"One Second" is set during the chaos of China's
1966-76 Cultural Revolution, a world away from Zhang's Matt
Damon-led fantasy "The Great Wall" or his Oscar-nominated period
drama "Raise the Red Lantern". It had been scheduled to close
the festival on Friday.
Festival director Dieter Kosslick, who is retiring at the end of
this edition after 18 years in the job, expressed his
disappointment.
"It would have been for me personally a great thing, because I
know him a very long time, to have the last film in the festival
with him," Kosslick said.
Asked whether the screening had been pulled due to censorship,
he said: "I don't know about this.
"I just know they said it was not ready because of technical
reasons."
In a statement, the festival said the film had been pulled
because of "technical difficulties encountered during
post-production," and that "Hero", Zhang's 2002 historic
blockbuster, would be screened instead.
Zhang, 68 one of China's most prominent filmmakers, was the
first Chinese director to win Berlin's Golden Bear award in
1988, for "Red Sorghum".
(Reporting by Hanna Rantala, writing by Thomas Escritt, editing
by Robin Pomeroy)
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