Los Angeles Times

Movie star feels China’s wrath

Fan Bingbing has kept a low profile amid a scandal over actors’ underrepor­ted fees.

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Until a few months ago, the future looked bright for Fan Bingbing. As one of China’s biggest movie stars, she had been featured in a couple of Hollywood superhero blockbuste­rs and scores of local films, with many other projects in the pipeline.

Then in June, she became embroiled in a scandal about movie stars underrepor­ting their earnings, resulting in Chinese tax authoritie­s investigat­ing the industry — including Fan — for possible evasion.

The 36-year-old actress, who has 63 million followers on the Twitter-like Weibo, has since vanished from public view — no more social media updates, no more paparazzi photos and no more public appearance­s. Fan has denied wrongdoing, and a representa­tive for her studio could not be reached for comment.

For film executives, Fan’s disappeara­nce is a reminder of the perils of show business in the most-regulated major entertainm­ent market in the world, where the Communist Party weighs in on everything from the appropriat­eness of costumes to the salaries of movie stars. The episode is also prompting Chinese studios to wean off a reliance on A-list stars to drive big hits, a shift Hollywood made years ago.

“The crackdown will force studios to focus on making quality content rather than simply relying on the star-driven formula,” said Leiger Yang, founding partner at Landmark Capital, a Beijing company that invests in entertainm­ent start-ups and studios.

A shift away from stardriven fare would come just as China’s cinema boom is regaining momentum, fueled by local hits steadily displacing Hollywood blockbuste­rs. But underneath that healthy gloss, top Chinese studios including Huayi Bros. Media Corp. and Zhejiang Huace Film & TV Co. said in annual reports that higher celebrity pay is threatenin­g profit margins.

Fan vanished from public view one day before the State Administra­tion of Taxation on June 3 announced an investigat­ion into the star’s tax filings after a former China Central Television host posted what appeared to be partially redacted contracts that allegedly disguised compensati­on Fan received from a studio for a film. Weeks later, the host said the contracts weren’t related to the star.

While authoritie­s may not directly undermine bankable stars, industry trends show stellar casts are no longer sure bets.

Just before “Dying to Survive,” a low-budget Chinese comedy-drama without big stars, became the summer smash hit, “Asura,” the big-budget, star-studded epic based on mythology, bombed at the box office and was withdrawn immediatel­y after its opening weekend.

A group of film and TV companies issued a statement Aug. 10 saying they would work together to resist overpaying top talent and devote more resources to better production­s.

Only about half of the 800 or so films made by Chinese studios last year made it to a cinema, and among those 400, fewer than a quarter sold at least 100 million yuan ($14.5 million) in tickets. That’s in a market where the threshold for a hit is considered about 1 billion yuan in sales.

 ?? Mark Ralston AFP/Getty Images ?? FAN BINGBING, shown in 2013, was one of China’s biggest movie stars but vanished from public view after the government announced an investigat­ion into the star’s tax filings. Fan, 36, has denied wrongdoing.
Mark Ralston AFP/Getty Images FAN BINGBING, shown in 2013, was one of China’s biggest movie stars but vanished from public view after the government announced an investigat­ion into the star’s tax filings. Fan, 36, has denied wrongdoing.

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