The Foreigner

Jackie Chan to Star in Action-Thriller ‘The Foreigner’ for STX


Stuart C. Wilson/Getty Images
June 5, 2015 | 05:16PM PT
Dave McNary
Film Reporter @Variety_DMcNary

STX Entertainment is in final negotiations with Jackie Chan to star in the action thriller “The Foreigner,” with shooting expected to start in October.

Nick Cassavetes is in talks to direct a script based on the Stephen Leather novel “The Chinaman,” which was published in 1992. The story centers on a restaurant owner in London’s Chinatown who is tracking down a group of Irish terrorists responsible for the death of his daughter.

David Marconi wrote the adaptation. His credits include “Enemy of the State” and “Live Free or Die Hard.”

Chan, 61, has acted in more than 150 films since the 1960s and is most famous for his martial arts. He starred in the “Rush Hour” trilogy for New Line.

Cassavetes’ directing credits include “The Other Woman” and “The Notebook.”

STX was launched last year by film producer Robert Simonds and TPG managing partner Bill McGlashan to produce projects in the $10 million to $80 million range — an area largely vacated by the studios in favor of superhero movies. STX aims to release as many as 15 films annually by 2017, and has lined up projects with Matthew McConaughey (“The Free State of Jones”) and Julia Roberts (“The Secret in Their Eyes”).

The company has also lined up financial backing from venture capital firm and co-founder TPG, Chinese private equity firm Hony Capital and investors Gigi Pritzker and Beau Wrigley, along with film financing from China’s Huayi Brothers.

Year-old STX has dated four films: horror-thriller “The Gift,” starring Jason Bateman and Rebecca Hall, on Aug. 7; “The Secret in Their Eyes,” starring Roberts, Nicole Kidman and Chiwetel Ejiofor, on Oct. 23; drama “The Boy,” starring Lauren Cohan (“The Walking Dead”), on Jan. 22; and Civil War drama “The Free State of Jones,” starring McConaughey, on March 11.

Marconi is repped by Bryan Brucks at Luber Roklin.

Jackie really should go back to action comedy next. At 61, he shouldn’t bother fighting against typecasting if he’s looking for another global hit. The world loves his action comedies.

Jackie really has no choice about being typecast. He plays himself in every film he’s in. He’s definitely NOT a character actor.

Daniel Day-Lewis and Gary Oldman are examples of great character actors, who can be almost unrecognizable from one role to the next. They really can’t be typecast.

talking directly now…

Martin Campbell In Talks To Direct Jackie Chan In STX Action Film
by Mike Fleming Jr July 15, 2015 11:51am

EXCLUSIVE: Martin Campbell is in talks to direct the now untitled film that will star Jackie Chan, with STX Entertainment eyeing a fall production start. This is the one that had been called The Foreigner, based on the Stephen Leather novel The Chinaman. It will get a new title. While everyone is talking about the financial turmoil that has Relativity circling the drain, Campbell’s pending deal here was made possible by that company’s difficulties. Campbell early on had been involved in developing The Foreigner but the helmer of Casino Royale, Edge Of Darkness and Green Lantern left to instead direct Relativity’s Hunter Killer. STX in turn had discussions with a few directors that included Nick Cassavetes. When Hunter Killer became uncertain because of Relativity’s difficulties, Campbell returned. Deals are being negotiated right now.

stxThis is a strategically important film for STX, which has received substantial slate financing from China; cracking that country is a priority. Chan is one of the most beloved action stars to come out of China. He will play a humble restaurant owner in London’s Chinatown who is forced to push his moral and physical boundaries to track down the group of rogue Irish terrorists responsible for the death of his beloved daughter after the justice system fails him. The book was adapted by David Marconi and Peter Buchman. Wayne Godfrey is producing.

Campbell is repped by CAA.

Anyone read Stephen Leather’s The Chinaman?

The Chinaman - Stephen Leather

The Chinaman understood death.

Jungle-skilled, silent and lethal, Nguyen Ngoc Minh had killed for the Viet Cong and then for the Americans. Imprisoned and tortured after the Communist victory, he escaped with his wife and baby daughter to Hong Kong - but only after being forced to watch Thai pirates rape and kill his two eldest daughters.

Now the proud owner of the Double Happiness Chinese takeaway in South London, he watches his daughter grow into a beautiful young woman, secure in the knowledge that the horrors of his homeland are finally behind him.

Until the day an IRA bomb in a Knightsbridge store snatches his family from him in a horrific maelstrom of fire and glass.

Then, simply but persistently, he began to ask the authorities who were the men responsible, what was being done. And was turned away, fobbed off, treated as a nuisance.

Which was when the Chinaman, denied justice, decided on revenge. And went back to war.

I guess I’ll post this here

Jackie Chan & Agent Exit WME; Philip Button Joins STX
by Dominic Patten
September 11, 2015 6:45pm


Getty Images

EXCLUSIVE: One of the world’s biggest stars already is set to appear a film for mini-studio STX, and now his agent Philip Button is joining the company too. I’ve learned that superstar Jackie Chan is leaving WME and will continue to be managed by Button but go agentless for the time being. Button’s title at STX will be EVP International Production and Management, focused on building out business in Asia and Latin America. He will report directly to STX CEO Bob Simonds. It is unclear if in what or any capacity Chan will align himself formally with STX.

Both longtime members of the WME family, Chan and Button will be leaving the agency imminently. Chan essentially was Button’s sole major client at WME, and I’ve heard that everyone is parting as friends.

The martial arts icon is set to star in STX’s untitled film that had been known as The Foreigner. STX Entertainment has been bulking up lately, with hires including Kathy Savitt joining the company today from Yahoo as President of Digital and QED’s John Friedberg singing on as President of International Sales in July. It also has a deal for the next film from the Jim Henson Company.

Back in April, China’s largest privately held film firm, Huayi Brothers Media Corp made a three-year deal with STX Entertainment for a slate of 12-15 films a year. It’s structured as a revolving line of credit estimated at upward of $1 billion for movies to be co-produced and distributed with Huayi. Securing Chan is a coup for STX as he remains a megastar in China.

What is implied by that last sentence? :rolleyes:

Brosnan. Pierce Brosnan.

Pierce Brosnan Joins Jackie Chan in STX Entertainment Action Movie (Exclusive)
MOVIES | By Jeff Sneider on November 19, 2015 @ 8:37 am Follow @theinsneider


Getty Images
Martin Campbell is directing the film, which STX is co-financing with Beijing-based SR Media Corporation
Two of the world’s most famous action heroes are joining forces, as Pierce Brosnan is set to star opposite Jackie Chan in an untitled action thriller that Martin Campbell will direct for STX Entertainment and SR Media Corporation, TheWrap has learned.
Chan stars as a humble restaurant owner in London’s Chinatown. When the justice system fails him, he is forced to push his moral and physical boundaries to track down the group of rogue Irish terrorists responsible for the death of his beloved daughter.
Brosnan will play Liam Hennessy, a former IRA member-turned-government official.
Campbell (“Goldeneye”) will direct from a script by David Marconi and Peter Buchman, who adapted Stephen Leather’s novel “The Chinaman.”
STX Entertainment and Beijing-based SR Media Corporation are co-financing the film, which will be produced by Wayne Marc Godfrey and Arthur Sarkissian.
In the ’90s, Brosnan reinvigorated the popularity of James Bond with blockbusters such as “Goldeneye,” “Tomorrow Never Dies,” “The World Is Not Enough” and “Die Another Day.” More recently, he starred in “No Escape” with Owen Wilson; “The Moon and the Sun” alongside William Hurt; “Survivor” with Milla Jovovich; and “How to Make Love Like an Englishman” with Salma Hayek, Jessica Alba and Malcolm McDowell.
Brosnan is also a producer whose company with Beau St. Clair, Irish DreamTime, has produced 10 films to date including “The November Man,” “The Matador” and “The Thomas Crown Affair.”

I’m been reviewing old Bond films in preparation for Spectre and I’ve always thought Brosnan was the oddest Bond. He started out playing a caricature of Bond in Remington Steele and then went on to play Bond on the heels of Timothy Dalton. He never quite worked for me, but I’ve liked him in other roles, like Mrs. Doubtfire.

An excerpt from an excellent long form journalism piece in the New Yorker

It’s worth the read if you’re into the film industry, but for the rest of you who just like to keep up on Kung Fu flicks, I’m cutting to the chase with this cut-and-paste.

Annals of Hollywood JANUARY 11, 2016 ISSUE
The Mogul of the Middle
As the movie business founders, Adam Fogelson tries to reinvent the system.
BY TAD FRIEND


In a market suffused with pricey superhero films, Fogelson is betting on stories on a human scale. But he says, If you ask, Can we make something great once or twice a year that violates a rational business model?, the answer is no!
CREDIT PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGIE SMITH FOR THE NEW YORKER

Adam Fogelson, the chairman of Hollywoods newest studio, listened to a pitch for a film called Unmanned with an encouraging smile. Hollywood pitches are jolly, elaborately courteous affairs. So on this sunny afternoon the filmmakerstwo producers, the director, and the star, Keanu Reeves, whose black suit and black T-shirt and black beard gave him the look of a stylish sextonhad cheerfully trekked over the hill to STX Entertainments offices in Burbank, and STXs executives had cheerfully welcomed them with a bottomless supply of bottled water…

…Fogelson looks at comps, too, but then he applies a three-part test. First, can the film be great? (By great, he means distinguished within its genre. When he green-lit The Boy, a horror film that STX will release this month, he hoped merely that it could be a great blend of two beloved subgenres of horror: the spooky doll, and the house haunted by a ****ed-up child.) Then, Do we know how to sell it? And, Can we make much more in success than we lose in failure?


Yeah, I could walk all the way to Egypt. Or you could just free them yourself using magic.

Modest profit doesnt suffice. STX is now filming The Foreigner, which stars Jackie Chan as a former assassin who comes out of retirement to hunt the I.R.A. terrorists who blew up his daughter. Fogelson was confident that he could sell it, and that it was a free playthat it would earn enough in China alone to recoup its costs. The low-risk strategy would be to bring in a pliable unknown to direct. We could have got a three-hundred-thousand-dollar director, he said. But we worked hard to get a Martin Campbell to give it a chance to be great. Campbell, the director of Casino Royale and GoldenEye, got paid about two million dollars, which means that STX spent an extra $1.7 million to play the greatness lottery.

However, Fogelson noted, If you ask, Can we make something great once or twice a year that violates a rational business model?, the answer is no! Its not a paintingits tens and tens of millions of dollars. Also, none of our movies are being made with the idea that they have to turn out great. Because eighty per cent of movies dont. When I mentioned a number of superb films that failed at the box office, and asked whether better marketing could have saved them, Fogelson said he wouldnt have made them in the first place. Hed have scotched Blade Runner, because darkness and sci-fi is really hard; Fight Club, because watching people beat the **** out of each other is a tough ask; and The Shawshank Redemption, much as he loved it, because the obvious sellan innocent man trying to escape from prisonwas a huge spoiler…

…Later that week, Fogelson drove his Tesla to Beverly Hills to meet Jackie Chan in his suite at the Montage Hotel to discuss The Foreigner. Noting the brutality of the story, Chan said, We need a happy ending. Otherwise the audience leaves, and He stood and shuffled off, shoulders bowed.

Otherwise, its not sufficient reward for the journey youve asked the audience to go on, Fogelson agreed.

Chan then suggested that a female character who got killed off in the script be kept alive. We save her for No. 2, Chan said. Now the I.R.A. goes after herand thats the story. Fogelson grinned and shook the actors hand.

Chan was just the kind of brand-extension expert that Fogelson needed to crack the Chinese marketand to attract wayward American viewers. Television has posed what might be called the Game of Thrones problem: once cinematic sex and violence, complete with dragons, are available on your phone, why pay a sitter and drive to a mall to see them? Even as the studios seek to distinguish their franchises from television, they have begun to shape them according to televisions dictates. A sequel like last Mays Avengers: Age of Ultron, from Marvel, is less a self-contained film than a loose amalgam of ongoing stories. The film lays track for two future sequels and allots significant screen time to each of the films fourteen main characters so they can serve as calendar reminders of forthcoming spinoffs and other ancillary products, including, of course, TV shows. The film is essentially a two-hundred-and-fifty-million-dollar episode of a television drama that airs every few years.

To Fogelson, this Scheherazade sensibility makes both financial and creative sense. Driving back to the office after meeting with Chan, he remarked, A few years ago, thinking about the sequel that way would be characterized as a lazy, greedy *******ization of the creative process. If you said that now, youd be telling the entire world that theyre wrong. Sequels have become a dutya form of storytelling that, thanks to great television, audiences have grown accustomed to. You can aspire to create six two-hour movies that develop your concept across multiple resolutionswhich makes movies easier to sell, and creates a more predictable business model. Half the films well say yes to will have sequelable potential.

More on the Mile 22 thread.

Wait…is it the Chinaman now? Because that’s a horrid title.

Always dapper. Expect no less for an ex-Bond.

Pierce Brosnan shows off his greying hair and white beard as he suits up on set for new action thriller with Jackie Chan
By JOANNA CRAWLEY FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 14:36 EST, 13 January 2016 | UPDATED: 14:56 EST, 13 January 2016

He’s reuniting with his Goldeneye director twenty years after their Bond team-up.
And while Pierce Brosnan may have cut a very different figure two decades on as he got to work on set on Wednesday, the action man was still looking decidedly dapper.


Action! Pierce Brosnan, 62, was sporting a white beard and greying hair for a day of filming in London on Wednesday for a big screen thriller based on Stephen Leather’s novel The Chinaman

Pierce was smart in a black overcoat layered over a grey suit for the day on set.
A purple tie added a pop of colour to his dapper wardrobe, while the Hollywood star wore glasses to finish off his character’s ensemble.
The actor is starring opposite Jackie Chan in the untitled action thriller from director Martin Campbell, who was behind the camera for Pierce’s Bond debut in 1994’s Goldeneye.


Dapper: Pierce was looking smart in a black overcoat layered over a grey suit for the day on set


Suited up: A purple tie added a pop of colour to his dapper wardrobe, while the Hollywood star wore glasses to finish off his character’s ensemble

Chan stars as a restaurant owner in London’s Chinatown who embarks on a one-man mission to track down a group of rogue Irish terrorists responsible for the death of his daughter.
Brosnan has signed up to play former IRA member turned government official Liam Hennessy.
Last week the actor was feeling nostalgic for his first team-up with director Campbell back in 1994, sharing a throwback shot on his Instagram page from around the time he wrapped filming on his Bond debut.


Talented team: The actor is starring opposite Jackie Chan in the untitled action thriller from director Martin Campbell, who was behind the camera for Pierce’s Bond debut in 1994’s Goldeneye


Getting down to business: Pierce blended in with Londoners in his classic suit

The stunning photo shows the handsome star posing with his then girlfriend and now wife Keely Shaye Smith, alongside the caption: ‘I had just finished Goldeneye and we went Bora.’
Pierce has been throwing himself back into work this week following the sad news of the death of his producing partner Beau St. Clair – with whom the actor had a thirty-year friendship – over the weekend.
‘Beau was the sister I never had,’ the Hollywood star said in a statement of his 63-year-old friend and colleague.


Rolling: Pierce was seen leaving a London location and jumping into a waiting car in his smart outfit


Thriller: Chan stars as a humble restaurant owner in London’s Chinatown who embarks on a one-man mission to track down a group of rogue Irish terrorists responsible for the death of his daughter


Complicated character: Brosnan has signed up to play former IRA member turned government official Liam Hennessy

St. Clair’s publicist Jennifer Allen told the Hollywood Reporter St. Clair was at her Malibu home Saturday night when she died following a battle with ovarian cancer.
Brosnan publicly mourned St. Clair’s death on Instagram Monday, posting a photograph of them together.
The caption said: ‘Farewell my Darling Beau Marie… We made memories in the movies we made, and a deep friendship in the life we shared…into the Dreamtime you go now…love and always love…’


Memories: Last week the actor was feeling nostalgic for his first team-up with director Campbell back in 1994, sharing a throwback shot with his wife Keely Shaye Smith from around the time he wrapped Goldeneye

Jackie looking rough on the set

Alas. U.K. tabloids. :rolleyes:

Jackie Chan: Time To Stop Taking Kicks To The Head?
By Joe Diliberto
Posted on Jan 25, 2016 @ 14:24PM

Celebrated Hong Kong-born martial artist and actor Jackie Chan, 61, was looking a lot worse for wear when he was spotted filming the new movie “The Foreigner” in London yesterday. Jackie is famous for doing his own stunts, and his litany of broken bones and serious injuries is legendary. In fact, his 2013 movie “Raising Dragon” was promoted in Japan with a poster cataloging all of his major injuries!

“The Foreigner” is an adaptation of the 1992 novel “The Chinaman,” about a restaurant owner in London’s Chinatown battling Irish terrorists who were responsible for the death of his daughter.

Jackie appears a bit unsteady on his feet in these photos. Or, maybe his character is employing some variation of the kung fu Jackie showcased in his classic 1978 film “Drunken Master,” in which he played a martial artist who could fight better while drunk!

While you’re waiting for “The Foreigner,” you can hear Jackie as the voice of Monkey in the animated feature “Kung Fu Panda 3” in theaters right now. A fourth “Rush Hour” movie has been announced, which would reteam him with Chris Tucker for the first time since “Rush Hour 3” in 2007. He is also set to reprise his role as Mr. Han in “Karate Kid 2,” with Jaden Smith.

‘already a perfect Steven Seagal movie’ OUCH!

I’m guessing this is funnier if you speak Irish. :wink:

The Foreigner: Jackie Chan v The IRA and definitely-not-Gerry-Adams
Jackie Chan takes on the IRA in his latest film. Here’s how we see it playing out
Fri, Jan 29, 2016, 11:30
Una Mullally

Upcoming film The Foreigner sees Jackie Chan take revenge on Irish terrorists who are responsible for the death of his daughter. Pierce Brosnan plays the definitely-not-based-on-Gerry-Adams character of Liam Hennessy, a government official and former IRA member. The Foreigner was already a perfect Steven Seagal movie, so we’ve decided to rename the film Jackie Chan v The IRA (or potentially Jackie’s Army). And we’ve reworked the first page of the script to move it from the actual film’s setting (London), to a much more local spot (Dublin).
FADE IN. EXT SINN FÉIN SHOP, PARNELL SQUARE – NIGHT
In Dublin’s gritty north inner city, a neon map of Ireland flickers in the window.
INT SINN FÉIN SHOP
LIAM, a grey-bearded Belfast man who is definitely not based on Gerry Adams looks up from his iPhone.
LIAM
The 1977 filter on my Instagram isn’t working, and I want to post this picture of me with a lemur on my head.
SAOIRSE, a flame-haired young woman, readjusts her replica Cumann Na mBan badge to cover the Jack Wills logo on her polo shirt.
SAOIRSE
Sure you don’t want to go back to 1977, Liam?
Laughter.
LIAM
It wasn’t the worst year, Saoirse a stór . . . not that I’d know anything about that.
The door buzzer BUZZES. Saoirse presses the intercom.
SAOIRSE
Sorry, we’re closed.
VOICE
(through the intercom) I’m looking beat for Liam Hennessy.
LIAM stands up, hurriedly gathering his belongings off the TABLE he was sitting at and shoving them into his BAG.
LIAM
If it’s Mary Lou tell her I’m at a children’s party. On a bouncy castle or something. Or at a petting zoo.
SAOIRSE
I’m afraid Mr Hennessy isn’t here right now, and I’m about to lock up.
QUAN, an ageing Hong Kong man with a stricken look on his face, crashes through the WINDOW, the toe of his shoe stuck in the neon loop that forms LOUGH NEAGH.
QUAN
I guess I’ll have to let myself in then.

Epic Bus Explosion

Epic Bus Explosion for Jackie Chan Movie Causes Panic in London
by Raphael Chestang 12:21 PM PST, February 08, 2016


Photo: Twitter
Onlookers were sent into a panic on Sunday morning when a double-decker bus exploded in London as a part of a stunt for an upcoming Jackie Chan movie.

Londoners tweeted their frustration, complaining that they weren’t properly warned about the realistic-looking explosion, which some feared was a terrorist attack.

“Hey, film types, next time you blow up a bus on Lambeth Bridge maybe tell us first so children in park aren’t freaked?” author Sophie Kinsella tweeted.

[QUOTE]Sophie Kinsella
@KinsellaSophie
Hey film types next time you blow up a bus on Lambeth Bridge maybe tell us first so children in park aren’t freaked?

RETWEETS 52 LIKES 103
Robby AmonteMamikoLara M McWilliams.sovietmisakiIan ClaytonClaire KilcoynejeffwoodallDavid FarkasAndrea Rudolph
2:37 AM - 7 Feb 2016

According to People, the film crew posted warnings that the explosion would be taking place, but the large fireball that ripped off the roof of the bus could be seen from far away.

“The scale and realism of the explosion would have worried a lot of people who were quite a long way off and not able to see the film crew and cameras,” Parliament member Nigel Huddleston told The Guardian. “Walking past parliament a few minutes later, some tourists clearly had no idea whether it was real or not.”

The blast was especially worrisome as it stirred up memories of the 7/7 bombings in London that took 52 civilian lives on July 7, 2005. With this in mind, Huddleston tweeted a video of the explosion, letting his followers know that it was fake.

“Anyone worried about the exploding bus on Lambeth Bridge just now?” he wrote. “It was just for a movie.”

Nigel Huddleston MP @HuddlestonNigel
Anyone worried about the exploding bus on Lambeth Bridge just now? It was just for a movie.
2:31 AM - 7 Feb 2016
492 492 Retweets 300 300 likes

The scene was reportedly being filmed for The Foreigner, starring Chan and Pierce Brosnan.[/QUOTE]

JC films - the new terrorism.

Katie Leung

Harry Potter star Katie Leung takes the driving seat as she films action thriller The Foreigner with Jackie Chan
By REBECCA LAWRENCE FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 13:10 EST, 19 February 2016 | UPDATED: 13:19 EST, 19 February 2016

She made a name for herself as Cho Chang in the Harry Potter series.
But Katie Leung was swapping her magic skills for driving skills as she filmed scenes for her latest film, The Foreigner, in London on Thursday.
Joined by the movie’s leading man, Jackie Chan, the 28-year-old seemed in good spirits on set, beaming as she filmed her scenes.


In the driving seat: Katie Leung, 28, was swapping her magic skills for driving skills as she filmed scenes for her latest film, The Foreigner, in London on Thursday

Working on what appeared to be a high speed chase scene, Katie took the driving seat during the production.
Chatting with the cast and crew of the film, Katie looked ready for action whilst Jackie settled himself in for a long day of work.
Racing around the set, the 61-year-old looked half his age as he worked behind the scenes.


The Karate Man: Racing around the set, Jackie Chan looked half his 61 years of age as he worked behind the scenes on his latest action thriller which will see him show off more of his action skills


All smiles: Joined by the leading man, Jackie, the Harry Potter actress seemed in good spirits on set, beaming as she filmed her scenes and chatting away with the members of cast and crew


Fast car: Working on what appeared to be a high speed chase scene, Katie took the driving seat during the production and looked ready for action whilst Jackie settled himself in for a long day of work

Also starring fellow action man, Pierce Brosnan, The Foreigner is based on Stephen Leather’s 1992 novel The Chinaman.
Starring as Quan in the film, Jackie plays the role of a Chinatown restaurant owner who is forced to track down a group of Irish terrorists responsible for the death of his daughter after the police fail to.
Filming for the movie began in January, but the crew found themselves heavily criticised after setting up a stunt that proved so realistic that police were called to the scene.


Action King: The Foreigner is based on Stephen Leather’s 1992 novel The Chinaman, and Jackie will star as Quan in the film, a Chinatown restaurant owner who is forced to track down a group of Irish terrorists


Revenge: Following in the lead of his previous action roles, the fast paced film will see Jackie tearing through the streets of London to avenge the death of his daughter who was killed by terrorists
Earlier this month, filmmakers blew up a double decker bus on Lambeth Bridge which left terrified Londoners fearing a terrorist attack had taken place and called the police.
Social media websites were filled with pictures and concerned tweets surrounding the explosion, but the emergency services were quick to assure the public that it had been a controlled incident.
A Met spokesman told MailOnline that they received two calls after the incident but their team knew there was filming on the bridge and were able to reassure the panicked callers.


Star-studded: Jackie was seen on set without his co-star Pierce Brosnan who will also play a leading role


Too realistic: Earlier this month, filmmakers blew up a double decker bus on Lambeth Bridge which left terrified Londoners fearing a terrorist attack had taken place and called the police


Panicked: A Met spokesman told MailOnline that they received two calls after the incident but their team knew there was filming on the bridge and were able to reassure the panicked callers

One of my metrics for anything coming out of the U.K. is the Harry Potter factor = how many HP stars are in the production.

Skiptrace, Railroad Tigers, Kung Fu Yoga, The Foreigner

//youtu.be/3wJYrddFU4c

Sep 29 2017 premiere date for PRC

Coincidentally, there’s mention of this film in my latest ezine offering, INTO THE BADLANDS: Women Warriors and Whitewashing because Orla Brady is in both.

China Date Set For Jackie Chan Pic ‘The Foreigner’ – CinemaCon

by Anita Busch
March 28, 2017 1:47pm


AP
The Foreigner, starring Jackie Chan, has landed a September 29 release date in China. The news came out of STX’s CinemaCon presentation Tuesday morning in Las Vegas, where STX motion picture group chair Adam Fogelson noted that the project is a Chinese co-production. Chan is a beloved star in the Middle Kingdom; his past two films — Kung Fu Yoga and Railroad Tigers — did gangbuster business in the country.

The Foreigner is based on the book The Chinaman by Stephen Leather about a humble restaurant owner in London’s Chinatown who is forced to push his moral and physical boundaries to track down the group of rogue Irish terrorists responsible for the death of his beloved daughter after the justice system fails him. The book was adapted by David Marconi (Enemy of the State, Mission Impossible 2).

The film was fast-tracked into production by STX a couple of years ago and quickly got director Martin Campbell on board. The actioner also stars Pierce Brosnan. Chan will next star in Bleeding Steel from writer/director Lijia Zhang for Chinese production company Heyi Pictures.

October 13

Yesterday, 10:30 am
Jackie Chan’s THE FOREIGNER Gets Brooding U.S. Poster
Peter Martin
MANAGING EDITOR; DALLAS, TEXAS, USA (@PETERAMARTIN)

Jackie Chan remains as busy as ever. Within the past year, we’ve seen the Chinese period piece Railroad Tigers and the modern Chinese/Indian fusion Kung Fu Yoga, which both showed him in his familiar guise as a heroic action figure.

The Foreigner promises to show him in a different light, as a man seeking vengeance for his family. Reportedly, it will emphasize the action in the premise; Chan plays a restaurant owner in London whose family is victimized by Irish terrorists. It’s based on Stephen Leather’s novel The Chinaman (?!), first published in 1992.

Pierce Brosnan, who’s done quite a variety of colorful roles since his days as James Bond, is Chan’s costar, along with Katie Leung and Tao Liu. Speaking of Bond, Martin Campbell, perhaps best known for Bond installments GoldenEye and Casino Royale, is directing.

The film is scheduled for release this fall – October 13 in the U.S. The first U.S. poster has now been released, which you can see in full below (via Reddit.) I’m quite intrigued, but I’m an unbridled optimist. What say you?

Strong Bond connection. I’m interpreting that as promising.

First trailer

//youtu.be/cFCM6L6Nl5E

srsly?

Jackie Chan’s New Film Sparks Outrage Because His Character is ‘Vietnamese’
By Ryan General Posted on July 3, 2017

The trailer for Jackie Chan’s new film “The Foreigner” has since been released to much acclaim, but another issue with Chan’s character is now creating a buzz online.

Based on the 1992 novel “The Chinaman” by Stephen Leather, the new thriller is directed by “Casino Royale” director Martin Campbell. Chan’s latest role marks a departure from his usual comedic action style in favor of a brooding serious tone that shows off his acting prowess.

//youtu.be/33iuQu3UtjI

But while many are understandably excited about the action legend’s return to the big screen, some people have expressed criticisms over his casting.

The negative reaction apparently stems from the interpretation that Chan’s character in the film is Vietnamese. A scene in the trailer showed a passport identifying the character as a Vietnamese immigrant in London named Ngoc Minh Quan.

Twitter user @linhtropy posted a series of tweets pointing out how “You can’t mix-and-match people’s ethnicities.”

@Linhtropy further explained that having a Chinese actor play a Viet character can be a form of erasing Vietnamese culture, especially since China has been one of the countries that colonized Vietnam in the past.

Asian-American user @Reappropriate added that the film itself is a problem as it is based on a book titled with a racial slur.

Both critics also pointed out that while having an Asian actor star in a Hollywood movie already means a lot for representation, miscasting ethnicities misses the whole point.

However, a representative for the film revealed that Chan’s character is actually Chinese, and the plot involves some mysteries on the hero’s real identity.

In a statement released to Teen Vogue, a spokesperson for STX Entertainment said:

“SPOILER ALERT: The character is Chinese in the movie and is being brought to life on screen by Jackie Chan, one of the most beloved and popular actors known throughout the world. We can’t wait for audiences to see Jackie in this extraordinary role (with extraordinary plot twists about his true identity).”

We’ll all find out soon enough how well all this plays out as “The Foreigner” opens stateside on October 13, 2017.

Twitter is just a place to ***** about stuff nowadays. :rolleyes:

The EW interview

Good Jackie interview - best I’ve read lately.

Jackie Chan talks battling Bond and learning to build (fake) bombs for The Foreigner
The martial arts icon plays a grieving father hunting down the terrorists who killed his daughter
SHIRLEY LI@SHIRKLESXP
POSTED ON AUGUST 17, 2017 AT 9:30AM EDT


CHRISTOPHER RAPHAEL/STX

Jackie Chan may be a martial arts legend, but he admits he could use a break from the stunts.

The 63-year-old actor says he had been searching for more dramatic roles when the perfect project arrived in the form of The Foreigner, a thriller based on a 1992 novel titled The Chinaman by Stephen Leather about a despondent immigrant who sets out to hunt down those responsible for the London terrorist attack that killed his daughter. Chan leaped at the opportunity to play Quan, the soft-spoken-but-deadly antihero, even if it meant some new bruises along the way. “I’m too used to injuries,” he admits. “But if I want to keep making movies, I have to change.”

EW spoke with Chan in July about filming the action-drama opposite Pierce Brosnan (who plays British government official Hennessy, a man who knows more about the bombing than he lets on) and getting a chance to flex his acting muscles along with his literal ones. (Note: This interview was conducted in Mandarin, and has been translated below.)

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: What drew you to The Foreigner, to doing a drama?

JACKIE CHAN: To put it simply, I’m not young anymore. [Laughs] If I still want to keep making movies, I have to be, like, an Asian De Niro, Dustin Hoffman, or Clint Eastwood, who at 80 can still be actors. When you think about it, in Japan, Hong Kong, China, U.S., there are so many action stars, but a lot of them now are no longer working.

So that’s why I’m saying I have to change. After all these decades, I’m sure you’ll understand, I’m always changing, looking for a good story. I believe that after these years the audience will understand that Jackie Chan is an actor and no longer just an action star, just a kung fu star. So today I’m still working in action, and it’s not easy, but if I want to keep making movies, I have to change.

What about the story itself attracted you to this role? Did you read the novel?

Yes. A few years ago, the screenwriter was talking to me about the story, and he said to me, “If you don’t do this role, no one can.” And I really liked the story, I liked the character. He’s someone who’s been through a tough past, but found a comfortable life and stays out of trouble, he retired and he doesn’t want to let anyone know about his past, but very sadly, he meets another tragedy. Because of that, he has to rely on his old skills and use them to protect other innocent people, and take revenge on what happened to his daughter.

But even then, this method of revenge isn’t good either, you know? It’s not the best solution. I hope through this film people will understand that violence shouldn’t be the only answer. You can’t say, you screwed with me and now that you’ve done that I’m going to also hurt your people. That’s not right either.

A lot of the stunts in The Foreigner aren’t huge set pieces, but smaller, hand-to-hand combat scenes that take place in corridors and confined spaces instead of, say, through entire hotels or major landmarks.

Yes, because at this age, that helps with my work. And I play the owner of a restaurant in the film, who has spent many years not moving around… So my fighting style in this has to be believable. He’s old, so in the beginning I’m walking slowly. And after I set out for vengeance, then I could start to bring out the force of my fighting style. Just, depending on what scene it is or situation it is, you have to match your fighting style to it.

How intense were those fight scenes? Any injuries?

I’m too used to injuries. To me, if you don’t end up in the hospital, then those don’t count as injuries. [Laughs] That happens very little, but of course, I definitely got some in this; they always happen when you do action films.

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Let’s talk about your character a little more. He’s a father who decides to hunt down the terrorists who bombed an ordinary street in London, killing his daughter (Katie Leung). Why do you think a story like this, adapted from a novel published in 1992, is important to tell now?

Because when you look at these past decades, how many innocent people have been killed by bombings and by terrorism? They were innocent, and it’s devastating, and I hope this film will open hearts and help people see that they shouldn’t hurt people and shouldn’t do anything like this. Through The Foreigner, and through the music I write, I want to make it clear that it’s devastating to see so many innocent people hurt in these attacks. Why isn’t it possible for the world to find peace? We can’t let a small group of people hurt this many people. That’s why I filmed this…. The Manchester bombing hadn’t happened yet when we were filming. After we finished, it happened. And something like what happened in Manchester, around there, all around the world, in every corner, things like that are happening.

So filming this was a chance to talk about peace. We, all of us, need peace, in order to build a peaceful world and live a peaceful life. I filmed that, and then I looked around and saw there were bombings everywhere…. I really think, if what I do can help spread peace, then I’m happy! I hope that this movie, after people see it, hopefully there will be fewer bombs, maybe it’ll take away one or two. Even that I feel like would be a positive effect on the world.

Well, speaking of bombs, Quan does build quite a few intricate homemade ones throughout the film to threaten the officials keeping information from him. Was there someone on set who helped you through those sequences?

Yes, on set, there was an expert who taught me.

Wait, so you know how to build a bomb?

Oh, no, no, no. I don’t know how to build them, that’s way too hard. [Laughs] It’s just for appearances.

What was it like working with Pierce Brosnan and director Martin Campbell (Casino Royale)?

Martin is, out of all the directors I’ve met over the years and worked with over the years, one of the most hard-working directors I’ve met. Really! He’s even more hard-working than I am. [Laughs] He works hard, he’s always prepared.

Pierce Brosnan, well, he’s excellent, very focused on his work. He’s an actor who, I’ll tell you this, there was one day he woke up at 6 [in the morning] and got dressed and ran lines and trained with me and then I said, “Okay, now you’re off to hair and makeup?” And he said, “No, I’m going back to bed,” and I said “What?! You came here just to help me rehearse?! Wow!” I was very emotional; I mean these days, how many actors are there who would do that for you? So I felt, I thought my partners and collaborators were very professional, very hardworking. I was very happy.

Did it ever cross your mind that you were in scenes with a former James Bond?

No, we’re just two actors… I’ve met him before, actually. We were in Africa together once for Miss World [in 1993, when Chan was a judge and Brosnan a presenter], but I never thought we’d get a chance to work together. And I remember through Michelle Yeoh, I’ve also met him, so I’m very happy to get to work with him. On set, he could teach me and help me with my English, and when it came to fighting, I would help him. We worked together really well.

What’s next for you, after this film?

I hope every year I can get to make different films and do different things, maybe voice more animated films, or make films where you see me doing things you haven’t seen me try before, or even ones where you see me do familiar things. And on top of that, I want to continue singing songs. It’s all to demonstrate that I can do more [than fighting]. I hope the more you see me, the more you can understand that I’m capable of many things.

The Foreigner arrives in theaters October 13.

The Foreigner (2017) - Ordinary People - Official Exclusive Song Video HD - Jackie

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The Foreigner | “Assault” Extended Look | In Theaters October 13, 2017

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The Foreigner | Final Trailer | In Theaters October 13, 2017

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