Imagine being pitched the opportunity to direct a computer graphic-laden 3D fantasy/adventure movie replete with vindictive mermaids, combating crustaceans and marauding sharks on one of the world’s largest sound stages. Oh, and throw in a Bond girl and a production budget of US$150 million.
Three years ago, filmmaker and former Edmontonian Michael French, 60, jumped at the chance to helm such a project, a venture called Empires of the Deep, billed as the largest 3D outing ever made. Not in the U.S. or Europe, but in the People’s Republic of China.
“It was a dream come true,” said French, who shot the movie on a sound stage roughly the size of three football fields outside Beijing. “The experience was so unbelievable, especially with such a big budget tied to it.”
It doesn’t matter to French that Empires, still in post-production, probably won’t be released in North America, even with an English script and Quantum of Solace star Olga Kurylenko in the lead. A devoted Asian audience base closely following behind-the-scenes developments will very likely result in a profit for the bankrolling China Film Group company.
Likewise, it didn’t matter to Chinese film executives that French, who cut his directorial teeth on sports documentaries and made-for-TV comedy programs, had never before directed a major action flick. Or that he’s not even remotely fluent in any Chinese dialect. But French did have experience in the Chinese film industry, which dated back 25 years.
In 1986, he landed a gig, directing Heart of a Dragon, a documentary that captured wheelchair athlete Rick Hansen’s exploits on the Great Wall of China. He recalled the cultural differences there were minor compared to a political system completely foreign to him.
“I found out very quickly about how restrictive it was,” said French. “The tension was real. We needed permission for absolutely everything. If you are from the west and want something done in China, where there are always political issues, get ready to wait.”