
Los Angeles, CA (November 7, 2011) — Chris Ball, President and CEO of LA-based film production and distribution company Wrekin Hill Entertainment, announced today that his company, in association with Row 1 Productions, have acquired theNorth American distribution rights to award-winning Chinese director Zhang Yimou’s (Raise the Red Lantern, Hero) and producer Zhang Weiping’s THE FLOWERS OF WAR starring Academy Award® winning actor Christian Bale (The Fighter, The Dark Knight). The film has been selected as this year’s official foreign language entry for China at the Academy Awards. Wrekin Hill, in association with Row 1, will open the film in New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco in late December 2011 and the film will then expand through early 2012.
THE FLOWERS OF WAR will have a wide release in China on December 16th following three premiere events in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou. Based on a screenplay by Heng Liu (The Story of Qiu Ju), THE FLOWERS OF WAR is adapted from Geling Yan’s historical novel 13 Flowers of Nanjing. The film is a work of historical fiction set against the backdrop of the Rape of Nanking, a brutal chapter in the Sino-Japanese War, which was a significant event in Chinese history. Produced and fully financed by Zhang Weiping under his New Pictures Film banner, THE FLOWERS OF WAR is inspired by true life events, and tells a genuine story of hope, love and sacrifice.
Set in 1937, Nanking stands at the forefront of a war between China and Japan. As the invading Japanese Imperial Army overruns China’s capital city, desperate civilians seek refuge behind the nominally protective walls of a western cathedral. Here, John Miller (Bale), an American trapped amidst the chaos of battle, and theensuing occupation, takes shelter, joined by a group of innocent schoolgirlsand thirteen courtesans, equally determined to escape the horrors taking place outside the church walls
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Excellent.
Wow…the Chinese producers were boasting about this being a Sino film that would make a ton of money worldwide. Based on this deal, doesn’t seem it has much potential outside the arthouse circles.
Yeah. This movie just looks bad. I saw the trailer and it was cheesy. I don’t know if Western audiences will take to the story, which seemed pretty muddled, even with Christian Bale in it. Just because you have a big star in a movie doesn’t mean it will do well. Harsh Times and Rescue Dawn, anybody?
Oh Boy. After their failed attempt to advertise and distribute Peter Weir’s “The Way Back”, Wrekin Hill buys another ‘grand classic adventure’. A distributing studio should know that acquiring such films doesn’t mean anything if they can’t capitalize and actually do their job in developing a promotion and distributing plan that benefits both the film and studio. Wrekin Hill has to succeed. Good luck to Yimou and Bale, you are not in “good hands.”
* Wrekin Hill has YET to succeed.