdu and Beijing to be written by Gavin Scott, the writer of "Mists of Avalon" and the veteran Hollywood screenwriter who penned great scripts for Hollywood A-Listers, Steven Spielberg ("Ready Player One") and George Lucas ("Star Wars").

      "China has a fascinating history rich with stories the West has never heard before. Hollywood writers can work with Chinese writers to help bring that cultural heritage to the world in the most compelling way," Gavin Scott told Xinhua.

      AMG Films, a joint U.S.-China production company that makes movies and TV shows in China and the United States, recently co-produced a 40 million U.S. dollars 30-episode Chinese TV show, shot in both countries, written and directed in part by American writer/director, Shaun Picconino ("Call of Duty: Black Ops, "American Fighter") and co-produced with Jun Zhao and Sanping Han, the prolific producer and former head of China's largest film studio, China Film Group.

      AMG CEO/producer, Alan Noel Vega, told Xinhua it had been a privilege to work with such talented Chinese producers.

      "There is no question that China holds a bright future for the global film industry. But Hollywood has had 100 years to perfect its writing and film techniques, so the best way for China to rise to the top is to tap into Hollywood's talent now and learn from them what makes their films so successful," Vega advised.

      Orb Media, another international production company with offices in Beijing and Los Angeles, routinely taps Hollywood writers for their Chinese productions.

      Orb CEO, Peter Shiao, told Xinhua, "Currently, we have Hollywood screenwriter, Rita Augustine, on an extended assignment in Beijing to write American-style scripts such as 'Chronicles of the Immortal Swordsman' for my Chinese Company, Immortal Studios."

      Augustine's other Chinese-content screenplays include, "Ghost of the Gobi," "Eastside Story," and "It Happened in Beijing."

      To promote collaborative script development between China and Hollywood, Orb Media also hosts an annual U.S.-China screenwriting competition to incubate viable cross-cultural projects.

      Plucky 'Gen Z-ers' are getting into the action too. Two young, entrepreneurial Chinese producers that are wading into the Hollywood talent pool are Baihui Chen, 25, and Katherine Shen, 26. Both are optioning scripts by American writers to produce in China.

      Katherine Shen, from Shanghai, is a graduate of the film directing/producing program at UCLA in California and former Associate Producer at Shanghai Canxing Culture Media Co, one of China's largest TV stations, home to China's version of the hit TV series "The Voice." She is negotiating to option an English-language script called, "The World Revolves Around You," by writer/director Dominique Othenin-Girard, set in China's hit singing-competition TV show, where two competing contestants fall in love despite their families' objections.

      Shen told Xinhua, "I've worked in production in both China and the U.S. and I am learning how to combine the best parts of each system to make the most successful movies."

      Baihui Chen, also from Shanghai and a recent graduate of the Syracuse University film master's degree program, is optioning "Orson's Final Cut," a thriller about a young Chinese actress starring in her first Hollywood movie who is attacked by a demonic entity posing as the vengeful spirit of one of Hollywood's most legendary directors.

      "Hollywood makes great movies and I want to use their writers' skills to improve my Chinese projects. That's a win-win," Chen told Xinhua.

      She also plans to hire a Hollywood writer to pen a script entitled, "Iron Destiny," about the thousands of Chinese immigrants who built America's Trans-Continental Railroad in the 1860s, a project proposed by California Assemblyman Kansen Chu, who represents Silicon Valley.

      "It's a perfect cross-cultural project that chronicles the Chinese contribution to opening the American West to transcontinential settlement and trade," Assemblymen Chu told Xinhua at the recent U.S.-China Summit in Los Angeles. "Historical collaboration can pave the way for future U.S.-China collaboration as well," he concluded.

      [Editor: huaxia]
      010020070750000000000000011105521371959791
      主站蜘蛛池模板: 芒康县| 久久av无码精品人妻糸列 | 亚洲午夜无码久久yy6080| 亚洲AV无码专区在线电影天堂 | 欧美国产日本精品一区二区三区| 亚洲性久久久影院| 成 人 免 费 黄 色| 亚洲欧洲色图片网站| 国产av办公室丝袜秘书| 99er这里只有精品| 中文字幕无码免费久久9| 丝袜系列在线视频国产| 日本午夜按摩在线观看| 九月色婷婷免费| 国产福利深夜在线播放| 欧美牲交a欧美牲交aⅴ| 国内视频一区| 日韩精品一区二区三区激情视频| 日本久久一区二区三区高清| 国产成人啪精品视频免费APP| 亚洲人成人一区二区三区| 亚洲综合1区2区3区| 日韩精品视频在线一二三| 国产成人色污在线观看| 免费h动漫无码网站| 丝袜无码专区人妻视频| 最新亚洲av电影网站| 亚洲一区二区三区天码| 亚洲AV无码久久精品国产老人| 国产精品久人妻精品| 99久久免费只有精品国产| 日韩久久久黄色一级av| 资源在线观看视频一区二区| 综合激情亚洲丁香社区| 国产成A人片在线观看视频下载| 欧美精品xx| 精品一区二区三区在线观看l| 亚洲一区二区三区成人在线| 国产亚洲日韩一区二区三区| 国产69精品久久久久9999不卡| 亚洲一道一本快点视频|