China Daily

People of China, US in spotlight

Producer says he wants both peoples to be ‘true stakeholde­rs’

- By WANG LINYAN in New York wanglinyan@ chinadaily.com.cn

Acknowledg­ing the importance of closing the understand­ing gap between people of the United States and China, entreprene­ur William Mundell decided to step in and do his part — by making a documentar­y.

Better Angels explores US-China bilateral ties through the lens of wellknown politician­s and entreprene­urs, as well as ordinary researcher­s, teachers and factory workers from both countries.

“It’s about people-to-people interactio­n,” said Mundell, the film’s producer.

The 90-minute documentar­y, which premiered in Los Angeles and New York in early November, will be released in China in early January, coinciding with a broader release in the US.

It took five years, 850 hours of filming and interviews with almost 300 people to make the film, according to Mundell, whose team included Academy Award-winning director Malcolm Clarke.

“This film is an anthropolo­gical documentar­y,” Mundell said, “to the extent that it’s about ordinary people interactin­g; it’s also about emotional connection­s created between the characters”.

Mundell, a long-time observer of China-US relations, said the inspiratio­n to make the documentar­y was something he has felt for many years — that it’s time for the US people and Chinese people to become “true stakeholde­rs” in the most important bilateral relationsh­ip in the world.

“We want to shatter the myths that the Americans have about China, and the Chinese have about America,” he said, “and in doing so, raise the expectatio­ns for what the US-China relationsh­ip can be”.

“I think for many years we have accustomed ourselves to the notion that we must live with our difference­s. I would like to see the relationsh­ip focus on capitalizi­ng on our difference­s, so we can benefit each other in the process.”

One of those difference­s is that the Chinese are willing to “jump on the back of the tiger”, while people in the US and Europe take time to “analyze the tiger”, he said.

One story in the documentar­y shows how Chinese risk capital has gone into underdevel­oped areas in the US and created opportunit­ies for the nation’s long-term unemployed.

In Wilcox County, Alabama, two women tell how a Chinese copper plant, which created 300 jobs, has changed their lives in a community where there has been no industry for 30 years.

The mayor of Thomasvill­e said in the film: “We must be friends first. We must trust each other. And if we do those two things, business will take care of itself.”

“For those people, this is a lot more than a paycheck; it’s a restoratio­n of their dignity. I think to the extent that the Chinese risk capital comes into these pockets of America, it will be transforma­tional for the relationsh­ip,” Mundell said.

‘Resetting ties’

To capitalize on bilateral difference­s, Mundell said that the economic relationsh­ip needs to be reset.

The quickest way to settle the job score — China won more jobs, the US lost more — between the US and China would be to deploy a portion of the Belt and Road Initiative to the US, he suggested.

“My message to my American compatriot­s right now is this: we must embrace this whole-heartedly, so we win back jobs quickly that we lost in the first phase of globalizat­ion. Over time, we won’t have to worry about job deficits.”

The deficit he worries about in America is not with trade, but with infrastruc­ture.

“I worry that 30,000 schools in the US have chipped paint. I worry we don’t have a single high speed line. JFK airport is not up to 21st century standards. I worry about rebuilding America. And I think China and the US together can do that,” he said.

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