Director of Gangster Movie on Trial for Threatening Promoter
Before “The Choice,” a movie about Shanghai’s World War II-era
underworld, ever made it onto the silver screen, its director was
accused of dabbling in the gangster life himself.
On Monday,
director Jiang and three other employees from the film’s production
company stood trial in Beijing’s Chaoyang District court, reported The
Beijing News. Prosecutors have charged the four with “picking quarrels”
on the suspicion that they assaulted and threatened employees of a
promotion company to get them to buy the rights to their film.
“The
Choice,” or “Junzidao,” is a sequel to a classic Hong Kong TV show,
“The Bund,” which was popular on the Chinese mainland in the 1980s. The
movie revolves around the shady dealings of various gangs and tycoons in
Shanghai during the Second World War, and on promotional posters it was
advertised as the Chinese version of “The Godfather.”
In
September 2015, Dalian Fengshangru Media Culture Co. Ltd., the
production company Jiang worked for, commissioned an advertising agency
to promote “The Choice.” Two months later, Jiang had yet to pay his
bill, and instead proposed that the agency buy the rights to the movie
for 80 million yuan ($12 million), under the assurance of a 200
million-yuan box office showing.
It is common in China’s movie
industry for distributors to pay a film’s producers up front. This
practice ensures that producers receive a return on their investment,
and it gives distributors a chance to see a huge windfall. One recent
example of a movie that was distributed this way is the current domestic
box office record holder, “Wolf Warrior 2.”
But a screening of “The Choice” disappointed the agency’s head,
surnamed Lin, and its deputy manager, surnamed Sun. They apparently
decided that Jiang’s offer was one they could refuse, and instead
insisted he pay off the promotion campaign’s 2 million-yuan balance,
according to the prosecutors.
But Jiang reportedly would not take
no for an answer. He solicited two colleagues to repeatedly intercept
and intimidate the victims, including Lin, Lin’s wife, the family’s
babysitter, and Sun. The prosecutors listed seven separate offenses —
including damaging property, setting up a camera to monitor Lin’s home,
and using a GPS device to track Lin’s car — during the hearing,
according to The Beijing News.
In response to the allegations, Jiang questioned the prosecutors’
accounts of the seven infractions. During the hearing, he accused Lin’s
company of making up statistics for the movie’s publicity campaign, and
explained his actions as a way to get a meeting with Lin and talk things
over.
One of the other Fengshangru defendants, a man surnamed Yu,
said throwing glass bottles with threatening messages into Lin’s home
was supposed to get Lin to come out. Jiang also explained that the
tracking device was installed because he couldn’t find Lin.
“I didn’t make trouble on purpose,” said Jiang. “All these things were done to get a meeting with them.”
“The
Choice” was originally scheduled to premiere in October 2015. The
latest post on its official Weibo microblog was from two years ago,
saying the release had been postponed because of intense competition
during the October holidays. Nearly two years later, the movie has yet
to be screened publicly.
The Beijing News did not say when the
court expects to reach a verdict. The prosecutors have reportedly
recommended to the court that Jiang be sentenced to between two and
three years in prison.
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