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Disney’s all-Asian Mulan makes historic small-screen debut

Los Angeles – Disney’s live-action Mulan featuring an all-Asian cast finally premieres on Sept 4, launching on streaming service Disney+ in a bold small-screen gamble that analysts say could change Hollywood forever.

The lavish US$200 million film about a legendary female Chinese warrior was due to hit movie theatres in March, but became an early victim of the coronavirus pandemic, with multiple release date delays.

Last month, still uncertain over when or if movie-going families would feel safe to return, Disney rocked the industry – and its own cast – by announcing Mulan would skip theatres and premiere in living rooms instead.

“The decision for it to go on Disney+ was a big shock I think for a lot of us,” said actor Jason Scott Lee, who plays the movie’s main villain, adding that the film was “meant to be seen” on the big screen.

“At first it was devastating,” added Tzi Ma, who plays Mulan’s father. “But after a day or so, I thought about the silver lining... with Covid-19, our responsibilities grow. We want to keep everybody safe.” 

Alongside health concerns is an experiment in on-demand viewing that could dramatically alter the way audiences watch movies.

The release of Mulan comes on the same weekend that Warner Bros’ sci-fi blockbuster Tenet hits US theatres – or at least, the roughly 70 per cent that have reopened, at reduced capacity.

Unlike its rival studio, which will have to split box office receipts with theatres, Disney will keep 100 per cent of profits for Mulan, which will cost viewers US$30, on top of existing subscriptions.

While Disney has produced plenty of straight-to-video movies, it has never tried this approach with anything close to the budget of Mulan – and Tinseltown will be watching nervously.

“What happens this weekend may be remembered forever, may be a tipping point for all of Hollywood as we go into the future,” said Jeff Bock, senior analyst for industry tracker Exhibitor Relations.

“This is about how audiences are going to digest blockbuster entertainment in the future,” he added.

Easing the decision for Disney was the fact that in China – where Disney+ is not available – many theatres have reopened. It opens in Singapore on Sept 4.

Based on a 1,500-year-old Chinese ballad about a young girl who takes her ailing father’s place in the imperial army, Mulan was already expected to be one of Disney’s biggest films ever in that marketplace.

Mulan is groundbreaking in other ways, too.

The entire cast is Asian or Asian-American – a demographic serially underrepresented in Hollywood, particularly among mega-budget blockbusters. 

“This is huge, that a major studio has the confidence in an all-Asian, Asian-American cast, to put their weight and financial support behind it,” said Tzi Ma. “It should be a benchmark. It should be something the world can see, that this is viable.” 

Gone are the musical numbers and romantic sub-plots. 

New Zealand director Niki Caro chose a more mature tone, with beautifully choreographed fight scenes and landscapes reminiscent of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.

The theme of women’s empowerment also comes to the fore, both in star Liu Yifei’s physical performance, and the introduction of a mysterious new female foe (Gong Li).

“I don’t think Niki wanted to do a remake,” said Tzi Ma. “That’s not what we’re trying to do. We really want to connect to the original ballad as our focal point.

“I loved the songs... but it is not our mission here.” 

Initial reviews have been cautiously positive, with many praising the film’s stunning visuals and willingness to depart from the animation, but some criticising a lack of character depth or humour.

For the cast, after months of limbo, the film’s long-awaited release alone is reason to celebrate.

“It’s been so long, I feel like the film has been caged up, and it just needs to be set free,” said Lee.

“It needs to have its wings... let people see it in whatever format.” - AFP

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