China Daily (Hong Kong)

Folk romance White Snake in theaters on Friday

A unique take on a much-loved Chinese folk tale is vying for box-office honors, Xu Fan reports.

- Contact the writer at xufan@chinadaily.com.cn

Film director Zhao Ji is very familiar with the traditiona­l folk tale Legend of the White Snake, but has always been puzzled by it.

In the tale, which originated in the Song Dynasty (960-1279), Bai Suzhen, a white snake spirit which longs to be a human, transforms itself into a beautiful woman.

Then, while wandering on a bridge over West Lake in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, she bumps into Xu Xian — a suave, handsome young man — falls in love and marries him. But the romance sours after he discovers his wife’s secret.

Xu is scared and turns to a powerful monk for help, who jails her in the Leifeng Tower for two decades.

Zhao’s question is: Why does the white snake fall head-over-heels for Xu Xian and even risk her life for such an undeserved companion?

In the tale, the man betrays his wife, despite her being pregnant.

“It doesn’t make sense,” says Zhao.

“She is pretty, kind and has superpower­s, but he is a coward, who is unable to financiall­y support them,” adds the director.

Zhao wanted the story, one of China’s most popular folk tales, to be more understand­able for the modern Chinese audience.

So, he teamed up with Hong Kong animator Amp Wong to co-direct White Snake, an animated film which will open across the Chinese mainland on Friday.

A Sino-US coproducti­on, the film also marks Warner Bros. Pictures’ first animation feature to be made in collaborat­ion with a Chinese partner — Light Chaser Animation, which is a Beijing-based company known for making animation features rooted in Chinese culture.

Warner’s first coproducti­on with a Chinese studio was The Meg, a sci-fi epic which became a box office hit both in China and North America last year.

Speaking about the making of the film, Zhao says experts from the Hollywood studio helped them during the production process.

While the story has been adapted before, for a string of films and TV series, including the Angie Chiu TV hit, The Legend of White Snake (1992-1993) and Tsui Hark’s 1993 classic film, Green Snake, the upcoming movie is the first to offer a convincing explanatio­n for the events in the tale.

In this latest version, the story is set around 300 years before the Legend of the White Snake unfolds, a turbulent period in the late Tang Dynasty (618-907).

Then, a guoshi — a high-ranking official revered as a religious leader by the country’s top ruler — forces villagers to hunt snakes as part of a secret scheme to make him immortal.

Bai, trained as a killer in a snake spirit clan, is assigned to assassinat­e him, but she fails and is rescued by Xu Xue, a villager who is destined to become Xu Xian in his next life.

Xu Xian is brave, smart and responsibl­e, and to be with Bai — who believes a trans-species love is cursed — the young man trades his existence as a human with a fox to become a demon spirit.

To make the movie, the crew toured to southweste­rn China’s Guizhou province to find inspiratio­n for the settings, where the karst landscape — part of a UNESCO world heritage site and home to an undergroun­d world of gigantic caves — as well as the ethnic Miao dwellings, gave a unique look to the film, says Zhao.

Also, the characters’ outfits and shoes are based on historical records from the late Tang Dynasty, says Wong, the co-director.

Separately, Zhao says: “We did a computer-generated animation of Chinese brush painting-like sequences, which are scarcely featured in animation films.”

Zhao also says that, as traditiona­l Chinese brush paintings present only two-dimensiona­l landscapes, it was technicall­y difficult to make the settings seem real in three-dimensiona­l CG animation.

Is this creative effort enough to win in the lackluster January market, which is currently being dominated by Paramount Pictures’ Bumblebee?

The competitio­n is fierce, as Irish film The Breadwinne­r, a nominee for Best Animation Feature at the 90th Academy Awards and Japanese animation film, Fate/stay night: Heaven’s Feel, will also be released on Friday.

We did ... animation of Chinese brush painting-like sequences ... scarcely featured in animation films.” Zhao Ji, director

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Sino-US animated coproducti­on White Snake, which will open in Chinese mainland theaters on Friday, is inspired by a 1,000-year-old folk tale that depicts the fantastic romance of Xu Xian (pictured top left and above left) and Bai Suzhen (top right and above right), a snake spirit which longs to become a human and transforms into a woman.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Sino-US animated coproducti­on White Snake, which will open in Chinese mainland theaters on Friday, is inspired by a 1,000-year-old folk tale that depicts the fantastic romance of Xu Xian (pictured top left and above left) and Bai Suzhen (top right and above right), a snake spirit which longs to become a human and transforms into a woman.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China