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Web Drama:

Web Drama Using screens and monitors as its primary storytelli­ng tools, suspense web series Cloud Prison – China's first “screencast drama” – taps into fears of how our personal informatio­n is exposed to the darkness that lurks online

- By Li Jing

Plot Devices

We start with a close shot of a computer screen. A user off-screen types in a Baidu search for suspense novelist Zhang Yan. Crucial clues are discovered on Zhang's Sina Weibo page that enable the user to access the novelist's cloud drive. As the mouse cursor clicks on one document after another, details about Zhang's private life – his work plans, photos, relationsh­ips and contacts – are slowly revealed.

Released on November 2 on leading video platform Youku, suspense series Cloud Prison follows novelist Zhang Yan after finding an anonymous diary describing a murder. Believing it a work of fiction, he publishes it as his own novel, only to become ensnared in a dangerous and intricate scheme.

Powered On

Comprised of 32, 15-minute episodes over two seasons, Cloud Prison has been called China's first “screencast drama,” a genre that tells stories through screens, from computers and smartphone­s to surveillan­ce cameras and dashcams.

“This time, we wanted to take the traditiona­l cinematic language back to school,” series director Mou Xincen told Newschina.

Mou got the idea for a screencast drama and critical acclaim. It tells a story of how a single father searches for his missing daughter through clues on her laptop only to learn secrets his daughter has kept from him. The low-budget thriller (US$880,000) raked in $75.5 million in the worldwide box office.

Released on the Chinese mainland in December 2018, Searching was the highest rated horror/thriller of the year on Douban, China's leading media review website.

That year, screenwrit­er Ye Xiaobai planned to write a new drama following the success of his debut mini web series Breaking Up. Based on his own experience­s of unsuccessf­ully shopping around his first book, Ye conceived a story about a failed writer who comes across a flash drive containing a diary, publishes it, and is sucked into a vast, dark plot.

“Zhang Yan discovers a diary that divulges a real murder and then gains fame and fortune from publishing it. Later the diary's owner finds him and starts to blackmail him – all of this unfolds on the internet. After watching Searching, I was tremendous­ly inspired and realized that this screen-based storytelli­ng format perfectly suited the story I was about to tell,” Ye told Newschina.

He quickly completed the drama's outline and wrote five episodes.

Series producer Wang Ying said the show

fills a gap in Chinese filmmaking. “I was quite confident about the project, as the genre was still an untrodden field in China,” Wang told our reporter.

Video-sharing platform Youku quickly took on the project and recommende­d director Mou Xincen, who came to fame in 2018 with his debut The Classifica­tion of Spirit, a popular sci-fi thriller web series.

Shots in the Dark

As screencast dramas do away with convention­al storytelli­ng and cinematic language, producer Wang Ying and Youku were concerned about whether viewers would take to it and offered a compromise: adopt screenbase­d storytelli­ng cut with more traditiona­lly shot scenes.

Mou refused. “We were determined to do it, and considerin­g that we wouldn't get much funding, we thought we might as well take it to the extreme and thoroughly explore every possibilit­y to see how far we could take the format,” Mou told Newschina.

The project took 20 days to shoot and another seven months for post-production, a normal schedule for the genre. Searching only took two weeks to film but two years in post-production. The film's director Aneesh Chaganty told CNET that editing sessions often involved more than 30 layers of video showing everything from moving browser windows and text bubbles to on-screen widgets. Most movies have three to four layers.

Mou told our reporter that they had planned to work with Bazelevs, the Russian post-production company behind the screencapt­ure technology used in Unfriended and

Searching. But with a total budget of 10 million yuan (US$1.5M), Cloud Prison was forced to do it all in-house.

“Since it was our first time making a screencast drama, everyone in the production team was feeling it out as they went. It was quite difficult to completely separate ourselves from the convention­al drama mindset. So it took a lot of time for us to coordinate and refine the details,” Mou said.

One of their greatest challenges was creating the road map scenes that help drive the plot.

With the story set in the fictional city of Guanshan, Mou brought in engineers from China's navigation service provider AMAP to digitally map the city.

The process took more than two months, Mou said, during which engineers and the

production team struggled to coordinate.

“They were mainly concerned about the practicabi­lity of displaying the fictional city on the app, but what I cared about was whether the audience could visually understand the map, and whether they could focus on the informatio­n and clues it showed,” Mou told Newschina.

The task proved more difficult than the director imagined. After the engineers constructe­d the city's framework, the production team attended to the details, including the name, location and function of every street, store, building and landmark.

“It was way more exhausting than building a physical set,” Mou said. “But since the map is integral to the story, if it wasn't convincing enough, the sense of involvemen­t and reality we establishe­d might collapse.”

New Angles

The unconventi­onal visuals and storytelli­ng in Cloud Prison create a gritty texture of reality. Compared with Searching and the Unfriended franchise, which both use computer screens as the primary narrative tool, Cloud Prison also broadens the palette with mobile phones, satnav, dashcams and hotel surveillan­ce cameras.

For instance, a scene where character Zheng Xiong saves his sister inside an elevator while on a video call with Zheng Yan was shot entirely on a smartphone. However, it was a process of trial and error.

“It's too easy to mess up with crew there when the actor turns 360 degrees with the phone, so we had to be somewhere else,” Mou said.

Instead, Mou took advantage of the phone's “shared screen” function and watched the streaming video from a tablet off-set. “As we couldn't rely on Steadicams or Easyrigs, we were really going to extremes in a rather headstrong way,” the director said.

Besides a sense of reality, screen-based formats provide a unique way of dropping details and hints, giving audiences a stronger feeling of involvemen­t and participat­ion. This constant stream of details is designed to keep audiences on their toes.

To the careful observer, protagonis­t Zhang Yan's computer screen reveals that he is a fan of authors Arthur Conan Doyle, Francis Foucault and Keigo Higashino and loves to watch suspense films like Unfriended: Dark Web and Searching, which he posts about on microblog site Weibo.

Romance played a large part in the original screenplay. After Mou joined the project, he and writer Ye Xiaobai cut most of the romantic scenes to focus on the suspense.

Mou said that conflicts between characters should be taken to extremes, otherwise the built-up tension would eventually fall flat “like a balloon leaking air.”

The series was rated 7.6/10 on Douban, a relatively high score for a domestic television drama.

“The show completely breaks the limits of traditiona­l film vocabulary, takes down the walls between different domains – fiction, social media and livestream­ing – and merges them into a new genre of suspense drama,” Douban user “Kelly Wu” commented. “Screen suspense films and dramas keep alarming people to how social media exposes everyone to the public. Today no one can live without it, but the question is: ‘how do we protect our personal informatio­n?'”

 ??  ?? Still from Cloudpriso­n
Still from Cloudpriso­n
 ??  ?? Still from Cloudpriso­n
Still from Cloudpriso­n

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