China's Wanda opens its answer to Hollywood by Staff Writers Qingdao, China (AFP) April 28, 2018 A massive "movie metropolis" billed as China's answer to Hollywood opened on Saturday, aiming to boost the domestic film industry and attract foreign producers. A total of 50 billion yuan ($7.9 billion) has been invested in building the studio complex in the eastern port city of Qingdao, according to the project's initiator, Chinese conglomerate Dalian Wanda, which is owned by one of China's richest men Wang Jianlin. But the opening lacked the high-wattage star power that turned out for the project's inauguration in 2013, when Hollywood A-listers Leonardo DiCaprio, John Travolta and Nicole Kidman showed up for a lavish event. The waning celebrity interest comes as debt-laden Wanda has been forced to carry out a fire sale of its real estate holdings following an overseas spending spree over the last several years. The size of 500 football fields, the 376-hectare "Qingdao Movie Metropolis" features 30 studios with "the highest international standards", according to Wanda. It has already hosted some high-profile productions, including "The Great Wall" starring Matt Damon, and "Pacific Rim: Uprising". The company plans to build ten more studios. The vast complex includes a school, a hospital, luxury hotels and a yacht club inspired by one in Monaco. The mini-city also features a giant shopping mall with restaurants, an ice skating rink, an amusement park and the biggest movie theatre in Asia. "This is the largest investment the global film and television industry has ever seen," the company said. Wanda, whose interests range from real estate to entertainment, snatched up Legendary Entertainment -- maker of "Jurassic World" and Christopher Nolan's "Batman" trilogy -- for $3.5 billion in 2016, as well as US-based cinema chain AMC Theatres. In a bid to ease its debt problems, Wanda last year sold dozens of hotels and other projects to Sunac and real estate firm R&F Properties for around $10 billion.
'Eradicate the tumours': Chinese civilians drive Xinjiang crackdown Moyu County, China (AFP) April 26, 2018 The civilian group descended on the village under government instructions to "win the people's hearts", but it also had a darker mission: identifying and punishing threats to the Chinese state. Four months after the Communist Party sent the "work team" to Akeqie Kanle, a fifth of its adult population - over 100 people - had disappeared into detention and re-education centres. The team - comprising staff from a regional university - was among more than 10,000 such groups that poured into rura ... read more
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