The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Asia will be able to create its own ‘GoT’, says HBO Asia exec

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ON the back of the global phenomenon that is the concluding season of Game of Thrones, head of HBO Asia original production Jessica Kam-Engle said that Asia will be able to produce a series of the sprawling scale, world-building ability and worldwide influence of the cable channel's crowning glory within a decade.

“Asia will potentiall­y create Asia's own Game of Thrones within 10 years. As we see now, there are more big-budget TV shows, for example in China, that have high production value,” Kam-Engle told The Hollywood Reporter in an interview at APOS in Bali, Indonesia.

The challenge right now is not the lack of culturally significan­t stories nor individual talents, but showrunner­s who can oversee a large-scale production that sees filming taking place simultaneo­usly across continents.

“In terms of stories, there are a plethora of Asian court power struggle dramas, add to that a few dragons, and then we'd have something in the vein of Game of Thrones,” she said. “So there is

What it is scarce is showrunner­s that can oversee the whole machine. Game of Thrones had different production­s on the same day in perhaps four countries. We might not have that kind of showrunner­s. We might have to import them.

no lack of stories we can tell here. Do we have the similar calibre storytelle­rs, scriptwrit­ers, producers, directors and actors? We have more in some fields than others, but we certainly have good actors, directors and creativity.”

She also added: “Writers that can command an overarchin­g structure, we might not have a lot, but we do have them. What it is scarce is showrunner­s that can oversee the whole machine. Game of Thrones had different production­s on the same day in perhaps four countries. We might not have that kind of showrunner­s. We might have to import them.”

Just as importantl­y, KamEngle explained that it's the impact that can transcend cultures that is an obstacle. “If we want to create an Asian Game of Thrones, it means a franchise that is an Asian property that targets the worldwide audience. Are we ready for that?” KamEngle asked. “I think we still have some way to go. Our primary focus right now is to satisfy and appease our Asian audience, which is sizable in itself with over 20 countries in total. The audience in Asia has its own needs, but if we bypass their needs and plan a Chinese or Japanese show that can woo the world, we might lose our local audience. That is not a wise path to take. We have to take care of our home turf first.”

“It's also about the mindset to target a global audience. China has a lot of money to create something with a high production value, and India makes hundreds of films a year. But they don't travel because they are not made with a mindset to target the global audience. So it's a learning curve for us,” she said.

She added: “To create a show like Game of Thrones, it's not the efforts of one or two people, but the expertise of thousands of people. It takes the ability to focus on the global audience ... In Asia, we have a very fragmented TV market, and traditiona­lly experts are trained to serve the local market. They are welltraine­d to focus on the local audience, but at this stage, we don't have enough profession­als trained well enough to target the world, And we need a lot to get there.”

HBO Asia launched four new titles in March, including Food Lore with Singaporea­n filmmaker Eric Khoo as showrunner, and has recently released the highly acclaimed Taiwan-set crime/psychologi­cal drama The World Between Us across Asia. The film has an IMDb rating of 9.5, which is the same as Game of Thrones — but it was also besieged by piracy in China.

Jessica Kam-Engle, Head of HBO Asia original production

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