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Feature image of “Technical Issues” Lead to Shock Cancellation of Shanghai Film Festival’s Opening Screening

“Technical Issues” Lead to Shock Cancellation of Shanghai Film Festival’s Opening Screening

2 mins read

2 mins read

Feature image of “Technical Issues” Lead to Shock Cancellation of Shanghai Film Festival’s Opening Screening
Shanghai International Film Festival is not off to the best of starts

The Shanghai International Film Festival got off to an ominous start this weekend when officials announced late Friday night that the highly-anticipated screening of The Eight Hundred — meant to be the festival’s grand opening picture — had been cancelled. “Technical issues” were cited for the surprise removal of the big budget blockbuster from the schedule, leading many to speculate that the movie had fallen foul of China’s increasingly strict censorship apparatus.

Chinese productions getting pulled from film festival schedules at the last minute due to “technical reasons” has become a depressingly common occurrence, but it’s still a major surprise for such an issue to strike at a key domestic festival — as oppose to the likes of Cannes or Berlin, which both had to grapple with short notice cancellations of Chinese movies this year.

Related:

The Guan Hu-directed, Huayi Brothers-backed action film details the story of a Chinese army unit fighting Japanese invaders in the Battle of Shanghai in 1937. It’s unclear exactly which aspect of Guan’s retelling of this story has caused problems.

The Eight Hundred was originally scheduled for a cinematic release in early July and was due to be one of the biggest films of the summer in China. Precisely what impact these “technical issues” will have on its release remain to be seen.

Possibly in response to the news, famed director Jia Zhangke took to Chinese microblogging platform Weibo to seemingly express dissatisfaction:

At time of writing, his Weibo post had been liked over 60,000 times, forwarded more than 30,000 times, and received in excess of 2,500 comments, however those comments are no longer viewable by users.

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

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Feature image of “Technical Issues” Lead to Shock Cancellation of Shanghai Film Festival’s Opening Screening

“Technical Issues” Lead to Shock Cancellation of Shanghai Film Festival’s Opening Screening

2 mins read

Shanghai International Film Festival is not off to the best of starts

The Shanghai International Film Festival got off to an ominous start this weekend when officials announced late Friday night that the highly-anticipated screening of The Eight Hundred — meant to be the festival’s grand opening picture — had been cancelled. “Technical issues” were cited for the surprise removal of the big budget blockbuster from the schedule, leading many to speculate that the movie had fallen foul of China’s increasingly strict censorship apparatus.

Chinese productions getting pulled from film festival schedules at the last minute due to “technical reasons” has become a depressingly common occurrence, but it’s still a major surprise for such an issue to strike at a key domestic festival — as oppose to the likes of Cannes or Berlin, which both had to grapple with short notice cancellations of Chinese movies this year.

Related:

The Guan Hu-directed, Huayi Brothers-backed action film details the story of a Chinese army unit fighting Japanese invaders in the Battle of Shanghai in 1937. It’s unclear exactly which aspect of Guan’s retelling of this story has caused problems.

The Eight Hundred was originally scheduled for a cinematic release in early July and was due to be one of the biggest films of the summer in China. Precisely what impact these “technical issues” will have on its release remain to be seen.

Possibly in response to the news, famed director Jia Zhangke took to Chinese microblogging platform Weibo to seemingly express dissatisfaction:

At time of writing, his Weibo post had been liked over 60,000 times, forwarded more than 30,000 times, and received in excess of 2,500 comments, however those comments are no longer viewable by users.

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

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Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

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Feature image of “Technical Issues” Lead to Shock Cancellation of Shanghai Film Festival’s Opening Screening

“Technical Issues” Lead to Shock Cancellation of Shanghai Film Festival’s Opening Screening

2 mins read

2 mins read

Feature image of “Technical Issues” Lead to Shock Cancellation of Shanghai Film Festival’s Opening Screening
Shanghai International Film Festival is not off to the best of starts

The Shanghai International Film Festival got off to an ominous start this weekend when officials announced late Friday night that the highly-anticipated screening of The Eight Hundred — meant to be the festival’s grand opening picture — had been cancelled. “Technical issues” were cited for the surprise removal of the big budget blockbuster from the schedule, leading many to speculate that the movie had fallen foul of China’s increasingly strict censorship apparatus.

Chinese productions getting pulled from film festival schedules at the last minute due to “technical reasons” has become a depressingly common occurrence, but it’s still a major surprise for such an issue to strike at a key domestic festival — as oppose to the likes of Cannes or Berlin, which both had to grapple with short notice cancellations of Chinese movies this year.

Related:

The Guan Hu-directed, Huayi Brothers-backed action film details the story of a Chinese army unit fighting Japanese invaders in the Battle of Shanghai in 1937. It’s unclear exactly which aspect of Guan’s retelling of this story has caused problems.

The Eight Hundred was originally scheduled for a cinematic release in early July and was due to be one of the biggest films of the summer in China. Precisely what impact these “technical issues” will have on its release remain to be seen.

Possibly in response to the news, famed director Jia Zhangke took to Chinese microblogging platform Weibo to seemingly express dissatisfaction:

At time of writing, his Weibo post had been liked over 60,000 times, forwarded more than 30,000 times, and received in excess of 2,500 comments, however those comments are no longer viewable by users.

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox.

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox.

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

RADII NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox

Feature image of “Technical Issues” Lead to Shock Cancellation of Shanghai Film Festival’s Opening Screening

“Technical Issues” Lead to Shock Cancellation of Shanghai Film Festival’s Opening Screening

2 mins read

Shanghai International Film Festival is not off to the best of starts

The Shanghai International Film Festival got off to an ominous start this weekend when officials announced late Friday night that the highly-anticipated screening of The Eight Hundred — meant to be the festival’s grand opening picture — had been cancelled. “Technical issues” were cited for the surprise removal of the big budget blockbuster from the schedule, leading many to speculate that the movie had fallen foul of China’s increasingly strict censorship apparatus.

Chinese productions getting pulled from film festival schedules at the last minute due to “technical reasons” has become a depressingly common occurrence, but it’s still a major surprise for such an issue to strike at a key domestic festival — as oppose to the likes of Cannes or Berlin, which both had to grapple with short notice cancellations of Chinese movies this year.

Related:

The Guan Hu-directed, Huayi Brothers-backed action film details the story of a Chinese army unit fighting Japanese invaders in the Battle of Shanghai in 1937. It’s unclear exactly which aspect of Guan’s retelling of this story has caused problems.

The Eight Hundred was originally scheduled for a cinematic release in early July and was due to be one of the biggest films of the summer in China. Precisely what impact these “technical issues” will have on its release remain to be seen.

Possibly in response to the news, famed director Jia Zhangke took to Chinese microblogging platform Weibo to seemingly express dissatisfaction:

At time of writing, his Weibo post had been liked over 60,000 times, forwarded more than 30,000 times, and received in excess of 2,500 comments, however those comments are no longer viewable by users.

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox.

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

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Feature image of “Technical Issues” Lead to Shock Cancellation of Shanghai Film Festival’s Opening Screening

“Technical Issues” Lead to Shock Cancellation of Shanghai Film Festival’s Opening Screening

Shanghai International Film Festival is not off to the best of starts

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