By Simon Rabinovitch
BEIJING – More than just a box-office hit in
China, animated Hollywood comedy "Kung Fu Panda" has led Chinese
artists to find fault with their own film industry and call for
fewer government controls on culture.
The movie, which tells the story of a fat
panda who dreams of martial arts glory, was faithful to Chinese
culture and laced with good humor, but China itself may have
been incapable of producing such a film, a Chinese filmmaker and
opera director lamented.
"The film’s protagonist is China’s national
treasure and all the elements are Chinese, but why didn’t we
make such a film?" Wu Jiang, president of the China National
Peking Opera Company, was cited as saying by Xinhua news agency
on Saturday.
Lu Chuan, a young film director, applauded
"Kung Fu Panda" as a fresh and rich take on Chinese culture,
mixing references to martial arts films with classic legends.
"I cannot help wondering when China will be
able to produce a movie of this caliber," he wrote in the China
Daily on Saturday.
Lu said the government was stifling the
creativity of China’s filmmakers, explaining how he had been
asked to make an animated film for the Olympic Games, which will
be hosted by Beijing in August, but decided to walk away from
the project.
"I kept receiving directions and orders on
how the movie should be like," he said. "The fun and joy from
doing something interesting left us, together with our
imagination and creativity."
An advisory body to the country’s
rubber-stamp parliament debated this week why a film like "Kung
Fu Panda," produced by DreamWorks Animation, had not been made
in China, Xinhua reported.
A standing committee of the Chinese People’s
Political Consultative Congress said that, though there was no
secret ingredient to filmmaking success, the government ought to
relax its oversight. Opening more space for Chinese artists
would allow more innovation, ultimately giving China greater
cultural influence abroad, they concluded.
Some Chinese critics had called for a boycott
of "Kung Fu Panda" because Steven Spielberg, an executive at
DreamWorks, quit his role as artistic adviser to the Beijing
Olympics to protest China’s links to the Sudanese government.
Zhao Bandi, a Chinese artist who features pandas in his work,
also called for people to shun the film, saying that foreigners
were profiteering from China’s national symbol.– Reuters