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After seven years of entertainment industry experience in Japan and Taiwan, Peter Loehr established Imar Film Co., Ltd., China's first independent film company, in 1995. Imar was China's first true, multi-faceted independent film company, producing, distributing and marketing all of their films entirely in-house. Loehr was selected as one of Variety's "10 Producers to Watch" in 1999. Loehr has produced nine feature films in Asia, including: "Spicy Love Soup," which swept the 1998 domestic Chinese awards; "Shower" (1999), which won 11 awards at nine different film festivals, including Toronto, San Sebastian, Thessaloniki, Rotterdam, Udine and Seattle, and "Quitting" (2001), which won awards at the Bangkok, Singapore and Stockholm Film Festivals. All five Imar produced films were among the top domestic releases in China the year they were released. In early 2002, Loehr began a new venture, Ming Productions, focusing on larger scale Asian-themed pictures for a world audience. His sixth film, "Sunflower" (directed by Zhang Yang, starring Sun Haiying and Joan Chen) won Best Director and Best Cinematography awards at the 2005 San Sebastian Film Festival. In 2007, Loehr was a producer on "The Children of Huangshi", a German/Australia/China Co-Production directed by Roger Spottiswoode and starring Jonathan Rhys-Myers, Radha Mitchell, Chow Yun-Fat and Michelle Yeoh. The film was released world-wide in 2008. In January 2005, Peter Loehr became Managing Director of the Creative Artists Agency (CAA) in China, China's largest and most successful literary and talent agency. During Loehr's seven year tenure leading CAA in Asia, the agency grew from the ground up to represent over seventy artists in China, Hong Kong, Japan and Korea. In six short years, CAA was involved with four of the largest co-productions in Asian history, John Woo's "The Battle of Red Cliff", Rob Minkoff's "Forbidden Kingdom", "Mission Impossible 3" and the Will Smith produced "The Karate Kid". In 2009, CAA directors directed 5 of the top 8 films at the Chinese box office. CAA directors and actors have won countless awards, including the Golden horse for best Actor (Huang Bo) and the Golden Bear at the Berlin international Film Festival (Wang Quanan). CAA talent, including Yang Lan, Daniel Wu and Karen Mok, have served as spokespeople for many of Asia's largest brands. In April 2012, Peter Loehr joined Legendary Pictures and became CEO of its China joint venture - Legendary East, a film company focusing on big budget Sino-US Co-productions with subjects based on Chinese history, mythology, or culture. He is one of the producers of "The Great Wall" - directed by Zhang Yimou, starring Matt Damon, Willem Dafoe, Pedro Pascal and Andy Lau. "The Great Wall" is the largest ever US-China Co-Production and the largest production ever shot in China. It will be released worldwide through Universal Studios in 2016. It was released through Universal Studios in 2016 and box office grosses were $334 million worldwide. In 2019 Loehr began serving as a Board Member and Non-Executive Director for IMAX China Holdings. Also in 2019 - he began serving as a Strategic Advisor and Manager, Greater Asia for Genies, a leading company focused on the Avatar and NFT aspects of the Metaverse. Loehr is also Co-Founder, CEO and Director of PX Productions with his wife, Xiaoye Shi. He is currently producing a live action version of the iconic Japanese Manga, GOLGO 13. Among other films, Xiaoye recently produced HI, MOM for PX Productions - currently the highest world-wide box office in history for a film by a female director at US$832 million. Peter Loehr is a graduate of the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service with a major in International Politics and speaks fluent Mandarin and Japanese.