Coronation is a 2020
documentary film directed by Chinese activist
Ai Weiwei.[2][3] The film documents happenings in the city of
Wuhan,
China during the global
COVID-19 pandemic, and how the country's government and citizens have responded to and been impacted by the outbreak. Ai directed the film remotely from Europe, with dozens of volunteers and paid crews covertly gathering footage inside hospitals, homes, and quarantine zones across China.[2][4]
Production
Ai, who lives in Europe, remotely directed dozens of volunteers and paid crews across China who gathered the footage used in Coronation.[2] In a telephone interview with The New York Times, Ai stated the most difficult footage to obtain was footage of inside
intensive care units.[2] He said that much of this footage was gathered using handheld video cameras roughly the size of smartphones.[2] He also stated that he amassed nearly 500 hours of footage, which he and a team edited down to about two hours in length.[2]
Release
In August 2020, the film was made available internationally on the
Vimeo on Demandstreaming service, and on
Alamo on Demand in the United States.[2] Ai stated he had hoped to screen the documentary at a film festival, but that the
New York Film Festival,
Toronto International Film Festival, and
Venice Film Festival, after initially expressing interest, declined to show the film.[2] Ai also said that
Amazon and
Netflix rejected the film, and he suggested that the documentary was turned down by the aforementioned festivals and companies in order for them to maintain business relationships in China.[2] A Netflix spokesperson responded by stating that Netflix is producing its own documentary about COVID-19, and a press officer for the New York Film Festival wrote in an email that "we want to emphasize that political pressures do not and have never played a role in the festival's curatorial selection."[2]
Coronation is a 2020
documentary film directed by Chinese activist
Ai Weiwei.[2][3] The film documents happenings in the city of
Wuhan,
China during the global
COVID-19 pandemic, and how the country's government and citizens have responded to and been impacted by the outbreak. Ai directed the film remotely from Europe, with dozens of volunteers and paid crews covertly gathering footage inside hospitals, homes, and quarantine zones across China.[2][4]
Production
Ai, who lives in Europe, remotely directed dozens of volunteers and paid crews across China who gathered the footage used in Coronation.[2] In a telephone interview with The New York Times, Ai stated the most difficult footage to obtain was footage of inside
intensive care units.[2] He said that much of this footage was gathered using handheld video cameras roughly the size of smartphones.[2] He also stated that he amassed nearly 500 hours of footage, which he and a team edited down to about two hours in length.[2]
Release
In August 2020, the film was made available internationally on the
Vimeo on Demandstreaming service, and on
Alamo on Demand in the United States.[2] Ai stated he had hoped to screen the documentary at a film festival, but that the
New York Film Festival,
Toronto International Film Festival, and
Venice Film Festival, after initially expressing interest, declined to show the film.[2] Ai also said that
Amazon and
Netflix rejected the film, and he suggested that the documentary was turned down by the aforementioned festivals and companies in order for them to maintain business relationships in China.[2] A Netflix spokesperson responded by stating that Netflix is producing its own documentary about COVID-19, and a press officer for the New York Film Festival wrote in an email that "we want to emphasize that political pressures do not and have never played a role in the festival's curatorial selection."[2]