[Chapter 229: Jackie Chan and Yuen Woo-ping]
The dinner ended swiftly. Raymond Chow likely rushed back to the company to gather his staff, inventory Jackie Chan and Jet Li's film rights, and strategize for tomorrow's negotiation.
Initially, four people had arrived at the dinner. Now, only two remained — Michelle Reis and Vivian Chow — lingering with Linton as if he had forgotten them.
After Raymond Chow left, the two actresses grew bolder. They clung closely to Linton, as though waiting for any opportunity to deepen their bond.
Watching the two stunning Asian beauties — one pure and radiant, the other elegant and aloof — Linton's excitent was undeniable.
With temptation so close at hand, it seed foolish to pass up the opportunity.
They returned to a room to "play poker", Linton wanted see if it differed in fun from what he knew back ho.
A sweet and beautiful oriental lody lingered softly.
...
What Linton didn't expect was that both Vivian and Michelle were nearly as popular as Sakai Izumi and Sakai Noriko. After the intense night, Linton felt his skills had improved a little.
…
The next morning, the three relaxed over breakfast in the presidential suite. After the intensity of last night, both won's outfits were in poor shape, so Linton called his assistant and asked her to take them shopping. As usual, each had a spending limit of $100,000.
He left with his bodyguards — Klinsmann and a team of six — in the car Raymond Chow had arranged, heading to Golden Harvest Film Company.
…
Since both parties had already communicated the previous night and Linton's offer was accepted, Raymond welcod Linton and his team warmly into the conference room.
Klinsmann presented the list of films for which they intended to acquire North Arican rights:
Jackie Chan (15 titles):
Dragon Fist, Fearless Hyena II, Drunken Master, Project A, Project A 2, Armour of God, The Protector, Police Story, Police Story 2, Police Story 3: Super Cop, Miracles, Island of Fire, Armour of God II: Operation Condor, City Hunter, Cri Story
Jet Li (8 titles):
Dragon Fight, Once Upon a Ti in China I–III, The Master, Swordsman II: The Legend of the Swordsman, The Legend of Fong Sai-yuk I & II
Linton knew Raymond's company held over 40 Jackie Chan films and many starring Stephen Chow and Chow Yun-fat. These three had dominated Hong Kong cinema for years. Whether Golden Harvest could offload all of those rights hinged on this negotiation.
"Mr. Anderson," Raymond said, "no issues with those 15 Jackie Chan films. But he has many other excellent works. Could you consider buying more?"
"I'm aware Jackie Chan has many great movies," Linton replied, "but the North Arican market is very different. Feature films outside action won't attract much interest. For now, we'll stick to these 15."
"And the others? Local hits with great box office?"
"Sa issue. Our current focus is solely on Jackie Chan and Jet Li's action movies. We'll be investing heavily in promoting them. As for other genres or stars, we simply can't stretch ourselves that far right now."
"I understand. Then about the price…"
"Let's leave that to our teams," Linton said smoothly. "That way, our friendship stays intact."
"Yes, yes," Raymond laughed. "I must seem a little eager. Oh! Jackie Chan and Yuen Woo-ping are already here. Let's move to another room so you can et them."
…
In the next room, Jackie Chan and Yuen Woo-ping awaited them in stylish cardigans. After introductions, the atmosphere quickly ward.
"Mr. Anderson," Jackie said gratefully, "thank you for recognizing my films. I never imagined soone from Arica would travel here just to buy my rights."
Years ago, he had tried breaking into Hollywood but returned quietly after facing rejection. The xenophobia in the North Arican market left a bitter mory. Now, soone was willing to promote his work abroad. For Jackie, it was like a dream, and he considered Linton his benefactor. Naturally, he was very thankful.
"Jack," Linton said, "your kung fu codies are unique. I hope you'll keep innovating. One day, your films could beco global sensations."
"You really think so?"
"Once your na gains traction in North Arica, our studio could develop a tailored film for a worldwide release."
"Thank you! Lunch is on today. You're not leaving until you're drunk — deal?"
"Deal. But don't overdo it — I have sothing to discuss with Mr. Yuen later."
"Then I'll go prepare. Boss Chow, Mr. Yuen, you guys can co after."
Jackie waved and left. Chow quietly reminded him there were already two beauties, so no extra arrangents were needed.
…
Turning to Yuen Woo-ping, Linton said, "I've seen Once Upon a Ti in China I & II. Your choreography was amazing. I'm preparing an action movie and want you as the action director."
"When and where's the shoot?" Yuen asked.
"Pre-production's underway. We'll shoot in Los Angeles next month for about four weeks."
"That's tight. Most Arican action stars haven't trained since childhood. It'll be tough to et the required standard."
"I understand. But in my movie, the lead is invincible — quick, ruthless, efficient. He overwhelms opponents with ease. Other characters only need basic coordination after two to three weeks of training."
"And the lead?"
"That's . Feel free to test ."
"Alright then. I'll do just that. Boss Chow, could we get so space?"
"Of course. Let's go to the martial arts training room."
…
Inside, Yuen removed his jacket and perford a series of movents. Linton copied them perfectly — flawless, even better than seasoned martial artists.
Yuen was stunned. He now had full confidence in the project. All that remained was agreeing on paynt.
"Director Linton, how much are you offering?"
"First, may I ask your previous rate? For example, on Once Upon a Ti in China?"
"Two million Hong Kong dollars."
"I'll double it. Plus, we'll cover round-trip travel, food, and lodging. Standards will match the rest of the crew."
"Deal."
A lawyer was brought in and a contract signed.
Linton handed Yuen the script, asked him to start assembling his team, and scheduled their return to Los Angeles two days later.
*****
spatreon/Sayonara816.
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