Chinese tennis player Li Na wins the Laureus Academy Exceptional Achievement Award at the Laureus World Sports Award in Shanghai, China, April 15, 2015. [Photo/IC] |
Chan's production company We Pictures said in a statement Saturday that the film will be based on Li's autobiography "Li Na: My Life" and will be released in 2016.
Li Na of China, playing in the 2nd round at the Championships, in this 2014 file photo. [Photo/IC] |
Chan says "Li Na had an impossible dream and found a way to turn it into reality. She broke rules and defied conventions and, against all odds, became a legend."
Li says "I am honored to have this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to tell my life story through a film." Actress Zhao Wei, director Peter Chan (center) and actress Lei Hao attend the 71st Venice Film Festival on August 27, 2014 in Venice, Italy.[Photo/IC]
The budget of the film is expected to be around 100 million yuan.
Hong Kong filmmakers have begun ditching the trademark kungfu and gangster genres in favor of social realism in recent years.
Peter Chan's last film Dearest (2014) has become a box-office hit on Chinese mainland. It's a fictionalized take on the real-life issue of child abductions.
The film, shot in police stations and courtrooms, reflects a trend among Hong Kong directors to take on important issues confronting people in rural areas all across China. It was named the best film by college students at the 22nd Beijing College Student Film Festival this month.