China Daily

‘Chinese Hollywood’ makes a comeback

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HANGZHOU — Actors, camera operators and lighting engineers are busy in film studios. Internet celebritie­s hold up mobile phones to livestream on the street. Vendors set up food stands when night falls.

After more than 100 days on pause, “China’s Hollywood”, Hengdian, has resumed operations.

Located in the eastern Chinese city of Dongyang, Zhejiang province, Hengdian World Studios is one of China’s biggest film-and-TV production centers and a barometer of the industry.

Shoots were restricted for months due to the COVID-19 epidemic. As the outbreak wanes, over 40 movie and teleplay crews had started working in Hengdian as of May 22, while over 60 others are preparing to resume shooting.

Hengdian World Studios has implemente­d strict epidemic-prevention measures, says Zhou Fenglai, head of its actors’ guild.

“All extras should register travel histories and report body temperatur­es twice a Zhou says.

“And people who’ve come from major areas with a high risk of infection were required to undergo concentrat­ed quarantine­s.”

Dongyang has released a slew of policies to support Hengdian’s work resumption.

The city has allocated 10 million yuan ($1.4 million) to subsidize venue and equipment rentals, and accommodat­ion. It has also cut or exempted taxes and fees for filmand-TV production companies.

Hengdian World Studios has offered living subsidies for extras. Some even became local factory workers or food-delivery people.

“My father always hoped that I would return to my hometown and land a stable job, but I insist on staying here to chase my dream,” says 27-year-old Li Haishan, an extra in Hengdian.

Li often rode horses for the camera. Now, he’s riding an ebike to pick up and deliver meals for online food-delivery platform Eleme.

“At least I can keep working as a rider,” he says.

Since many actors and actresses have returned, Li plans to look for roles he can play while continuing his delivery job.

“I have stayed in Hengdian for months. The hardest times will be over soon,” he says.

Hengdian is the shooting base for a quarter of China’s movies and onethird of its TV series. Over 64,000 episodes have been shot there.

The street was empty and quiet when producer Huang Jinmei arrived in Hengdian in mid-April. The hustle and bustle have since returned.

“In the film industry, as long as you can control the budget and provide high-quality products, there must be a place for you to survive,” Huang says.

Producer Bao Mengmeng is hopeful about the future.

“Although we are encounteri­ng more challenges, we can spend more time polishing our scripts and keeping good connection­s with big platforms,” she says.

“In such a hard time for the whole industry, I believe the fittest will survive and quality will prevail.” their their day,”

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