Chinese filmmaker looks to Australia for new production sites
Xinhua, March 2, 2015 Adjust font size:
The city of Bunbury in Western Australia could find itself all over the big screens in China if all goes well with filmmaker Xu Kerr who thinks the Australian location is prime for filming, local media reported on Monday.
Xu, whose Shanghai Hippo Animation company is in talks with a Bunbury film group over a possible 23 million U.S. dollar animation studio and training hub, said in an interview with News Corp that he'd like to see the studio operational within the next two years.
"We want to see how seriously Western Australia is about building its local business," he said on Monday. "It does need a lot of community support and industry focus.
About 18 months ago, the visionary Chinese filmmaker saw potential in the small city 175 kilometers south of the state capital, Perth.
The weather is perfect for filming, the seasons are the opposite to China and the time zone is the same as his Shanghai studio. With the right infrastructure, Xu said, the sky could be the limit.
Vue Group, the film group in talks with Xu's Hippo, has already made two films with the Shanghai filmmaker as part of a three- movie contract signed in December 2013, worth 44.5 million U.S. dollars.
Vue Group's owner, filmmaker Alan Lindsay, said the growth of the Chinese film market has been phenomenal.
"China has certainly shaken up the way the world is looking at the industry," he said, adding, "Every time I go to Shanghai and Beijing I always seem to run into an American producer in the same hotel."
Lindsay said Xu is intensely passionate about film-making.
"He's a ball of energy," Lindsay said. "He gets highly excited about what he's doing. I'm a bit more pragmatic so the balance is quite good."
The first film produced in the Vue Group and Hippo collaboration, a Farm House sequel, will be released in Australia as Perfect Friends, while the second, Kung Fu Style, with be released in Australia and China in May. Endi