Los Angeles Times

China to build elaborate film complex

A political initiative by President Xi, the project will include a studio, theme park.

- By Jonathan Kaiman and Jessica Meyers

BEIJING — China is building a $2-billion film studio and theme park complex in the southwest metropolis of Chongqing based on a political initiative by President Xi Jinping.

The elaborate park — which will include a film studio, theme park and office compound — will be named after Xi’s “One Belt, One Road” program, a massive effort to establish new trade and transporta­tion routes across Europe, Asia and East Africa, the official New China News Agency reported Monday.

The park, in Chongqing’s mountainou­s Wulong county, “will serve as a platform to … boost exchanges and cooperatio­n among Chinese and foreign film enterprise­s,” Tan Nianshen, the project manager, told the agency. Constructi­on will begin in 2017.

China’s ruling Communist Party has spent billions of dollars in recent years to bolster the country’s cultural industries, hoping to offset the influence of Western culture at home — Xi has blamed “hostile foreign forces” for a range of domestic problems — and promote a positive image of China abroad.

“One thing that’s striking is that the government has announced the plan — not private companies, but the government itself,” said Stanley Rosen, a USC political science professor and Chinese film expert. “I think it’s a political decision more than anything else.”

Lower government officials want to “promote One Belt, One Road as much as possible,” he continued, “and having film as a part of that makes political sense more than economic sense.”

China’s box office is expected to soon surpass the U.S. as the world’s largest, and Hollywood filmmakers are scrambling for a piece of the pie. Director Steven Spielberg last month announced a partnershi­p with Jack Ma, China’s richest man, to help produce and distribute movies in China. Ma’s Alibaba Pictures will buy a stake in Spielberg’s Amblin Partners production firm as part of the deal.

The Chinese conglomera­te Dalian Wanda has also been on a Hollywood buying spree. This year, Wanda formed a partnershi­p with Sony Pictures and acquired Legendary Entertainm­ent — the production company behind “The Dark Knight,” “Jurassic World” and “Godzilla” — for $3.5 billion. It tried, unsuccessf­ully, to buy a major stake in Paramount Pictures.

Next year, Legendary Entertainm­ent and Universal Pictures will release “The Great Wall,” the first major Hollywood movie produced, filmed and set in China. The action-adventure epic features Matt Damon and Willem Dafoe, alongside Chinese heartthrob­s Andy Lau and Wang Junkai.

Wanda, which has close ties with the Chinese government, is building what it touts as “the world’s largest film and television studio” in the eastern Chinese city of Qingdao — a 400-acre complex with 30 soundstage­s. The first phase is scheduled to open in 2017.

“I’ve never seen government­s in other countries put as much energy into entertainm­ent as I’ve seen the Chinese government do,” said Kelly Ryner, president of Thinkwell Asia, a branch of L.A.-based Thinkwell Group, which creates theme parks and other entertainm­ent venues.

Wanda is also challengin­g Western dominance in theme parks. Wanda operates two parks in China, has plans for nearly a dozen more and hired a former Disney executive to take charge of its theme park group.

Western theme parks in China, including Shanghai Disneyland and the upcoming Universal Studios Beijing, draw largely on Western motifs, Ryner said, such as sleeping princesses and hungry dinosaurs.

“It’s really logical that the next step would be for the government to look at creating something on a similar scale that is very much Chinese intellectu­al property,” she said.

Details of the Chongqing park’s finances, and its relationsh­ip to government agencies, remain unclear.

The park is being built by a Chongqing-based subsidiary of ZYHJ Industry Investment Capital Ltd., an investment firm that was registered in Hong Kong in 2013 with about $650 million in capital. The firm has holdings in constructi­on, media, healthcare, communicat­ions and other industries, according to its website.

The New China News Agency said that “partners in about a dozen foreign countries will participat­e in the operation of [the Chongqing park’s] projects, including the theme park and the tourist town.”

Yet when reached by phone, Liu Jin, chief executive of the Great Nation Silk Road Television and Film Culture Co. — the Chongqing-based subsidiary — refused to give their names and said he “doesn’t know them.” He said that the subsidiary has 30 employees and that other details were “confidenti­al.”

Chinese leaders boosted the country’s cultural protection­ism this month with passage of the country’s first film law. The legislatio­n places a tighter chokehold on movie content, forbidding material that damages China’s “national dignity” or hurts “national feelings.”

Foreign films already face strict limitation­s. Officials usually allow 34 foreign movies into the country each year, and these face censorship for material considered politicall­y inappropri­ate or lewd. The law says that filmmakers should “serve the people and socialism,” according to the New China News Agency.

jonathan.kaiman@latimes.com Meyers is a special correspond­ent. Nicole Liu in The Times’ Beijing bureau contribute­d to this report.

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