« LFM’s Jason Apuzzo at The Huffington Post and AOL-Moviefone: With Great Power: A Conversation with Stan Lee at Slamdance 2012 »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Grabbers »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Bestiaire »     ...     « Slamdance 2012: LFM Reviews The First Season »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews The Return »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews V/H/S »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Wuthering Heights »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Wrong »     ...     « Midnight at the Grand Guignol: LFM Reviews The Theatre Bizarre »     ...     « Happy New Year: LFM Reviews All’s Well, Ends Well 2012 »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Ai Weiwei – Never Sorry »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews The Other Dream Team »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews The Raid »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Lay the Favorite »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Red Lights »     ...     « Slamdance 2012: Ed Wood’s Final Curtain »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews The Pact »     ...     « Slamdance 2012: LFM Reviews Faith Love + Whiskey »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews The Ambassador »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Wish You Were Here »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Where Do We Go Now? »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Searching for Sugar Man »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews The Conquerors »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews About the Pink Sky »     ...     « Slamdance 2012: LFM Reviews Buffalo Girls »     ...     « LFM’s Joe Bendel Covers The 2012 Sundance, Slamdance Film Festivals + LFM Reviews The Debutante Hunters »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Madrid, 1987 »     ...     « Submitted to the Oscars by South Korea: LFM Reviews The Front Line »     ...     « LFM Reviews: The Viral Factor »     ...     « LFM’s Govindini Murty on Lars Larson’s National Radio Show »     ...     « LFM’s Jason Apuzzo at The Huffington Post and AOL-Moviefone: “Why The Cold War is Back at the Movies” »

By Jason Apuzzo. Over at Hollywood Elsewhere, Jeffrey Wells is reporting that the People’s Republic of China is currently refusing distribution for the upcoming Angelina Jolie/Phillip Noyce/Sony actioner, Salt.  As Wells puts it, this is:

… [n]ot one of those “scenes must be removed before your film is allowed to play in China” problems, but a “sorry, but no amount of edits will satisfy us” problem. Meaning that Salt is apparently cinema non grata in that country until further notice – no theatrical bookings, no DVDs, no Blurays.  Which, of course, means a huge opportunity for Chinese video pirates and a huge potential loss for Sony Pictures.

As I recall, Wells is tight with Salt director Phillip Noyce (Patriot Games, Clear and Present Danger), so I’m assuming this story is kosher.

I’m laughing at all this because Sony just did a gigantic co-production with China on Karate Kid – and went so far as to grant the Chinese communists limited editorial control of that film’s content.  Presumably Sony agreed to this in order to grease the rails for future Sony products making their way into China … and now the Chinese have predictably stabbed Sony in the back, now that their travelogue-propaganda piece Karate Kid is already out in theaters.

This is why American filmmakers should never give in to the Chinese communist regime, or to any tyrannical regime when they demand editorial control.  Tough luck, Sony!  You can always film in Tehran, Pyongyang – or maybe just West LA.

Btw, Jolie’s doing an anodyne interview in Vanity Fair right now.  She’s still one of the sexiest women in Hollywood, but a decade of weirdness has taken its toll and frankly she’s looking a little hard …

Posted on June 29th, 2010 at 1:09pm.

Bookmark and Share

9 Responses to “China Salt-Free? Jolie’s Salt Banned in China”

  1. Jeff P. says:

    That is really strange they’ve banned Salt. From the buzz I’ve heard, there’s no anti-Chinese content that anyone has noticed in it. Any word on possible reasons for the ban from the Chinese?

    • Jason Apuzzo says:

      I really have no idea. It’s possible that there is some sort of pot-shot aimed at the Chinese in the film, or perhaps – and this is my guess – Jolie gets sultry in the film, beyond what government officials usually accept there. [They even banned a chaste little kiss from Karate Kid.] We’ll see.

  2. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Mr. K, Libertas Film Mag. Libertas Film Mag said: New LFM Post: China 'Salt'-Free? Sony/Angelina Jolie "Salt" Banned in China … See: http://bit.ly/9rpCoO [...]

  3. Trojan Horse says:

    It just goes to show you cannot cooperate with totalitarian regimes, because they will eventually bite you in the ass. Sony should have known better than to cave on “Karate Kid,” because it probably just made the Chinese think that they were weak and could be pushed around. Boo hoo. I’m not crying. This country needs to wake up and realize what is going to happen if we keep doing business with the Communist (and yeah, they are still Communist) Chinese.

  4. servethepeople says:

    Where’s “Red Dawn” when you need it?

    • Jason Apuzzo says:

      As a side note, the current word is that Red Dawn will be released in November.

  5. Pong says:

    I thought “Karate Kid” wasn’t so bad, but the film’s actually about kung fu. It makes the advertising a little weird, in retrospect.

Terms of UsePrivacy Policy Libertas Film Magazine™ is produced by The Liberty Film Festival.® Suffusion WordPress theme by Sayontan Sinha