Shanghai Trailer: Why, Exactly, Has This Been on the Weinsteins' Shelf for Two Years?
A foreign trailer for the Weinstein Company's longest-delayed film, Shanghai, surfaced recently after two years of mythmaking, rumor-mongering and general Web undermining. On the one hand, that's what happens for better or worse when Harvey Weinstein (or anyone, really -- but especially Harvey) drops a movie on his shelf. On the other, while I can't speak to the full-length feature, why is this even on a shelf in the first place?
I mean, listen: John Cusack opened one of the highest-grossing films in 2009 -- hardly on his own, but he made for a brilliant 2012 leading man because he brings the same quality to everything: He moves a story, crappy (Martian Child, War Inc.) or otherwise. In the latter class, The Grifters in particular comes to mind; he's essentially pulling the same act here as an American spy in China during the Japanese occupation as he did when he was a wheezing small-time con artist jockeying for pole position between two squirrely personalities. Tack on 20 years and some international black-ops-mission magic, there's no reason Roy Dillon couldn't have been Paul Soames if his mom hadn't smashed a glass in his jugular. But, you know, in 1941 versus 1990. You know what I mean.
Anyway, my point is that every audience knows this whether they know they do or not, and for all the hand-wringing over Shanghai being any good or just some victim of Harvey Scissorhands, this trailer implies it can't be all that bad. In fact, it looks kinda good: Intrigue, murder, romance, double-crossing, triple-crossing, world history, production values, and the guy at the center who makes it all hum. Does it work at 100 minutes or more? Who knows? The bottom line is: Do you want to see it? After seeing this, my answer is the same as it was two years ago: Yes, already. Let 'er rip, Harvey.
VERDICT: Sold!
[<via The Playlist]

Comments
Looks kind of shit with Japanese actors playing Chinese and all... I will protest.
Apart from the chinese-face, which in fairness is inexcusable, it looks very intriguing. I love the cast and I'd definitely be interested in seeing this in a theatre. Has Memoirs of A Geisha cast that much of a shadow? Plus, Jeffrey Dean Morgan and Ken Watanabe are fairly hot tickets right now, ( The Losers/Inception) so what gives Harvey?
Full disclosure- I haven't seen John Cusack in a sex scene since.. Say Anything. The time has come.
Jack's development of the game should have been limited to just the voice acting and dialogue. That, he did very well.
In search of this for some time - i imagine chance is far more progressive as compared with search engines...