Today, we are the largest provider for premium movie content in Taiwan, aggregating content from Hollywood studios including Disney, Warner Bros., NBC Universal and Paramount in addition to having a wide selection of international independent films and leading local productions for distribution on major operators’ digital platforms. Today, CATCHPLAY continues to look into investment and co-production opportunities internationally and in Asia targeting particularly Chinese-speaking territories and South East Asia following our recent expansion footprints.ĬATCHPLAY started placing significant emphasis on the development of digital movie content years before the others did in Taiwan. In the same year, CATCHPLAY also provided financing and local production support to director Martin Scorsese’s passion project Silence, making it the first international production filmed entirely in Taiwan. CATCHPLAY and partners also control exclusive distribution rights to these films in Taiwan, China, Hong Kong and Macau, with The Revenant generating outstanding box office results from these territories in 2016. In early 2015, we closed a partnership deal to invest in New Regency’s three enthralling titles, namely The Revenant, Assassin’s Creed and Splinter Cell, marking the first investment of a Taiwanese company in major Hollywood productions. Both investments generated considerable box office performance in Taiwan and China respectively. In the same year, we invested in the locally produced film, Paradise in Service and co-produced 20 Once Again with CJ Entertainment for the Chinese market. “We had a really great friendship and I would love to have that again, you know, but without a couple steps in the right direction, I don’t see that happening.In 2014, in addition to distributing the movies CATCHPLAY loves, we embarked in earnest co-production and investment projects, venturing into content creation. “I don’t think we can have a friendship until there’s some accountability and some responsibility taken,” she said. I’m not doing that.’ And I had to walk away from something that I really believed was gonna be a forever relationship, and so that was difficult.”įYI, Chelsea and Jo (who tried therapy before their split) haven’t been in touch that much, and Chelsea said some things have to change before they’re friends again. I was like, ‘I’m not going to change this, I’m not going to change the way that I behave in order to make you feel more comfortable. ![]() No matter how much I loved this person-and I loved him so much-I was not going to abandon myself. ![]() She went on to say that “walking away from him was one of the most difficult things that I ever had to do” and that “there were just some behaviors that we couldn’t agree on, and it felt to me like I would have to abandon myself-which maybe I would have been okay to do if I were 20 or 25-but I wasn’t willing to do that. ![]() ![]() “And then toward the end of the relationship, it just became clear that this was not my person.” “I’m not that hard up to get married, but I was open to the idea of it and we definitely discussed it at length, like, a lot ’cause it was important to him,” Chelsea added of her and Jo’s relationship.
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