|      The director    of China's biggest box-office hit says    "Lost in Thailand" succeeded by    showing a rarely seen subject: modern Chinese life. The historical epic,    fantasy, action and thriller genres have long filled China's domestic movie    screens. But "Lost in Thailand" was a low-budget and light-hearted    road-trip tale about an ambitious executive who goes to Thailand to get his    boss's approval for a business deal. Along the way he's pursued by a rival    co-worker and encounters a wacky tourist who helps him rethink his    priorities. "There is hunger    from the audience for movies that talk about the real-life situation in    China. That's why the movie rocked," said Xu Zheng,    the film's director, writer and star. "There is a lack of    films that talk about things that are related to the life of ordinary    people" in China, he added. Unusually for a Chinese    release, the movie was a moral comedy whose characters reflect stressed-out,    overworked, wealth-obsessed China. Xu said his character,    businessman Xu Lang, "represented the    majority of the people, who are chasing after fame and desire, then becoming    successful. That's what most of us do." The movie starts with the    executive hardened by cutthroat business competition and worn out by family    troubles. He and a wacky tourist, co-star Wang Baoqiang, experience a series    of capers and mishaps in scenes heavy with slapstick humor. In the end, Xu    Lang realizes he's had his priorities all wrong. "Lost in    Thailand" smashed domestic box-office records, raking in 1.26 billion    yuan ($200 million) last year, an especially surprising tally since it was    not released until December. It edged out "Avatar" to become the    biggest-grossing Chinese movie ever as China    became the world's second-biggest movie market last year. Most other Chinese-made    hits last year were in traditional categories, such as Jackie Chan's action flick "CZ12," which    was the second-highest-grossing Chinese movie in 2012. The blockbuster success    of "Lost in Thailand" may spur a wave of copycats. Xu has no plan    yet for a sequel, but the state-run Xinhua News Agency has reported studios    are lining up to "chase the craze" and a burst of such films could    hit Chinese screens this year. With such a huge return    from its $2.2 million budget, "some filmmakers have begun pondering how    to replicate the film's box office miracle," Xinhua said. It did not    mention any specific projects, but other Chinese news sites have been buzzing    about Raymond Yip's upcoming film about two brothers on a road trip. Yip directed 2010's    "Lost on Journey," a sort of prequel to "Lost in    Thailand" also starring Xu and Wang. The plot of his new film,    "Along Crazy All The Way," which has a different cast, is being    kept under wraps. But a hint can be found in the title, which is the same as    one of two Chinese names given to "Planes, Trains    and Automobiles," the 1987 Hollywood comedy starring Steve Martin and John Candy    about a man trying to get home for Thanksgiving accompanied by an obnoxious    salesman. Xu has acted in more than    a dozen movies, but "Lost in Thailand" is his directorial debut. He    said the film was greatly influenced by a few of his favorite Hollywood    movies. "I did a lot of    research before making the film and I used some films as reference, such as    'Rain Man,' (the Belgian film) 'The Eighth Day' and 'Midnight Run,'" Xu    said. "These are movies about two people becoming friends along the way    on a journey." Xu cited "Midnight    Run" in particular as one of his favorites, and the parallels between    the two are evident. The 1998 film stars Robert DeNiro as a bounty hunter    taking an ex-mob accountant played by Charles Grodin from New York to Los    Angeles to collect a payment and trying to avoid the Mafia and the FBI along    the way. Xu said he hasn't yet    decided what his next project will be. He said he's had some offers to remake    his movie but for now his priority will be on Chinese audiences. He might    return to acting but is taking his time before making any decisions.  |    
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