Li and Fang banned from film-making Print E-mail
Written by Clifford Coonan   
Friday, 04 January 2008
Story Categories: censorship, China, Festivals, Film, People, regulation,

BEIJING – China's censors have banned the makers of the steamy "Lost in Beijing" for screening an unapproved version of the pic at the Berlinale last year and for obscenity, the latest in a litany of controversies to dog the project.
"Lost" tells of a relationship between a Beijing massage parlor boss, played by Hong Kong thesp Tony Leung, and his employee, played by mainland starlet Fan Bingbing set in contempo China.
Chinese censors have specifically objected to scenes that depict gambling and sex in the film, but the overall tone of the pic was always set to raise official hackles.
The Film Bureau told Fang last year that "Lost," helmed by Li Yu, one of the country's few emerging female helmers, could not go to the Berlinale because a censorship committee was unhappy with the moral tone of the film.
In the end it screened uncut as the producers said there was insufficient time to make changes. Pic opened in theaters in China on November 30 but now the makers have been banned for what SARFT says are violating regulations by submitting an unapproved version of the film to the fest.
The film makers, co-production company Beijing Laurel Films and producer Fang Li were also banned for illegally distributing unapproved and pornographic clips online, SARFT said.
This appears to be the crux of the ban, which rules Fang out of any involvement in the film biz for the next two years although he is appealing the decision.
"We are the victims in this whole thing. One of our unprocessed, unedited images was stolen and distributed on the internet," Fang Li said in a telephone interview.
Fang also produced "Summer Palace," whose helmer Lou Ye was banned from working for five years after the pic appeared in the Cannes competition without Chinese permission.
"Our material was stolen and I'm being made to take the responsibility. I'm the victim of a thief – I'm surprised, it's a big shock. The movie has been in theaters for weeks," said Fang, who said he would meet the Film Bureau next week to discuss the issue.
© Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Comments (0)add comment

Write comment
This content has been locked. You can no longer post any comment.
There is a problem with the comment system, or you do not have javascript enabled.

busy
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 08 January 2008 )
 
< Prev   Next >
Powered By Page_Cache by Ircmaxell