A boom in pocket rockets
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โJeremy Goldkorn and team
1. Chinaโs new boom in pocket rockets
In this article, Ryan Woo of Reuters looks at Chinaโs 15-plus private rocket manufacturers that are betting on future demand for nanosatellites, which โweigh less than 10 kilogrammes (22 pounds) and are in some cases as small as a shoebox.โ
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Nanosatellites may be used in โmassive constellationsโฆthat can offer services ranging from high-speed internet for aircraft to tracking coal shipments.โ
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NewLine Baby is the name of Linkspaceโs reusable prototype rocket, still in its very early stages of development and 8.1 meters (27 feet) tall.
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When the rocket is ready, the company โhopes to charge no more than 30 million yuan ($4.48 million) per launchโฆa fraction of the $25 million to $30 million needed for a launch on a Northrop Grumman Innovation Systems Pegasus, a commonly used small rocket.โ
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In 2018, investors poured 3.57 billion yuan ($533 million) into Chinese space startups. One company, LandSpace, โsecured 300 million yuan in additional funding for the development of its Zhuque-2 rocketโ a month after its failed Zhuque-1 orbital launch in October 2018.
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The government is also getting in on the action: โChinaโs state defense contractors are also trying to get into the low-cost market.โ
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Also from Reuters: Photo gallery of China’s rocket startups.
2. Two Chinese workers kidnapped in Nigeria
Premium Times of Nigeria reports:
Two Chinese nationals, Sun Zhixin and Wang Quinghu, have been kidnapped in Ebonyi State, southeast Nigeria. The two men are workers of Tongyi construction company.
They were working on a road project in Ohaozara Local Government Area of Ebonyi State when they were forcefully whisked away by armed gunmen.
Ebonyi Stateโs Commissioner of Police said โa track down rescue team has been dispatched to move on in order to rescue the Chinese nationals unhurt,โ but she also โexpressed shock that the company moved to such a lonely site without applying for security from the police.โ
China-Africa-watcher Eric Olander commented:
The security of Chinese nationals in Africa is going to become a fascinating issue to follow in the years ahead now that China has a forward military deployment on the continent but is also still publicly hamstrung by its doctrine of non-interference.
Context from Nigerian Confucius:
Last year, gunmen also kidnapped a Chinese national in Zamfara state.
Chinese companies are quite active in Ebonyi state. Last month, I reported that the state is set to partner with ย Foshan Sunchees Energy Company to develop a solar panel and battery manufacturing factory at a cost of US $4m.
About ten Chinese construction companies are already handling different projects in Ebonyi, while some other 20 are handling mining activities.
3. French warship in the Taiwan Strait
A French warship passed through the Taiwan Strait on April 6, U.S. officials told Reuters, โa rare voyage by a vessel of a European country that is likely to be welcomed by Washington, [and] a sign that U.S. allies are increasingly asserting freedom of navigation in international waterways near China.โ
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The vessel was the French frigate Vendemiaire, according to the U.S. officials, who also said that โas a result of the passage, China notified France it was no longer invited to a naval parade to mark the 70 years since the founding of Chinaโs Navy.โ
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The spokesperson for Franceโs military chief of staff declined to comment to Reuters.
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Chinaโs response was to accuse France of โillegally entering Chinese waters,โ according to the Financial Times (paywall).
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Calling such a passage through the Taiwan Strait โillegalโ is new. โThis would be new language,โ said Alexander Huang, an expert on the Chinese military at Tamkang University in Taipei and a former senior government official working on cross-Strait relations, cited by the FT.
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Our whole team really appreciates your support as Access members. Please chat with us on our Slack channel or contact me anytime at jeremy@thechinaproject.com.
โJeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief
Here are the stories that caught our eye this week:
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The price of pork, Chinaโs favorite meat, is set to hit record levels later this year as a result of the havoc that African swine fever has wreaked on the countryโs hog farms. The incurable disease has now spread to all 31 provinces, province-level cities, and autonomous regions of China, and over 1 million pigs have been culled to stop the spread of the virus.
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Hong Kong jailed four key leaders of the 2014 Umbrella Movement, with two democracy activists receiving 16-month sentences. In another blow to freedom of expression in the city, Hong Kongโs largest state-controlled book distributor announced plans to relocate its warehouse to Guangzhou Province, meaning that Beijing will be able to censor materials as they pass through customs.
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The second Belt and Road Forum was attended by 37 top foreign politicians, and Beijing used the opportunity to push a message of more debt-sensitive, transparent, and green investment projects. Oddly, the forum itself appears to have been hastily put together, as the agenda of events was still blank hours before opening. Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal highlighted numbers that showed, it said, โJapanโs silent belt and road is beating Chinaโs.โ
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Women now buy more suits than men in China, at least according to data from Alibaba affiliate websites. The trend has been picking up steam for a while, but has recently been turbocharged by the streaming-TV series All Is Well (้ฝๆบๅฅฝ dลu tวng hวo), in which the gender-bias-busting protagonist played by Yรกo Chรฉn ๅงๆจ wears a suit.
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Fร n Bฤซngbฤซng ่ๅฐๅฐ has returned, but the internet mob does not want her. Six months after the superstar actressโs tax evasion scandal, she made a surprise appearance at the ninth anniversary gala of iQiyi, one of Chinaโs most popular video-streaming platforms. But one of the most upvoted comments on a posting about Fanโs presence at the event reads: โGet the f**k outta here.โ
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Chinaโs luxury consumers are alive and well and buying Birkins, the Hermรจs handbags that sell for $10,000 to $300,000 a pop. The French luxury house posted quarterly results that showed the fastest revenue growth in more than four years, much of it attributed to Chinese consumers.
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The United Kingdom has approved the use of Huawei equipment for at least some parts of its 5G data network, despite American pressure. The Trump administration had for months been calling on many countries, especially allies, to reject the use of Chinese telecom equipment, especially from Huawei.
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Xi Jinping wants China to be a โstrong maritime nationโ (ๆตทๆดๅผบๅฝ hวiyรกng qiรกngguรณ), and has made a focused effort to modernize the Peopleโs Liberation Army Navy (PLAN). Meanwhile, a series of Reuters reports is documenting how โChina is replacing America as Asia’s military titan.โ
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In U.S.-China โtech cold warโ news, there are growing worries about Chinese use of artificial intelligence research funded by foreign organizations, and an American cancer research center has dismissed three scientists in connection with national security worries. The Wall Street Journal also reported that China is exploiting U.S. satellites โto strengthen [its] police and military power.โ At the same time, the world is slowly realizing that it is no longer possible to shut out Chinese technology.
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A migrant construction worker in Qingdao complained about low-quality helmets, making a viral video showing the differing quality of his helmet and a managerโs. He claims he was fired and blacklisted from construction contractors for his complaint.
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Over 200 million Weibo posts will be archived by the National Library of China. No word on what the National Library will do with the many millions of Weibo posts that are censored each year.
BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:
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Ctrip in India
Chinaโs Ctrip now owns half of Indiaโs MakeMyTrip following share swap with Naspers / TechCrunch ย
โCtrip will boost its ownership of MakeMyTrip, which is listed on the Nasdaq as Ctrip, to 49 percent through an exchange deal that sees Naspers, the South African internet giant and early backer of Tencent, swap its shares for 5.6 percent of Ctrip.โ -
Stock market blues
In China stocks, a $2.3 trillion rebound is giving way to gloom / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
โBeijingโs shift in stimulus tone has undermined confidence.โ -
Tech winter
China tech has hangover from last yearโs IPO party / The Information
โThe market for Chinese IPOs has been hit by an economic slowdown thatโs weighing on corporate growth, along with a stricter regulatory environment and stock drops at some of the companies that grabbed headlines when they went public last year.โ
SCIENCE, HEALTH, AND THE ENVIRONMENT:
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Astronomy
Huge Chinese cosmic-ray observatory begins operation / Physics World
One of the worldโs largest and most sensitive cosmic-ray facilities has begun operation with its first set of detectors. Located about 4410 meters above sea level in the Haizi Mountain in Sichuan Province in southwest China, the 1.2 billion yuan ($180m) Large High Altitude Air Shower Observatory (LHAASO) will attempt to understand the origins of high-energy cosmic rays.
POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:
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U.S.-China trade war
Chinese President Xi Jinping could travel to US to sign trade deal as early as June, source says / SCMP
โChinese President Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟๅนณ could meet his American counterpart Donald Trump in Washington as early as June if the two sides can finalize a deal to end the trade war, according to a source familiar with the arrangements.โ -
Shrinking cities of the Northeast
Chinaโs shrinking cities: โMost of my classmates have leftโ / FT (paywall)
Despite the received wisdom about Chinaโs inexorable urbanization, the country now has more than 900 cities that are shrinking like Qiqihar, most of them in the north-east. The demographic consequences, in the form of an increasingly elderly population, offer another preview of tomorrowโs China.
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Huawei
Here’s which leading countries have barred, and welcomed, Huawei’s 5G technology / CNBC
A guide to which countries โhave barred, and welcomed, Huawei’s 5G technology.โ
Who owns Huawei? The company tried to explain. it got complicated. / NYT (porous paywall)
Huaweiโs PR efforts to show it is a normal private company appear to have failed. -
Belt and Road ย
Chinese President Xi Jinping tries to stem rising chorus of doubts over Belt and Road Initiative / SCMP
President Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟๅนณ sought to allay mounting scepticism and fears over his global infrastructure and trade plans on Friday, promising to prevent debt risk, promote sustainable growth and make the Belt and Road Initiative more transparent and inclusive.In a speech to almost 40 world leaders in Beijing, the Chinese leader also made a series of commitments designed to address concerns over the countryโs domestic reforms.
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Belt and Road delegates welcome Xi Jinping’s pledges, but now they want action to back them up / SCMP
Hammond courts China economic ties on Beijing trip FT (paywall)
U.K. โChancellor praises โepic ambitionโ of Belt and Road Initiative as Huawei row plays out at home.โ
Related: Opinion: Is China the worldโs loan shark? / By Deborah Brautigam in NYT (porous paywall)
โSome say Beijing lends money for infrastructure and development to pressure poor countries with debt. Not so.โ
Malaysia to see more Chinese investments along ECRL / CNA
Kenya eyes SGR cash as it seals three more deals with China / Nation (Kenya)
What China’s Belt and Road means for elephants in Laos / NPR -
Australian election will not reset relationship with China
After roller-coaster relationship, no swift invitation to Beijing likely for next PM / Sydney Morning Herald
“Beijing would like to reset relations with Australia by revisiting the Huawei decision and the South China Sea issue. But Labor has made it clear that there’s no going back on those policies,” says the Lowy Institute’s Richard McGregor.
“So in that respect, I don’t expect a Labor victory, if that’s what happens, will offer a clean slate on relations with China. There will be lots of inbuilt tensions straight off the bat.”
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Xinjiang internment camps
Uncovering China’s secret internment camps with Rian Thum / NBC News ย
A podcast and transcript of an interview with scholar Rian Thum on โthe one million Uyghurs being held in concentration camps by China.โ -
Taiwan elections and sexism
Foxconn tycoonโs bid for Taiwan presidency hits feminist storm / SCMP
โTaiwanโs wealthiest man Terry Gou (้ญๅฐ้ Guล Tรกimรญng) has caused a storm after dismissing his wifeโs opposition to his presidential bid by saying โthe harem should not meddle in politicsโ [ๅๅฎซไธ่ฆๅนฒๆฟ hรฒugลng bรนyร o gฤnzhรจng]. Gou made the comment to multiple media outlets after revealing on Thursday that his wife Delia Tseng [ๆพ้ฆจ็ฉ Zรฉng Xฤซnyรญng] had left him after his announcement last week that he intended to run for president in Januaryโs elections.โ
Gou apologizes for โharemโ remark after online furor / Taipei Times
โI would like to solemnly apologize to those who feel offended [by what I said]. I have used an inappropriate metaphor. I would like to apologize for that.โ -
Vice and endangered animals on the Myanmar border
Sex, casinos and tiger parts: Myanmar’s vice-riddled China frontier / AFP
โBentleys and BMW convertibles roll up to the โVenetian Casinoโ in Mongla on the Myanmar-China border, a melting pot of sex, drugs and gambling on a frontier that has also become a โsupermarketโ for illegally traded wildlife.โ -
Who owns Li Ruiโs diaries?
Maoโs former aide kept diaries. A lawsuit is seeking to prevent them from being released / Inkstone
Lว Ruรฌ ๆ้, a former aide to Chairman Mao, took notes.
In his diaries, he documented the inner workings of the ruling Communist Party, including everything from what he witnessed during the Cultural Revolution to Maoโs swear words.
The diaries are being held by the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, but a lawsuit filed in China is now seeking to prevent them from seeing the light of day.
Li, who died at the age of 101 in February, was a personal secretary to Mao Zedong and later a critic of the Chinese leadership, a rarity among Chinaโs political elite.
Li started keeping a diary in 1935, when he was an 18-year-old Communist activist, and only stopped in the spring of 2018, when he was hospitalized. His daughter, Lว Nรกnyฤng ๆๅๅคฎ, has given the diaries to the Hoover Institution, a public policy think tank.
But according to the daughter, her stepmother and Liโs second wife Zhฤng Yรนzhฤn ๅผ ็็ has filed a lawsuit against her at Beijingโs Xicheng district court, demanding that the writings be handed over to Zhang.
The suit says Zhang is the rightful owner of the documents as the heir to Liโs estate. It also seeks to prevent his daughter or the Hoover Institution from making their contents public.
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The fate of the Hong Kong booksellers
Hong Kong bookseller flees to Taiwan fearing extradition / AFP
A Hong Kong bookseller who disappeared into Chinese custody for half a year said Friday he has fled to Taiwan after the financial hub announced plans to approve extraditions to the mainland.
Lam Wing-kee [ๆๆฆฎๅบ Lรญn Rรณngjฤซ] was one of five publishers selling gossip-filled tomes on China’s leaders who vanished at the end of 2015, resurfacing in Chinese custody and making televised confessions.
He was allowed back to Hong Kong in June 2016 on condition that he pick up a hard drive listing the bookstore’s customers and return to the mainland.
Instead he skipped bail and went public with explosive testimony detailing how he was blindfolded by mainland police after crossing the border at Shenzhen and spent months being interrogated.
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Lamโs colleague Guรฌ Mวnhวi ๆกๆๆตท is still in detention in China.
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Remembering 1989 in Hong Kong
Tiananmen museum reopens in Hong Kong to mark anniversary / Kyodo News
โA museum documenting the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre reopened in Hong Kong on Friday after a three-year hiatus, marking the 30th anniversary of the bloody crackdown on a pro-democracy protest.โ
SOCIETY AND CULTURE:
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Marriage
โWhy arenโt you getting married?โ โ Chinaโs marriage rates keep dropping / What’s on Weibo
โChinaโs dropping marriage rates have been a hot topic in Chinese newspapers and on Chinese social media recently. Chinese netizens and state media, however, seem to have different views on what lies at the root of the matter.โ -
Crime
โStar studentโ accused of killing mother arrested after evading police for years / Caixin ย
Whoever killed Xiรจ Tiฤnqรญn ่ฐขๅคฉ็ด went to a lot of trouble to make sure nobody found her body. For seven months they succeeded. Inside her apartment, the slain 49-year-old woman was wrapped in layer after layer of plastic, with activated charcoal placed inside to absorb the smell. Surveillance cameras and infrared alarms were set all around, rigged to be remotely monitored and controlled with a smartphone.
VIDEO ON SUPCHINA THIS WEEK
Yu Bao on data protection, blockchain, and the role of Shenzhen in China
Yu Bao, a member of the UNESCAP Task Force on Digital Economy, has more than 15 years of experience in innovation incubation and investment in Chinaโs technology sector. We spoke with him in New York City in April to learn about his insights into the current development of blockchain technology in China, data protection in the country, and Shenzhenโs advantages compared with those of Silicon Valley in the tech sector.
FEATURED ON SUPCHINA
An introduction to Chinese poetry in translation: Five anthologies
April is National Poetry Month in the U.S., and weโre celebrating with a series of articles that looks at Chinese poetry, both past and present. Weโve featured poets across all eras, from Li Bai of the Tang dynasty to Xiao Hong of the 1930s to Zheng Xiaoqiong of the present day. Today we have recommendations that also stretch across the eras: anthologies of Chinese poetry that are excellent starting points for the curious reader.
The China Project Quiz: The May Fourth Movement
Itโs the last Thursday of the month, which means itโs quiz time! Last month was a quiz about U.S.-China diplomatic history. Today, with the 100th anniversary of the May Fourth Movement just around the corner, we presentโฆMay the Fourth be with you! Ten questions to test how much you know about one of the most significant moments in the history of modern China. Let us know how you do โ tweet your score to @supchinanews.
Protesting in the name of science: The legacy of China’s May Fourth Movement
Yangyang Cheng writes on the legacy of the May Fourth Movement, which set China on a new course of democracy and science โ only for one to be abandoned and the other to be appropriated for the consolidation of state power. When the revolutionary becomes the dictator, it understands too well how its own path to power is a threat to the power it now holds. Today, what is the role of scientists in affairs of the state? Do science and freedom go hand in hand? Between livelihood and freedom, between martyrdom and complicity, what choice does a Chinese scientist have?
Graveside poetry: Xiao Hong, Dai Wangshu, and the dead among us
Drawing from her experiences of war, poverty, and illness, writer Xiao Hong/Hsiao Hung ่ง็บข (1911โ1942; given name Zhang Naiying ๅผ ไน่น) produced acclaimed novels such as Tales of Hulan River and The Dyerโs Daughter.
Zheng Xiaoqiong, the migrant poet
Zheng Xiaoqiong is a seminal figure in the emerging genre of migrant worker poetry and one of the most significant living Chinese poets. Though she seems to come out of a world completely foreign to the traditional poetry reader, her work has a universal resonance. As such, her writing is more than a wellspring of meaning for each reader; it is an ocean that connects readers from worlds that might otherwise never meet.
Kuora: The usefulness of learning Chinese
Is learning Chinese (Mandarin) really worthwhile for business? Unfortunately and rather unhelpfully, the only truthful answer is “It depends.” Make no mistake: It’s a huge investment of time. One never truly masters it as a second language. For an adult non-native learner, investing enough time to learn to speak enough of the language to demonstrate respect and interest is one thing. Learning to speak well enough to actually conduct business in China is quite another.
SINICA PODCAST NETWORK
Sinica Podcast: An American Futurist in China: Alvin Toffler and Reform & Opening
This week on Sinica, China-watching wunderkind Julian Gewirtz joins Kaiser and Jeremy to chat about his recent paper on the American futurist Alvin Toffler (author of Future Shock and The Third Wave), who found a surprisingly receptive audience in the China of the early 1980s. His ideas on the role of technology in modernization were widely embraced by leaders of China’s reform movement โ including both Dรจng Xiวopรญng ้ๅฐๅนณ and his right-hand man, Zhร o Zวyรกng ่ตต็ดซ้ณ. Julian describes how Toffler came to the attention of the reformers, and discusses the lasting impact of his influence.
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Subscribe to the Sinica Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or plug the RSS feed into your favorite podcast app.
TechBuzz China: Douyuโs IPO, Panda.TVโs Death โ Let the Gaming Live-Streaming Games Begin
In Episode 43 of TechBuzz China, co-hosts Ying-Ying Lu and Rui Ma dive into the world of gaming live streaming, which is a pretty big industry in China. Specifically, our co-hosts focus primarily on two companies, Douyu and Panda.TV. The former has just filed to go public on the NYSE at a valuation of $500 million, and the latter officially shut down on March 30 of this year. Notably, these and several other players mentioned in todayโs episode have all received Tencent investment at one point or another โ not a surprise, since gaming is in Tencentโs lifeblood. Our co-hosts, while both not gamers, acknowledge that the topic of todayโs episode is interesting because it is one of the most global ones out there, with plenty of opportunities for cross-border capital.
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Subscribe to TechBuzz China on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or plug the RSS feed into your favorite podcast app.
ChinaEconTalk: Red Guards to Red Entrepreneurs: How Mao Era Thought Seeps Into Modern Chinese Business
In this episode of ChinaEconTalk, host Jordan Schneider interviews Christopher Marquis, the Samuel C. Johnson Professor in Sustainable Global Enterprise at Cornellโs SC Johnson College of Business. Christopher discusses a few of his recent publications, which focus primarily on how Chinese communist ideology impacts thinking within private sector firms and policy implementation by Chinese politicians.
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Subscribe to ChinaEconTalk on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or plug the RSS feed straight into your favorite podcast app.
The Caixin-Sinica Business Brief, Episode 84
This week on the Caixin-Sinica Business Brief: New data on Chinaโs economic growth, the civil lawsuit against JD’s Richard Liu, Chinaโs pension system, the child-modeling industry, Doug Young on whatโs going on with Amazon China, and more.
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Subscribe to the Business Brief on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher.
Middle Earth #08: How to Make a Movie in 14 Days
Making a feature film can be a long and painful process โ especially when youโre shooting an indie film in below-freezing conditions 16 hours per day for 14 days. But that is exactly what the creative team behind The Last Sunrise ๆๅ็ๆฅๅบ was able to do. Along the way, it generated useful insights into Chinaโs science-fiction movie scene and the realities of filmmaking in China on a shoestring budget. Featuring: Wen Ren, director, and Elly Li, producer and co-writer.
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Subscribe to Middle Earth on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or plug the RSS feed into your favorite podcast app.