Home>News Center>Life
         
 

China company debuts TV show for small screen
By Stephanie Hoo (Associated Press)
Updated: 2005-08-09 09:08

It's a super-modern love story made for the small screen — the very small screen. Two motorcycle racers vie for the same woman in Appointment, a romance squeezed into five-minute episodes made to be shown on mobile phone screens half the size of a credit card.


An episode of the mobile phone drama Appointment is filmed in Shanghai. The show was made to be shown on mobile phone screens. [AP]
Its makers hope the 25-minute series will capture attention in China's crowded mobile phone market, where entrepreneurs are competing furiously to come up with the latest gimmick.

"Chinese people, especially, like new things," said Gang Wei, a 20-year-old student actress who is making her professional debut in the series. "They want what's next."

The competition is intense, but with 400 million customers in the world's biggest mobile phone market, China offers a potential jackpot to the company that invents a new craze.

Last year, one company debuted a mobile phone-based novel written to be transmitted in 70-word chapters.

In June, Chinese online service Tom Online Inc. announced a deal with U.S. movie studio Warner Bros. to offer games and animation to 60 million wireless customers.

The latest innovation comes from Beijing's Le-TV Media Group Corp., which says Appointment is China's first TV show made just for mobile phones.

Few will be able to see it, though.

The series can be viewed only on sophisticated phones with Internet connections made by South Korea's LG Electronics Inc., one of the sponsors of Appointment.

The LG phones cost about $850 — a lavish sum in a country where the average person makes less than $1,000 a year. The price of the average Chinese mobile phone is closer to $150 and the most bare-bones model can cost as little as $36.

"It will show what the latest phone technology can do," said Le-TV Media general manager Liu Hong.

Appointment is just one early example of what's being pegged as the next boom in mobile entertainment after music, though some industry observers have doubts about whether users will pay very much to watch TV on a phone's tiny screen.

This year, Twentieth Television introduced in the U.S. and elsewhere a cellular spinoff of its Fox network suspense serial, 24. Called "24: Conspiracy, this series of 24 original one-minute "mobisodes" (short for mobile episodes) was produced complete with opening titles and cliffhangers. But 24: Conspiracy could play to only a select U.S. audience: Verizon customers with phones equipped for this premium service and located in the limited number of markets that offer it.

A new form of storytelling, Cell TV means new challenges for actors, who must tell their story quickly in tight shots.

"The gestures I make are very limited," said Luo Ji, who plays one of Gang's suitors. "Your emotions should only come from facial expressions. It's quite difficult acting."

"A mobile phone screen is only so big, so it doesn't make sense to have shots that are very wide." said Yu Enyuan, general manager of Le-TV's sister company XBell Technology Group.

Yu originated the idea of filming a mobile phone drama.

"There's very little dialogue — just a lot of close-ups and gestures, with a soundtrack that'll be added in editing," he said. "We're pursuing a dreamlike beauty."

The series was filmed on a budget of $360,000.

Le-TV Media hopes to pay for this production entirely through company sponsorships. But if the technology proves popular, viewers would pay to watch future programs.

Such services, however, are competing for a small group of customers at the top end of the Chinese mobile phone market.

The vast majority of customers sign up for cut-rate services that offer only the features they need, with no premium text-messaging or roaming.

Such low-cost accessibility has made mobile phones universal. No small-town taxi driver's business card is complete without a mobile phone number. Women switch phone covers to color coordinate with their outfits. During the morning commute, subway cars are filled with the trilling of ring tones based on tunes ranging from Greensleeves to the theme from the TV series Dallas.

A mobile phone TV drama is perfect for a viewer waiting to catch a plane, riding a bus or relaxing after a big meal, Liu said.

"Just as computers changed our lives completely," he said, "so will mobile phones."



Tony Leung to appear in Hollywood film
Carina Lau to be short-lived CEO
Oscar winner Theron to wed
  Today's Top News     Top Life News
 

At least 123 miners trapped by flooding

 

   
 

Central bank to open 2nd HQ in Shanghai

 

   
 

Australia seeks nuke co-op with China

 

   
 

Experts begin picking pandas for Taiwan

 

   
 

Shuttle Discovery lands safely in California

 

   
 

Nation wants more say in IPR topics

 

   
  Couples to join the Chinese Valentine's Day gala
   
  Nothing queer for 'metrosexual' men in pink
   
  Wild orgies leave the Great Wall in mess, and tears
   
  Chinese produce nation's first cloned pig
   
  'Dying in sleep' linked to sleep apnea - study
   
  China company debuts TV show for small screen
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
Novel form of writing read by fingers
  Feature  
  1/3 Chinese youth condone premarital sex  
Advertisement
         
主站蜘蛛池模板: jjzz日本护士| 中文字幕日韩欧美一区二区三区 | 精品综合久久久久久888蜜芽| 国产成人精品一区二三区在线观看| 中文无码久久精品| 欧美h片在线观看| 啦啦啦中文中国免费高清| 黑白配hd视频| 岳又湿又紧粗又长进去好舒服| 久久精品青草社区| 欧美国产日本高清不卡| 亚洲精品无码不卡在线播放 | 国产自国产自愉自愉免费24区| 久久午夜夜伦鲁鲁片免费无码影视 | 中文在线三级中文字幕| 日本黄色片免费观看| 亚洲AV无码专区在线亚| 男女男精品视频| 四虎影视久久久免费观看| 67194成l人在线观看线路无码| 奶大灬舒服灬太大了一进一出| 九九热这里都是精品| 欧美成人鲁丝片在线观看| 另类国产ts人妖视频网站| 青青青视频免费| 国产青草视频在线观看免费影院| 一二三四在线观看免费中文动漫版 | 日韩电影免费在线观看视频| 免费一级特黄特色大片在线 | 国产三级毛片视频| 国产精品免费久久久久影院 | 手机看片一区二区| 小小影视日本动漫观看免费| 久久久久国产精品免费看| 欧美日韩一区二区三区四区在线观看| 可以免费看黄的app| 蜜臀91精品国产高清在线观看| 国产精品美女久久久久| av一本久道久久综合久久鬼色| 日本牲交大片免费观看| 乱子伦一级在线现看|