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Jackie Chan is awesome
#31
I'm subscribed to the Criterion channel, but they don't show these yet as streaming.
But among the double features they promote is the odd pairing of Last Hurrah for Chivalry and The Umbrellas of Cherbourg.

The reasoning is that both John Woo and Jacques Demy were trying to revitalize their genres, and also John Woo ranks The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (with a very young Catherine Deneuve) as a personal favorite.  There were other parallels mentioned, but I think it's mostly a pairing designed to draw attention.
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#32
That would be an awesome double feature, especially if it could be turned into some sort of drinking game.
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#33
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#34
It must Jackie Chan day on the inter-webs.

As a matter of fact, my anger does keep me warm

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#35
Jackie Chan is only 10th?

I have so many questions about this list. First, is it based on world-wide box office or just domestic? They do factor in other earnings besides BO but it still seems like Jackie should be higher than tenth. I want to more. Funny that Lin Manuel made it on the list mainly due to Hamilton on Disney+


Quote:Dwayne Johnson is the highest-paid actor in Hollywood for the second year in a row. Forbes released its annual list on Tuesday, which featured usual suspects like Johnson, Mark Wahlberg and Vin Diesel. And it’s interesting to note that six of the top 10 actors had one interesting thing common: Netflix.
Ryan Reynolds, Wahlberg, Ben Affleck and Diesel round out the top 5 thanks to Netflix, while Adam Sandler benefited the most from the streaming giant. Sandler, who came in at No. 9, was paid $31 million — 75 percent of what he made all year, according to Forbes — as part of his four-film, $250 million deal signed in 2014. It’s why he has popped up the list in recent years. Although some may not think of Sanders as the box office draw he was a decade ago, his Netflix film Murder Mystery is one of the company’s most-popular original films of all time.
Johnson, one of Hollywood’s most bankable stars, even got a boost from Netflix. Forbes estimates the actor earned $87.5 million in 2020, with $23.5 million being paid out by Netflix for the upcoming film Red Notice. The company spent more than any individual studio on Hollywood’s leading men, according to Forbes, and Netflix really invested in Reynolds.
Reynolds, who appears alongside Johnson in Red Notice, starred in this year’s Six Underground and he reportedly raked in more than $20 million a piece for both films. Netflix announced they are teaming up with the Deadpool star for a third film.
Netflix isn’t the only streamer that shelled out big bucks. Akshay Kumar, the only Bollywood star to make the list, helped earn his spot with Amazon Prime’s upcoming television series The End. Lin-Manuel Miranda made his debut thanks to Disney acquiring the movie rights to the original Broadway production of Hamilton.
Forbes — which will release its list of highest-paid female actors next month — takes into account more than just acting gigs, as all of the leading men have business ventures that help catapult them to the top. Here’s a breakdown:
1. Dwayne Johnson: $87.5 million
2. Ryan Reynolds: $71.5 million
3. Mark Wahlberg: $58 million
4. Ben Affleck: $55 million
5. Vin Diesel: $54 million
6. Akshay Kumar: $48.5 million
7. Lin-Manuel Miranda: $45.5 million
8. Will Smith: $44.5 million
9. Adam Sandler: $41 million
10. Jackie Chan: $40 million

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#36
Fair questions. Good to see Akki on there. Both him and Jackie must have strangely divested portfolios given their markets. They are really the only two non-Hollywood stars here.
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#37
Btw, remember this?


(11-04-2010, 02:10 PM)Drunk Monk Wrote: So I was supposed to interview Akshay for the last issue.  His agents (yes, three actually) contacted me.  They sent me pics and asked for questions.  I submitted questions, but Akki never answered.  Meanwhile, I figured I'd catch up on his films and this was reputed to be one of his best.  Honestly, I'd only seen Chandhi Chowk, which was very enjoyable.  When I saw that flick, in a theater no less, others in the audience told me I had to see this one.  Why not?  Snoop Dogg is in it.  Seriously.  

I wonder if Akki will ever get back to me with those interview answers...


He never did.
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#38
He's obviously too big for you.
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#39
(08-13-2020, 05:47 AM)Greg Wrote: He's obviously too big for you.

No doubt. The irritating thing was that his reps reached out to me and then didn't follow through. In retrospect, I should have offered him the cover. That would've been an insane bit of crossover - super hard to pitch to G2 (she had difficulties with any non-Mandarin speakers) - but man, I would've been so ahead of the curve there. It would've been the first US newsstand mag cover for Akki (still might be as I've never seen any Indian stars on a US newsstand mag). My readership would've been split but I know, again in retrospect, I could've defended it. 

Still bummed. One of the big ones that got away.
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#40
Quote:Sep 15, 2021 1:08pm PT
New Jackie Chan Film ‘Ride On’ Starts Shooting Amid Early Musings of Box Office Trouble

By Rebecca Davis
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[Image: jc.jpg?w=681&h=383&crop=1]
Courtesy of Gravitas Ventures

[url=https://variety.com/t/jackie-chan/]Jackie Chan
 has begun shooting his next film, a martial arts-based comedy about a man and his horse, entitled “Ride On.”
The 67-year-old superstar remains as prolific as ever, churning out a movie a year since 2019, despite the pandemic. While the presence of his name on a marquee continues to sell tickets, a number of his latest works have been critical bombs. On the Chinese Douban review platform, viewers rated last year’s “Vanguard” with a 4.5 out of 10, 2019’s “Mystery of the Dragon Seal: Journey to China” 3.6 out of 10, and “The Knight of Shadows: Between Yin and Yang” a 3.8.
His latest could break the streak. In “Ride On,” Chan will play a down-and-out, washed-up martial artist named Lao Luo, who is very attached to his beloved horse. When he becomes mired in a dispute over debt, however, it seems that the horse may be taken away from him, leading him to ask for help from his daughter Xiaobao (Liu) and her boyfriend (Guo), who embark on a road trip together to resolve the crisis.
Currently scheduled to release in 2022, the film is written and directed by Yang Zi, who helmed the light-hearted pet-themed film “Adoring,” released last New Year’s Eve.
“Ride On” is produced by Alibaba Pictures, Beijing Hairun Pictures and HG Entertainment Film Company. The film’s Chinese title roughly translates to “Dragon Horse Spirit,” with the dragon referring to Chan’s martial arts history and the horse being his beloved mount.
Alongside Chan, it stars “Adoring” actor Guo Qilin (the 25-year-old son of Guo Degang, one of China’s most recognizable crosstalk comedians) and Liu Haocun, the new young muse of Zhang Yimou whose star has risen rapidly after appearing in his “One Second” and “Cliff Walkers.”
Liu’s acting chops have been widely praised, with Zhang himself calling her the next Zhou Dongyu and even comparisons of her to a young Gong Li. But she has run into a measure of trouble with her public image online for an incident involving her parents’ dance training school. After a young student there became partially paralyzed after a spinal injury at the school, Liu’s parents tussled in court with the girl’s family over compensation issues, inciting criticism of the family for fighting the payment.
While the issue was settled, online detractors remain critical of Liu for not, as a public figure, offering a public statement or apology about the incident, which received a large amount of local press.
The incident may be tabloid-esque, but in China’s recent political climate, any whiff of scandal around an entertainer can quickly spiral out into calls for boycotts and even the erasure of past works — leaving some online questioning the film’s casting choice and whether it could have an impact on its future box office prospects.
Last year, Chan’s “Vanguard” made $44 million in China.


A little late on this one. 

Sure, sure, Jackie's latest films have sucked (I still have yet to see Vanguard). But I'll keep watching out of loyalty. 

No one has delivered the kind of cinema that Jackie has.

Nobody even comes close. 

Jackie Chan is awesome.
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#41


Ride on
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#42
My mom is reading Never Grow Up, Jackie's 2015 autobiography. She says it's good. She reads a lot - it's her primary diversion - and she's critical of books often saying they aren't good. She got it from the Sunnyvale Library service. That's a fantastic service, btw. 

I've been meaning to read this book for...well, seven years. The original title translates more into 'growing old before growing up' which works better for me.
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#43


"A Beauty Carved In Time" (刻在时间里的美好) (2023) | Jackie Chan Short Film
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#44
We might have to retitle this thread after your latest review.
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#45
Jackie has always made great films and crap films. Always.

He's still awesome.
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