Polish-born U.S. producer Alina Szpak, using her recently completed family feature,
Brothers of the Wilderness, as an entrée to return to Poland, and with the aim of helping to ease the thaw of
Cold War relations as
the country was just coming out of martial law, in 1984 she and her husband/partner Robert Fleet approached the country's official film agency,
Film Polski and, in co-operation with Film Unit Perspektywa (Zespoł Perspectywa) developed the first U.S.-Poland feature film co-production (
not services-for-hire), producing
White Dragon (aka
Biały Smok aka
Legend of the White Horse aka
White Horse, Dark Dragon) for her own company, Legend Productions under the aegis White Dragon Productions, Inc. The fantasy-adventure feature, valued at a 1985 budget of US$11 million and starring American and Polish actors (
Christopher Lloyd,
Dee Wallace,
Soon-Tek Oh,
Kazimierz Kaczor), was purchased in pre-production by CBS Theatrical Productions. Released in 1987 in Poland, it was the #2 grossing theatrical film of the year, after
E.T. In the U.S., although
White Dragon had already been pre-sold to 100 international markets during production in 1985-86, a corporate takeover of CBS by
Laurence Tisch resulted in the entire feature film division being closed; the feature was subsequently renamed
Legend of the White Horse and sold via Fox Video; due to a settlement with CBS, it is currently under digital distribution by Legend 44 as
White Horse, Dark Dragon. == References ==