At this week’s Shanghai International Film Festival, the state-backed China Film Foundation rolled out the Kung Fu Film Heritage Project, a $14 million (RMB100 million) program that will apply generative AI to restore—and in some cases completely re-imagine—100 classic martial-arts films starring Bruce Lee, Jackie Chan, Jet Li and other genre legends.
Foundation chair Zhang Qilin said the initiative aims to “preserve the storytelling and aesthetic” of touchstones such as Lee’s Fist of Fury, Chan’s Drunken Master and Li’s Once Upon a Time in China while upgrading image and sound to modern standards. Producer Zhang Qing added that the showcase project—A Better Tomorrow: Cyber Border, billed as the world’s first fully AI-produced animated feature—was completed by just 30 people in a fraction of a traditional production cycle.
“AI has collapsed the barrier between creativity and execution,” Zhang Qing told journalists. Yet the announcement has split opinion. Film-historian forums and social-media threads decry the potential “digital smoothing” of vintage cinematography and note that neither Lee nor many original directors are alive to guide changes. Action-cinema commentator John M. Jerva predicted “controversy to ridiculous levels,” citing parallels with Hollywood labor disputes over AI likeness rights.
Backers argue that China’s emerging generative-AI rules—requiring visible labels and embedded metadata—provide safeguards that could let the country leap ahead of more cautious Western studios. Canxing Media chair Tian Ming insisted “AI is the brush, but creativity is the soul,” pledging fidelity to the “spiritual backbone” of kung-fu cinema.
HotNewHipHop noted that the first ten titles will begin processing this year, with global rights negotiations already under way as distributors eye the remastered catalog. Industry analysts say the rollout will be watched closely by rights holders who have long struggled to monetize Asian library titles in high definition, viewing China’s experiment as a possible blueprint—or cautionary tale—for future AI-assisted preservation.