The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Tang Wei stars in China-Aussie flick ‘Whistleblo­wer’

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HONG KONG: Production is under way on The Whistleblo­wer, one of the biggest Australian­Chinese co-production movies ever made.

Starring actress Tang Wei (Lust, Caution, Finding Mr Right), the film is a thriller about a Chinese expatriate who discovers a conspiracy at the firm he is working for.

The film is directed by Chinese woman director Xue Xiaolu, who achieved a critical breakthrou­gh in 2010 by putting Jet Li in a drama role in Ocean Heaven.She achieved commercial success with 2013 romance Finding Mr Right.

Other cast members are Lei Jiayin (Guns and Roses) with Xi Qi and John Batchelor (Red Dog). The dialogue is in Mandarin and

We are thrilled to have ‘The Whistleblo­wer’ being produced in Australia, and are sure our Chinese guests will be impressed by the Australian cast, crew and locations.

English.

The official co-production film has a gross budget of some US$39 (about RM164 million) before rebates and incentives. At least US$28.5 million is being spent in the state of Victoria, where the Dockyards Studios are being used. Filming continues through October.

Production is by AustraliaC­hinese joint venture company Perfect Village, Bill Kong’s Edko Films and Beijing Carving Films. Finance comes from the Australian federal government through Screen Australia, Creative Victoria, and Film Victoria. Roadshow Films is set as the theatrical distributo­r in Australia. Edko Films is handling internatio­nal sales and will also distribute the film in China.

“Official co-production­s are a fantastic opportunit­y for creative partners to come together and collaborat­e on story, share skill sets and benefit from the financial screen incentives offered by both countries. We are thrilled to have The Whistleblo­wer being produced in Australia, and are sure our Chinese guests will be impressed by the Australian cast, crew and locations,” said Screen Australia CEO Graeme Mason.

The film involves line producer Dean Hood, cinematogr­apher Marc Spicer, casting director Louise Mitchell, production designer Jeff Thorp and VFX supervisor­s Peter Stubbs and Scott Zero.

There is a growing number of Australian VFX and post production staff with experience on Chinese movies,” producer, and Perfect Village head Ellen Eliasoph told Variety recently in Toronto. “These are great skills to have.”

Graeme Mason, Screen Australia CEO

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 ??  ?? Tang Wei before a press conference during the recent Busan Internatio­nal Film Festival. —Shuttersto­ck photo
Tang Wei before a press conference during the recent Busan Internatio­nal Film Festival. —Shuttersto­ck photo

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