Annaud said he did not yield to censors' requests to alter scenes but made the film as he wanted to in China, where movies need approval from government regulators.
"I think being your own censor is very bad, so I did the screenplay very freely," he told The Associated Press today.
Set in 1967 during the Cultural Revolution, "Wolf Totem" tells the semi-autobiographical story of a student sent from the city to the Inner Mongolian steppes for re-education. He lives with the nomads, develops a respect for freedom and nature and becomes fascinated with the wolves. But then a government official orders all the wolves in the area to be killed.
Both the director and main actor, Feng Shaofeng, said the China-France co-production centered on the relationship between humans and nature, and taking care of the environment. "The film is not just a film about China. It's for the whole world, and its theme is an issue everyone cares about," said Feng.
Annaud said that after submitting his screenplay he received a letter from censors saying that three scenes "may be problematic," including one scene involving a traditional Mongol custom that they said may be upsetting for Mongols.
The director said he wrote back disputing this, and shot and edited the scene how he had originally intended. Chinese audiences will see exactly the same version as that released internationally, he added.
Annaud, who has made films with animals in the past, such as "Two Brothers" and "The Bear," was visited at his Paris office by a delegation of Chinese producers who told him they would be honoured to see him direct "Wolf Totem," partly so the Chinese film industry could learn from him.
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