<tt id="6hsgl"><pre id="6hsgl"><pre id="6hsgl"></pre></pre></tt>
          <nav id="6hsgl"><th id="6hsgl"></th></nav>
          国产免费网站看v片元遮挡,一亚洲一区二区中文字幕,波多野结衣一区二区免费视频,天天色综网,久久综合给合久久狠狠狠,男人的天堂av一二三区,午夜福利看片在线观看,亚洲中文字幕在线无码一区二区
           
             
          中文
           
          Home> Local
          The president's choice
          By Liu Wei ( China Daily )
          Updated: 2012-04-10

          The president's choice

          Related: Sailing on rough waters

          On the eve of Titanic's 3D release in China, Liu Wei talks to a cross-section of viewers, theater managers and industry insiders in Beijing to find out why Jack and Rose's love story still endures.

          The tagline used in the advert for the film Titanic, screened for the first time in Chinese theaters in 1998, remains an eternal favorite with industry insider Ben Ji.

          During a business trip in Wuhan, Hubei province, the veteran distributor saw a board outside a theater that said: "Titanic, recommended by President Jiang Zemin."

          Ji, working for a Hollywood studio's Beijing office at that time, was surprised.

          "Rarely ever had China's top leader recommended a film, especially a Hollywood one," he says.

          In March that year, Jiang, then president of China, talked about the film in a political meeting with delegates from Guangdong province. He said the film had, incisively and vividly, depicted the relations between money and love, poor and rich, and how different groups of people dealt with a crisis. He even suggested other political leaders go see it.

          Newspapers in Guangdong picked up the story, followed by other media across the country.

          Zhao Jun, general manager of Zhujiang Films Group, was in charge of publicity at Guangdong Film Corporation in 1998. He made multiple copies of the newspaper that reported Jiang's speech and faxed it to many theater managers across the country.

          Geng Yuejin, now deputy general manager of Edko Films Beijing, was working in a theater in Fujian province. He received a copy of the press report, which inspired him to persuade organizations and government departments to buy group tickets for their employees.

          "Many government officials, including governors and mayors, went to see the movie," he says.

          The president's choice

          Director James Cameron works on Titanic. Photos provided to China Daily

          The combination of endorsement by the country's top leader, the glory of 11 Academy Awards, the press frenzy, and the theater managers' efforts turned the film into a huge hit in China. Audiences, men and women, young and old, rushed to theaters.

          Huang Xing, a 33-year consulting firm owner, grew up in Zhuzhou, Hunan province. He remembers watching the film at least twice. His parents worked in factories, and almost every factory in the city gave their employees tickets of Titanic as a bonus.

          College student Si Si was just 11. She went to watch the film with her classmates. While she did not quite understand the love story, she cried with everyone else in the only theater in Changchun, capital of Jilin province, after the ship collided with the iceberg. She says she will definitely watch the film's 3D and 3D IMAX versions, released in China on Tuesday, to refresh her memory.

          The film finally raked in 360 million yuan ($55 million) in China, more than 25 percent of the box office grossing of the whole year. It was the highest-grossing picture in the country until Transformers 2 broke the record by earning 450 million yuan ($71) in 2009.

          Geng was not surprised by the revenue. Before the film hit theaters in April 1998, he attended a preview for theater managers across the country hosted by China Film Group, the only company that imported foreign films for theatrical release in the Chinese mainland. The film was quite long, but he found none of the viewers went out during the three-hour duration. When it ended, long queues formed outside the toilet.

          "I knew at that moment the film would be a hit," he says.

          The Titanic phenomenon spread across the country.

          Images of Jack and Rose were printed on poker cards and T-shirts. Their flying pose on the ship inspired TV commercials. Zhao Wei, one of the most popular stars in the late 1990s, had a lyric on her album: "My dream boyfriend? Leonardo."

          And Celine Dion suddenly became a household name, thanks to the theme song My Heart Will Go On.

          "Actually it was quite difficult not to listen to the song, because it was played everywhere," recalls 30-year accountant Marjorie Ma. "It was the first English song I heard in its entirety."

          Hu Qiming, then China chief representative of UCI, a joint venture of Paramount and Universal, recalls he gave 10 CDs of the film's soundtrack to Zhao Shi, then chief of the State Administration of Radio, Film and TV, as gifts when she visited the United States. Soon he was told that the CDs were so popular among her friends that she had none left for herself.

          The film's impact on Chinese audiences and filmmakers is profound, insiders believe.

          "By watching Titanic, for the first time, many Chinese audiences got an idea of what a real Hollywood blockbuster was like, in terms of box office, reputation, how powerful it could be in visual and audio effects and how wide an audience it could reach," Ben Ji says.

          Geng Yuejin of Edko Films thinks that the film epitomizes the concept of a global film.

          "Chinese filmmakers marvel at the fact that a film can actually win over global audiences. Male and female, poor and rich, white and black, are all able to appreciate the story," he says. "With a precise catch of universal emotions, a film has a global market."

          The film also shows how technology can add dimensions to a regular genre such as romance. Chinese media and scholars were motivated by the film's popularity to study how director James Cameron's imagination took shape on the big screen assisted by his diligent exploration of technology, which, Hu Qiming believes, was something valuable.

          "In Titanic it is easy to see how powerful a film can be when the storytelling is combined with cutting-edge technology," he says.

          "And it is definitely not a bad thing for filmmakers to learn that this seamless combination comes from the passion and courage to dive deep into the sea as many as 12 times to get a better sense of the ship's wreck and achieve perfect underwater cinematography."

           
          Video
          Specials



           
           
          主站蜘蛛池模板: 亚洲AV天天做在线观看| 办公室强奷漂亮少妇视频| 夜夜添夜夜添夜夜摸夜夜摸| 久热久热久热久热久热久热| 91精品国产免费人成网站| 久久88香港三级台湾三级播放| 成人午夜在线观看日韩| 中文字幕在线视频免费| 色窝窝免费播放视频在线| 国产亚洲欧洲aⅴ综合一区| 日韩国产成人精品视频| 成人综合网亚洲伊人| 韩国福利视频一区二区三区| 免费A级毛片无码A∨蜜芽试看| 浴室人妻的情欲hd三级国产| 加勒比无码av中文字幕| 91福利国产成人精品导航| 韩国无码AV片在线观看网站| 亚洲伊人情人综合网站| 国产成人啪精品视频免费APP| 久久九九久精品国产| 精品人妻av中文字幕乱| 久久一日本道色综合久久| 久久三级国内外久久三级| 国产精品乱码久久久久久小说| 日本免费人成视频在线观看| 最近免费中文字幕mv在线视频3 | 亚洲成人av在线资源| 综合成人亚洲网友偷自拍| 国产精品免费观看色悠悠| 亚洲欧美伊人久久综合一区二区 | 中文字幕在线视频不卡一区二区| 欧洲码亚洲码的区别入口| 制服丝袜国产精品| 美女人妻激情乱人伦| 最近免费中文字幕mv在线视频3| 久久天天躁狠狠躁夜夜躁| 91青青草视频在线观看的| 亚洲综合一区二区三区| 国产精品99一区二区三区| 18岁日韩内射颜射午夜久久成人|