Reynolds returns as Pokemon sleuth
By Xu Fan | China Daily | Updated: 2019-04-29 08:05
Lei, who has his own stylish comedic temperament, reveals he once planned to add some northeastern Chinese dialects to Pikachu's lines, but quit doing so, not wanting to go too far from the original version.
Actor Justice Smith and actress Kathryn Newton also appeared at the Beijing promotional event at the 751 D-Park on April 21.
Letterman says the film was based on the 2016 video game, Detective Pikachu, a spin-off from the Pokemon franchise.
He recalls that Legendary Pictures contacted The Pokemon company and signed a contract to make a live-action film of Pikachu.
With a close connection to the Japanese company and Pokemon's original creators, Letterman says they tried to balance the live-action part and staying true to "the underlying materials of the Pokemon characters".
Set in the fictional Ryme City, a modern metropolis where humans and Pokemon live side-by-side, the fantastical film is about 21-year-old Tim Goodman, who is searching for his missing father and joins forces with a talking Pikachu to unravel a thrilling mystery.
Best known to Chinese audiences for the 2018 sci-fi film, Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, Smith plays Goodman, who is the only person who understands Pikachu language, while other humans just hear the familiar, chirpy "Pika Pika" sound.
"Pokemon and humans have a connection that goes beyond verbal communication. They can feel what you're feeling. I think that's the message of this movie," explains Smith.
For Newton, who plays a news reporter accompanied by a Psyduck (a Pokeman creature resembling a yellow duck), the new film is fan-friendly.
"If you are a Pokemon fan, it will give you an idea of how it would be to have a Pokemon in your life. It's just like your best friend," she says.
Yet to have a powerful rival, Pokemon Detective Pikachu will be the only animated film to be released on May 10.
xufan@chinadaily.com.cn