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The Myth -
Jackie Chan |
China - July 09th 2005 -
Indiana Jones
incarnated in Jackie Chan
(Credits to China Daily)
Jackie
Chan fans will only have a couple of months to wait
before his latest martial arts blockbuster "The Myth"
comes out. Due for release on September 23, it will be
different from "Around the World in 80 Days" and "New
Police Story," Chan told press conferences in Beijing
and Hong Kong this week.
The media
has likened "The Myth" to the Indiana Jones' series of
"Raiders of the Lost Ark" or "Indiana Jones and the
Temple of Doom." In the movie, Chan plays a modern-day
archaeologist who in the process of discovering a
mausoleum built by China's first emperor Qin Shihuang in
221 BC he of Terracotta Army fame found himself falling
back in time to become a Qin Dynasty general. The film
also stars Leung Ka Fai from Hong Kong, Kim Hee-Sun from
South Korea and the Indian actress Mallika Sherawat.
Director and screen writer Stanley Tong said he got the
story idea after visiting the mausoleum of Emperor Qin,
which took over 700,000 men 38 years to build.
Liberally
splattered with fantasy and much literary licence, the
film is a modern-day swashbuckling adventure. It is a
co-production of Jackie Chan Emperor Movies Limited and
China Film Group Corporation and cost US$20 million to
make.Its on-location shoots included Shanghai, Xi'an,
Lanzhou, Guizhou and Yunnan, as well as India. It
contains over 900 shots with CG effects, like the one
showing thousands of terracotta warriors and a sea of
mercury falling from the sky the actual tomb of Emperor
Qin has still not been opened because of the lake of
highly toxic mercury reputed to be inside. Battle scenes
using over 1,000 extras and more than 100 horses, were
shot, while over 100,000 CG soldiers will be added to
the final film.
Graham
Ware Jr, horse trainer for "The Lord of the Rings," was
on board to train the horses, especially the one Chan
rides. During filming, the cast sustained quite a few
injuries, with Chan himself injured in a horse-related
accident. He recovered sufficiently to travel on the
HIV/AIDS charity work he has been active in, and
promotion of "Around the World in 80 Days" in Europe.
At a press
conference in Hong Kong on Thursday, Chan spoke of how
Kim's professionalism had impressed him during the
making of the movie. He marveled at Kim's ability to
learn Chinese, her continuing to work in spite of some
particularly tough filming conditions and being able to
cry on demand.
In
interviews with the media in previous months, Mallika
Sherawat has been quoted praising Chan.
She
described him as professional, funny, helpful, and
caring, andvery admiring of the beauty of Indian women.
At the
press conference in Beijing on Tuesday, Chan said he was
drawn to the plot of "The Myth," not only by the
challenge of playing two roles, but because of the
serious message it carries about the need to return
looted cultural relics to their rightful and native
countries.
Chan, who
has been participating in a lot of charity events
recently to arouse public concern over AIDS prevention
and HIV/AIDS victims, said film-making carries a lot of
social responsibilities.
He
revealed that for his next film project he will
collaborate with the celebrated mainland director Zhang
Yimou on a comedy set in 1980s' China.
"I waited
for 10 years to be able to collaborate with Zhang," he
was quoted as saying by the local media.
His
collaborative project with Zhang would be "galvanizing"
and is set in the 1980s. The idea is his, but Zhang will
work on the script and the pair plan to dispatch someone
to do research.
(Source:
chinadaily.com)
Karazen Movie Review:
The Myth
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