By Sherry Qin
‘Every time I see a good comic or animation, I get excited for days, not merely for my appreciation for the work, but for my hopes for the entire Chinese animation and comics industries,” Lin Ji, a cartoonist widely known as Guosite, with over 16 million followers on Chinese social media platform Weibo, wrote after watching the latest Chinese animated hit fi lm, Ne Zha.
Since its release on July 26, Ne Zha has broken the single-day record for an animated film in China with 200 million yuan($28.6 million) and fi ve days after its debut, the movies box offi ce revenue exceeded 1 billion yuan ($141.8 million), topping the box office chart, according to the Maoyan online ticketing service. Its box office had hit 2.3 billion yuan ($328.6 million) as of August 5, and already surpassed Hollywood animated movies in China, including Zootopia($217.2 million), Coco ($171.8 million) and Despicable Me ($147.7 million). Rated 8.7 on Douban, a website which provides user reviews and recommendations, the film has become the highest rated movie of the summer.
Ne Zha, the protagonist of the fi lm, sporting two buns and dark circles around his eyes, has gone viral on Chinas social media. Ne Zha cosplays, fan art and fan fi ction fl ooded Weibo in the 10 days after its release.
The Ne Zha fever seems to be ushering in the dawn of the long-clouded Chinese animation industry. Many fans and industry insiders are calling for “the rise of Chinese comics once again.”
Ne Zha tells the story of the birth and coming of age of the mythical fi gure by the same name, who is a rebellious deity born to human parents and seen as a devil in his hometown. Adapted from one of the most renowned Chinese novels, Investiture of the Gods, the character is no stranger to Chinese audiences. In fact, there have been 18 different adaptions of TV series and animations featuring Ne Zha since 1979.
But the director of the fi lm Yang Yu tailored his Ne Zha to todays cultural context to resonate with todays audiences. To fi ght against his hometowns preconceptions, Ne Zha, a violent and defi ant fi gure in previous versions, becomes an antihero who vows to take his life in his own hands and not submit to his so-called destiny.
Yang, widely known by his nickname Jiaozi (dumpling), was a medical graduate before turning to animation. After the success of his solely-made animated short film See Through, he strove to produce an animated fi lm in the Chinese style. Yang chose Ne Zha as his fi rst project on the big screen because of the folk legends prevalence with audiences in China and the room it allowed him to shape the character to modern tastes.
“Its a folk legend told in a contemporary way. Many lines spoken by the characters are adapted from the latest and hottest memes,” wrote a viewer on Douban. “But it also raises discussion about current topics, such as pedagogy, self-identity and family relationships.”
Ne Zha is not the first animated film in recent years to spark hope for the rise of the domestic animation industry and a revival of Chinas comics industry. Monkey King: Hero Is Back (2015) and Big Fish & Begonia (2016) both provoked wide discussions on social media after they were released. Yet most viewers were attracted to their splendid visual effects and their unique styles, diverging from Hollywood and Japanese animation.
“It is no longer a pileup of meaningless Chinese icons. This movie builds a world in which solid and empathic characters have their worldviews and characteristics,” one person commented on Douban.
“It was not easy to make Ne Zha. Chinese audiences used to think that comic books and animations were only for kids. We wanted to break that stereotype, just as Ne Zha battles peoples biases,” said Yang at the premiere of the movie in Beijing on July 23.
It took Yang fi ve years and a total of 66 ver- sions to bring the story to the big screen in his efforts to make it entertaining for both children and adults. Out of over 30 different potential images of Ne Zha, Yang eventually picked the panda-eyed and slouchy boy as his lead character to challenge peoples impressions of the familiar fi gure.
Along with abandoning their bias against comics and animation, Chinese audiences also need time to cultivate the habit of enjoying them. Lin, born in the 1980s, refl ected on her journey from a comic enthusiast to a full-time cartoonist. When she was little, comic books were absolutely banned by her parents; she had to read them at night after the lights were turned off. Ten years later, when she became a cartoonist, many of her readers were introduced to her work by their parents. “I realized the environment has changed, comics and animation are being gradually accepted by Chinese society,” Lin said.
Despite the optimism of audiences and industry professionals, Yang and investors feel bittersweet about the sweeping acclaim Ne Zha is garnering.
“In the process of making Ne Zha, I saw the lack of a mature industrial system behind the production of animated films in China,”Yang said. It took 1,600 staff members from 20 production companies to create the visual effects, yet each company had different standards on the character rendering and modeling process, which posed a challenge for the director.
One of the major production companies behind Ne Zha is Coloroom Pictures, a subcompany dedicated to animated fi lms under Enlight Media, one of Chinas leading private fi lm companies. Wang Changtian, President of Enlight Media, announced the giants new animated ambitions and the founding of Coloroom in Beijing in 2015 after the major splash made by Monkey King: Hero Is Back. Yet it took Coloroom another four years to produce its next animated hit fi lm.
Compared to live action films, animated movies offer the highest risk-reward ratio in the movie business, but slow return on investment and an immature market in China make producers hesitant to venture down the animation road.
In 2017, a total of 12 domestic animated films grossed only 930 million yuan ($131.9 million), trailing far behind Ne Zhas fi ve-day box offi ce revenue.
“We will make plans for the next Ne Zha fi lm if investors can recoup their costs,” said Yang, revealing the relentless reality of the industry. So far, it appears Enlight Media and Coloroom Pictures are the biggest winners this summer.
Ne Zha is an experiment for Yang and Coloroom to test the market and pave the way to construct an industrial system for animated fi lm production. Yang and Coloroom are planning to work on a trilogy of Ne Zha and further build a series based on Investiture of the Gods, a vernacular novel much like the Marvel comics universe with many characters and heroes of which Ne Zha is only one.