Font Size
15px

Nowadays, saying Duke is the pillar of Warner Bros., not only would all of Hollywood agree, but even people within Warner Bros. would raise both hands in approval. The Warner Bros. editorial departnt took the story outline that Tina Fey had forwarded very seriously. While Duke was busy continuing filming, they specifically assigned personnel to study it and discuss the feasibility of turning it into a movie.

As for Duke’s suggestion to forward it to the China Film Group, Warner Bros. naturally put it aside. If the project could generate significant revenue, they trusted Duke would not object to Warner retaining these files.

It can be said that Warner Bros. treated this seemingly unfamiliar material with great importance. After all, it was sent seriously by a director of Duke’s caliber, not so self-proclaid talent who had never proven themselves in the market producing random nonsense.

However, after weeks of research and discussion, Warner Bros. concluded that while the docunt had so value, it was not particularly significant to them.

They specifically had Warner Greater China conduct a related investigation. Although the characters ntioned were household nas in China, few knew them outside of China. Hollywood follows an internationalized route; producing a film solely for the Chinese market had no real significance.

Given this situation, Warner Bros. forwarded the docunt to Warner Greater China. The cooperation between Warner and the China Film Group had brought countless benefits, and Warner Bros. hoped this could further strengthen the relationship between both sides.

The docunt was solemnly handed over by Warner Greater China’s general manager Phil to the China Film Group. Hearing that it was a proposal from Duke Rosenberg regarding Chinese films, the China Film Group did not dare neglect it and imdiately delivered it to Zuoshandiao.

In his spacious office, Zuoshandiao opened the docunt and began reading it carefully.

In recent years, with rumors of his impending retirent circulating in the industry, various unfavorable stories about him had appeared online and within the film circle. Zuoshandiao did not care; many of the statents were indeed factual. Yet in this country, if one wants to accomplish anything, how could one act differently?

He had devoted his entire life to Chinese cinema and had vigorously promoted reforms in the industry, believing himself to be worthy of the Chinese film industry.

Although nearing retirent, Zuoshandiao still wanted to contribute sothing to Chinese cinema.

After reading the docunt, Zuoshandiao sighed lightly. The characters were well-known in China, and with proper adaptation, the audience would certainly be abundant. Truly gathering all these characters together could attract a huge audience and might even create a blockbuster-level success for Chinese superheroes.

However, as soone who understood the industry thoroughly, Zuoshandiao knew that filming a Chinese superhero movie was not realistic.

In fact, such calls had long existed online. Chinese superheroes were neither fewer nor weaker than Arican ones and had a wide grassroots following. But in modern society, everyone knew that actually filming such a movie was rely wishful thinking.

Zuoshandiao had also read many relevant posts online, though he did not fully agree with them.

So argued that superheroes advocate extre individual heroism and symbolize rebellion against governntal power, which could offend authorities and make leaders uncomfortable.

This reasoning was a bit overblown. If such concerns were valid, the first to be targeted would have been Sun Wukong. The havoc he caused in Heaven was no less than any superhero’s exploits.

Others claid that Chinese films were all knock-offs, lacking imagination or technical ability to produce a blockbuster.

Zuoshandiao considered this reasoning invalid as well. If technical skill is insufficient, one can spend money to hire a Hollywood team. He had worked extensively with Duke Rosenberg and the best special effects companies in Hollywood, including Industrial Light & Magic, and knew they were all profit-driven. As long as the money was there, they did not care where the business ca from.

So even invoked the idea of "mainstream thes," but to Zuoshandiao, that was also not a sufficient argunt.

Mainstream thes do not contradict science fiction or superheroes. In fact, Arican superhero films are essentially mainstream films of the U.S.—they carry both realistic and positive anings. Sci-fi and superheroes are just forms; any the can be incorporated, and the two do not exclude each other.

Despite rejecting these argunts internally, Zuoshandiao knew very clearly that such projects had little significance for Chinese cinema at the current stage. He pressed the intercom and instructed his secretary to temporarily archive these materials.

After the secretary left, Zuoshandiao lightly tapped the desk. As a veteran of Chinese cinema, claiming he did not want to see Chinese films soar and dominate globally like Hollywood films would be false.

He even began to ntally add cinematic elents based on the docunts he had just read.

To turn this into a film closely connected with modern society, it would be necessary to design a superhero consistent with mainstream values and positivity—for example, soone living in a well-regarded family in Beijing, embodying the qualities of a "Four Haves" young person, loving the city, supporting the governnt, with a story about defeating terrorist monsters and saving Beijing. To align with current circumstances, this superhero would also embody virtues like integrity, tolerance, patriotism, and innovation.

Yet even thinking this far, Zuoshandiao shook his head and let out a long sigh: "It just can’t be fild!"

With superheroes and terrorist monsters, there must be fights. With fights, they must be spectacular; otherwise, the audience would not be satisfied.

Once the fights reach a spectacular scale, a series of corresponding problems arise.

In Arican films, they easily destroy their own cities like New York or Los Angeles, including iconic buildings; Japan, even more so, with Tokyo being destroyed more often than Beijing experiences sandstorms.

Thus, such destructive action scenes are utterly unrealistic in China. Forget the censorship and other departnts; even the China Film Group alone would never approve.

For example, placing the background of a superhero versus evil forces battle in front of the Imperial Palace square.

Before filming, the director and crew must face the question: is it permissible to topple a hero’s monunt?

Do you even need to ask? Certainly not. It commorates martyrs from the revolutionary war. If the crew topples it, what political aning would the film convey? What about smashing a corner of so assembly hall where officials et? Also not allowed—that’s where the nation’s representatives gather. What if a representative stands up to protest that it’s disrespectful?

As for a morial hall, touching even a single finger would be sacrilegious and would lead to indefinite censorship by the authorities.

Thinking of this, Zuoshandiao abandoned the most famous buildings in the city and opted for a less politically sensitive location. For instance, near the China World Trade Center, the superhero and evil forces could battle with the Trade Center tower as the backdrop, restricting the action strictly between Dawang Road in the east and Yong’anli in the west. Smash one of the twin towers, blow up half a flyover, burn the big pants-shaped TV building once—but no more than that.

But after less than five seconds of thought, Zuoshandiao shook his head again.

Doing so still posed many problems. Destroying such an important CBD in Beijing could tarnish the city’s achievents. If one claims the movie is fictional, what if soone takes it seriously? Would businesses protest? Moreover, the TV station’s annex fire had happened years ago, responsibilities clarified; placing it on screen now—what is the implication? Questioning official investigation conclusions?

What about moving the battle outside the city? The wilderness is definitely no good. Though Zuoshandiao was of retirent age, he understood audience psychology well enough. If the film’s background is in an unfamiliar place, the audience’s imrsion would be weak, so one must choose a well-known location.

How about the Badaling Great Wall? Far from the city, relatively safe, but feasibility is still zero.

The Great Wall represents the nation’s image. If the hero or villain punches and breaks it in two, the symbolism looks bad.

Even if the film has no intent to imply anything, audiences with ulterior motives could misinterpret it. Suppose soone just screenshots the scene, posts it online with a comnt about the nation—social impact would be severe and hard to undo.

Moreover, if the film portrays the villains as monsters sent by terrorists, where do these terrorists co from? The U.S., Europe, or Russia is no good—it could cause diplomatic disputes. The Middle East is also unsuitable and riskier. Certain independent organizations could be villains, but the state forbids ntioning them; the film would already contain too many sensitive words. What? Invent a terrorist group? Still not enough? Why always create trouble for the country?

Then there’s the ending problem for this type of film.

"The monster wreaks havoc across the city, everyone is helpless, and at the critical mont, the superhero appears to save the city."

As soon as he muttered this, Zuoshandiao imdiately realized the problem: does "everyone" include police and ard forces? The monster is wreaking havoc on social order, and the police are powerless, leaving it to a superhero to save the day. Wouldn’t this degrade the image of certain departnts?

Perhaps the script could be modified so that the superhero works with the police to defeat the villain—like Duke Rosenberg did in Transforrs, with Autobots fighting alongside the U.S. military.

But Zuoshandiao still shook his head. The feasibility was too low. With such a setup, who obeys whom? The superhero obeys the police, or the police obey the superhero? Does this superhero even have a supervising departnt? Perhaps the protagonist is actually a police officer, working regular duty, and transforms into a superhero only when needed—but that wouldn’t work either. How could such a thing be kept from the organization?

Simulating all this, Zuoshandiao’s enthusiasm quickly faded. He stood up, made himself a cup of tea, and no longer cared to think about it.

....

Hi For access to additional Chapters of

Director in Hollywood (40 chpaters)

Made In Hollywood (60 Chapters)

Pokemon:Bounty Hunter(30 Chapters)

Douluo Dalu: Reincarnated as Yan(40 Chapters)

Hollywood:From Razzie to Legend(40 Chapters)

The Great Ruler (30 Chapters)

Join pateron/Translaterappu

You are reading Made In Hollywood Chapter 811: Zuoshandiao’s Superhero Plan on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Bailonz Street 13 cover
Similar genre

Bailonz Street 13

김송로 ·Josei

“Sometimes,secretswecan’tfathomcrawlthroughtheshadowsofLondon.”TheprotagonistfindsherselftrappedinahorrorVRgamethatwassetin19th-centuryLondon,acity...

Data-Driven Daoist cover
Trending now

Data-Driven Daoist

CatVI ·Action

Theycalledhimtrash—untilhestartedtreatingtheDaolikeaDataset.Whendemonsslaughterhisnewfamily,computerscientistJohan—nowrebornasYuHan—survivesbypurew...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.