CANNES -- Helmer Lou Ye has found a dangerous way around his five-year
filmmaking ban by from Chinese authorities. He's aiming to lens his new
project in the Palestinian territories.
Lou,
whose ban came in the wake of defying China's Film Bureau by screening
his unauthorized movie "Summer Palace" at the Cannes Film Festival last
year, is adapting Palestinian scribe Mazen Sa'adeh's "The Last Hour"
through his Dream Factory shingle.
The $2.7 million project is
about a Palestinian prisoner who completes his sentence only to
discover he has become impotent. Ensuing separation from his wife
forces him to re-evaluate his dark past with metaphysical consequences.
Lou and Sa'adeh met while on a writers' program at the U. of Iowa.
Project is inspired by Sa'adeh's own experiences after he was released
from prison.
Lou aims to start lensing on location in early 2008 as a way of bypassing his Chinese ban.
"We
are not sure about how it will affect the ban," said producer Nai An.
"The moment Lou Ye was told about the ban he expressed that since it is
unreasonable and against the constitution of China, he would not stop
filmmaking, whether inside China or outside. He has been interested in
the Middle East long before he was banned. To go make a movie in the
Middle East is one of his dreams."
Situation in Palestinian
Territories, especially Gaza, is increasingly unsafe for foreigners.
Gaza has played to renewed intra-Palestinian violence with recent
clashes between rival Hamas and Fatah actions leaving many dead. The
fate over abducted BBC journo Alan Johnston also remains unclear two
months after he was first kidnapped.
While first choice for Lou
and Sa'adeh remains to lense in the Palestinian territories, producers
are also looking at neighboring locations. "Many producers suggested we
should also think about Jordan and some other Middle East cities as a
possible choice," said Nai . "We think that's a very good suggestion."
This
is second time Lou has had run-in with Chinese authorities. He
previously received a two-year ban in 2000 for screening "Suzhou River"
at the Rotterdam film fest without official approval.
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