The movie is slated to release here on January 28, the first day of the Chinese Lunar New Year. In the film, Chan has taken his adventures to a new level by driving a car carrying a lion in the back seat which generated a lot of buzz in the Chinese social media.
The big cat is not computer-generated. The very real predator is owned by Dubai's royal family, state run China Daily reported today.
"Kung Fu Yoga" is one of three Sino-Indian co-productions being made as a result of an agreement between the two countries.
According to Jonathan Shen, founder of Shinework Media, one of the film's Chinese producers, the movie will be released in around 500 cinemas in India.
More From This Section
The film's trailer featuring the lion, which was released on Jan 5, has garnered millions of clicks on major video-streaming sites, making it one of the most-anticipated films of the profitable Spring Festival holiday.
In September 2014, China and India signed a groundbreaking agreement on coproducing films, in a bid to bring the two major movie powerhouses together.
It yielded results in May the following year, when China's State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television, and the Indian embassy in China announced plans for three jointly produced films.
"Kung Fu Yoga" is one of the three films. The other two are a biographical feature of "Xuan Zang", based on the seventh-century monk's pilgrimage to India, and "Buddies" in India, comedian Wang Baoqiang's directorial debut.
Of the three films, Chan's movie is expected to make an impression in India as the star's early Hollywood blockbusters - "Rumble in the Bronx" (1995) and "Rush Hour" (1998) and "The Myth" - made him a well-known name in the country.
Patani plays an India professor assisting Chan, and Dastur is in the role of her sister. "Kung Fu Yoga" is their first Chinese-language movie.
As for the commercial prospects of the film, Chinese filmmakers believe it will make a splash in both markets.
The new film sees them teaming up again after "Rumble in the Bronx", "Police Story 4: First Strike" and "CZ12".
Tong says the film features scenes shot in Iceland and Dubai. Most of Chan's action films offer visual feasts. Also, using his personal connections with Dubai's royal family, Tong borrowed several animals, including the lion, from them, besides some very expensive sports cars.
For Chan, however, the movie is all in a day's work. "I love to be on a film set. It's my amusement park. I always have new ideas and realise my dreams when I am there," Chan said.