Thursday, December 31, 2009

Sherwood Hu films video for the Shanghai 2010 World Expo

Sherwood Hu, director of Prince of the Himilayas (2006), was in Shanghai this past week filming a video for the Shanghai pavillion of the Shanghai 2010 World Expo. The video is meant to convey the Shanghai experience of the past century and the grand development of Shanghai in the current era. It is a very feel good piece, so do not expect any wartime scenes or period of cultural revolution struggle.
The most interesting thing was the camera rig they used to film this. Since it is intended to be projected in around the walls of the pavilion, it was necessary to film 360 degrees. The camera team used 5 Canon Mark II SLR cameras rigged together (one up and 4 at 90 degrees to one another)

The camera team and the impromptu Canon 360 degree rig


The crew was a combination of local talent and a photography department from USA that will be doing some of the work on Spiderman 4. The photo rig was their solution to film for a 360 degree projection on a severely low budget. The production was commissioned by Shanghai so it was done on a limited budget that would not allow a typical IMAX-style camera but they needed the same results. The resolution is only in HD from these cameras but the results are still admirable.


Christian Bachini (l), Richard Trombly and Alex Genneopoulos pose as 1930s stock traders

Many of the local expatriate actors were called on to act in this piece to fill some of the grand old dance halls and galleries on the Bund. The mandate was to show the grandiose scale of Shanghai in the 1930s before WWII and Shanghai's current grand scale of modern development.
"It is great to be in the project and work with a director like Sherwood Hu," said Christian Bachini. He is a young actor from Italy who came to China specifically to work on martial arts films, learn from Chinese martial artists and is also  studying the Chinese language. He and Alex Genneopoulus have taken part in several short films as stuntmen, extras or actors and were cast in the upcoming film Chen Zhen.
The Shanghai 2010 Expo will run from May 1 to October 31, 2010 in Shanghai, China.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Italian film maker Gianpaolo Lupori makes his mark on the China film scene

***Gianpaolo Lupori and Richard Trombly have collaborated on many projects including the below-mentioned film "MeatSpace" which was recently featured in a Chong Qing, China film festival.***



Italian film maker focuses on China's urban youth




NEWSPAPER EDITION
2009-12-9 00:00

CINEMATIC postcards from the edge are created by an Italian film maker focusing on young Chinese Internet addicts and others on the fringes of the urban mainstream. Sam Riley reels it in.

The lives of young people in China's fast-changing urban environments fascinate Italian film maker Gianpaolo Lupori, who delves into Shanghai's metropolis to tell stories from the fringes of the mainstream.

In his film "Meatspace," recently screened at the Chong Qing Film Festival, Lupori looks at young Chinese who spend so much time online in cyberspace that they refer to their "real lives" as time spent in "Meatspace."

The inspiration for the 17-minute film came while Lupori was working in a computer games company in Shanghai.

The characters are "real people," not actors, and some were the online enthusiasts that Lupori worked with.

They talk in Shanghai dialect, with English and Mandarin Chinese subtitles.

"I researched online, but not understanding Chinese was a huge handicap. But through working with these kids, who also acted in the film, I was able to understand a lot more," he says.

"Meatspace" is very much about what is happening in China, he says.

Lupori, who has lived in Shanghai since 2004, says he was drawn to the idea of people who identify more with their online life than their day-to-day reality.

"Not knowing Chinese I had to take information second- or third-hand about the online world of these kids but I kind of like that," he says.

"Before I did the film, I hadn't played an online game, and as an outsider in the culture you have a unique position as an observer. You can see things that those who are totally involved in that life may not."

"Meatspace" was shot on just 1,200 yuan (US$176) and Lupori hopes it will become the pilot of a full-length feature film.

He worked extensively with the Shanghainese actors to make sure the dialogue was right and that it reflected the way a young online computer enthusiast would speak.

Lupori has shot another two short films, again on shoestring budgets of less than 1,500 yuan each.

One of the films, the 12-minute "Dark Moon" is about problems of making connections in a big city. It was screened at Shanghai's Meiwenti film festival in June 2008.

His third movie, still untitled, was filmed this year and follows the mishaps of a young man who finds a bag on the street of Shanghai and tries unsuccessfully to get rid of it.

Lupori would like to screen all the three films together because they are all urban stories about local people, "universal stories but very localized."

Telling stories from China's urban heart might seem a leap for Lupori, who grew up in the barren rural landscape of southeastern Italy in countryside near the port city of Bari.

At first he followed his parents, working in childhood education that runs arts, crafts, music and multimedia activities to engage children in learning.

He worked with underprivileged children and new immigrant families. He also taught English in Italy.

Lupori came to Shanghai because the parents of his wife, Nadya Alexander, were working in the city. The couple has two children, Shawn, 9, and Aidan, 8. Alexander teaches at a Montessori school.

"The plan was to stay six months or a year at most but we got caught up in the spirit of the potential that is such a part of Shanghai," Lupori says.

He taught English before moving into acting and film. On arriving he quickly gained a toehold in the local film community, getting parts as an extra in Hollywood films "The White Countess" and "The Painted Veil." He was also a stand-in for Jonathan Rhys Myers in "Mission Impossible 3."

He was a runner on sets, organizing actors and equipment on shoots. In 2007 he got a part in a high-profile commercial for electronics manufacturer Philips Global that was directed by acclaimed director Wong Kar-wai.

He also has been directing programs for Luxe, a series of in-flight television shows featuring China's luxury goods industry, for Shanghai Airlines.

Looking back on five years in Shanghai, Lupori says he has forged a career in the local film and media industry that would not have been possible in his home country.

"The media industry in Italy is very closed, and there is no room for innovation and it is all in the hands of a few people," he says.

"Film making is not what it used to be in Italy - I thought I might be able to be a critic or something but never what I have been able to do here."Gianpaolo Lupori

Nationality: Italian

Age: 32

Profession: Media producer

Q&A

Description of self (three words):

Scruffy, analytical, picky.

Favorite place:

The inside of any means of transportation.

Worst experience:

Yet to come.

Motto for life:

"Life is what happens to you while you are busy making plans." (John Lennon)

How to improve Shanghai:Less luster and a little more drama. I fear that the obsession with improvements is rendering the city sterile, dull and lifeless. Every city needs a healthy dose of grime.

Advice to newcomers:

Get over the disappointment of not encountering the much anticipated cultural shock and realize that the city does have an exotic strain, faint as it may be.