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CD Voice | Bit of India in China's Oscar choice

2016-10-28 S Bhattacharjya CHINADAILY


Two things of relevance to China and India happened this month.


The eighth BRICS summit was held over Oct 15-16 in India, where President Xi Jinping met Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and the other leaders of the grouping - Michel Temer, Vladimir Putin and Jacob Zuma, in the seaside province of Goa. The meetings were extensively covered in media.  


So, I'm moving to the next.


A week prior to BRICS, China announced Xuanzang as its Oscar entry in the best foreign film category. The film is based on Chinese monk Hiuen Tsang's 17-year overland travels to India in search of sutras. Released in April, it was jointly produced by State-owned China Film Group Corporation and private Indian company Eros International.




Chinese media estimated the film earned $4.9 million or so in the country. I saw the posters in a bus stop down the road from where I live.   


The box-office expectations were perhaps higher also because Huang Xiaoming played the lead role. The Chinese TV and film actor has a large female following here. He is also said to be popular among men as model-actress-singer Angelababy's husband.


But whether Xuanzang wins the award next year or not, it is the first-born of a cinematic agreement between the two countries in 2014. There's not been such cooperation in the past.  


The celebrated Hong Kong-based filmmaker Wong Kar-wai also put his weight behind the film as a producer.   


I asked Tan Fei, the president of Eracme Culture & Media Co Ltd, a company in Beijing that makes films and TV series, for his thoughts on Xuanzang.


"It symbolizes not only film links but also the historical origins of the two countries," he said. 



The monk, who was born in Shaanxi province when Chang'an (present-day Xi'an) was the capital of imperial China, later wrote about his 7th-century trips to India in Great Tang Records on the Western Regions, which historians think formed the basis of the Chinese classic Journey to the West. 

       

The film was probably chosen for the Oscars because of its "historical significance" in the light of the Belt and Road Initiative, Tan said of China's transnational economic vision.


The film's director Huo Jianqi told an Indian newspaper earlier that the film was shot in the provinces of Bihar, Maharashtra and Karnataka in India, and in Xinjiang, Tibet and Gansu in China. Among members of the cast, Indian actor Sonu Sood played the role of Harshavardhana, an emperor who ruled northern India at the time of Hiuen Tsang's visits. 

             

The next coproduction is Kung Fu Yoga, staring Jackie Chan as a Chinese archeology professor Jack who "teams up with beautiful Indian professor Ashmita and assistant Kyra to locate lost Magadha treasure(s)", according to the Amazon-owned IMBd. Magadha was a powerful kingdom in ancient India. 


The film is expected to be released next year.




About the author & broadcaster
Satarupa Bhattacharjya is a senior editor at China Daily. A longtime news reporter in India and Sri Lanka, she now writes stories of transition in China, mostly in the smaller towns. 

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