Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 15 of 120

Thread: Asian Film Festivals and Awards

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,202

    FanAsia

    More on Gallants. Now I'm interested...

    Hong Kong kung fu "legend" wins award at Fantasia Film Festival

    Hong Kong (HKSAR) - The "Legendary Kung Fu Star" Award was presented on Saturday (July 10, Montreal time) at Montreal's Fantasia International Film Festival to Hong Kong actor Bruce Leung Siu-lung in recognition of his contribution to martial art films in the past few decades. The presentation was held during the Canadian premiere of the retro-70s Hong Kong film "Gallants", which was a highlight of the 14th Fantasia Festival. The film was screened at Concordia University's Hall Theatre to a capacity audience.

    Bruce Leung and the film's director Clement Cheng attended a jam-packed autograph session after the screening. "Gallants" was screened earlier at the Marche du Film in Cannes and at the New York Asian Film Festival. It was described as "a kung fu comedy reminiscent of old Hong Kong martial arts cinema", "fun, fun stuff" and "definitely one of the most entertaining films of the year." The Director of the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office (HKETO) in Canada, Ms Maureen Siu, said at the presentation ceremony that after the commercial and critical success of "Ip Man" - the story of Bruce Lee's kung fu master - in 2008, the martial arts genre saw a resurgence.She thanked the organisers for presenting the Canadian premiere of "Gallants" and giving the award to a kung fu film "legend" of Hong Kong.

    "The film 'Gallants' reflects the well-known spirit of Hong Kong people to never give up," added Ms Siu. "The award to Bruce Leung is especially meaningful because this year marks the 70th birthday of Bruce Lee, one of the most influential icons in martial arts films, who left us with another legend in the movie world," she said. Having appeared in many blockbusters, Leung at one time ranked close to Bruce Lee and Jackie Chan in the hearts of Hong Kong film fans.

    Born in 1948 in Hong Kong, Leung learned martial arts from his father at the Cantonese opera. He is a well-known action star and kung fu choreographer. Between the 1970s and 1980s, Leung performed in more than 70 movies.

    The HKETO sponsored the Hong Kong Panorama section of this year's Fantasia, which includes some of Hong Kong's latest film productions - "Gallants", "Ip Man 2","Bodyguards and Assassins", "Dream Home", "Little Big Soldier", "Love in a Puff", "Overheard", "Written by" and "Accident".Five of them are Canadian premieres. Begun in 1996, the Fantasia International Film Festival is a popular summer tradition in Montreal, Canada's City of Culture.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,202

    A f f d

    9th Annual Asian Film Festival of Dallas
    July 23-29, 2010

    Asian Film Festival of Dallas 2010 Trailer

    IP MAN 2 is headlining.

    9500 LIBERTY (2009), Dir: Eric Byler/Annabel Park
    A FROZEN FLOWER (2009), Dir: Yoo Ha
    A MILLION (2009), Dir: Cho Min-Ho (SOUTHWEST PREMIERE)
    ACCIDENT (2009), Dir: Cheang Pou-Soi (SOUTHWEST PREMIERE)
    AGRARIAN UTOPIA (2009), Dir: Uruphong Raksasad (SOUTHWEST PREMIERE)
    AT THE END OF DAYBREAK (2009), Dir: Ho Yuhang (SOUTHWEST PREMIERE)
    Opening Night Film: AU REVOIR TAIPEI (2010), Dir: Arvin Chen (SOUTHWEST PREMIERE)
    BAY RONG (CLASH), (2009), Dir: Le Thanh Son (SOUTHWEST PREMIERE)
    BEIJING TAXI (2010), Dir: Miao Wang
    BREATHLESS (2009), Dir: Yang Ik-Joon
    CHAW (2009), Dir: Shin Jeong-won (SOUTHWEST PREMIERE)
    EMPIRE OF SILVER (2009), Dir: Christina Yao (SOUTHWEST PREMIERE)
    I CORRUPT ALL COPS (2009), Dir: Jing Wong (NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE)
    Centerpiece Presentation: IP MAN 2 (2010), Dir: Wilson Yip (SOUTHWEST PREMIERE)
    IRON CROWS (2009), Dir: Bong-Nam Park
    KAMUI (2009), Dir: Yoichi Sai (SOUTHWEST PREMIERE)
    KUNG FU DUNK (2008), Dir: Yen Ping-Chu (NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE)
    LET'S FALL IN LOVE (2009), Dir: Wuna Wu (NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE)
    LIKE YOU KNOW IT ALL (2009), Dir: Hong Sang-soo (SOUTHWEST PREMIERE)
    MAO'S LAST DANCER, (2009), Dir: Bruce Beresford
    NIGHT & FOG (2009), Dir: Ann Hui (NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE)
    NO MORE CRY!!! (2009), Dir: Nobuo Mizuta (NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE)
    PHOBIA 2 (2009), Dir: P.Purijitpanya/V.Poolvoralaks/S.Sugmakanan/P.Wongpoom/B.Pisanthanakun (U.S. PREMIERE)
    ROBOGEISHA (2009), Dir: Noboru Iguchi
    RUNNING TURTLE (2009), Dir: Lee Yeon-Woo (SOUTHWEST PREMIERE)
    SEVEN 2 ONE (2009), Dir: Danny Pang (U.S. PREMIERE)
    SPARROW (2008), Dir: Johnnie To
    SUMMER WARS (2009), Dir: Mamoru Hosoda (SOUTHWEST PREMIERE)
    SYMBOL (2009), Dir: Hitoshi Matsumoto
    TALENTIME (2009), Dir: Yasmin Ahmad (SOUTHWEST PREMIERE)
    Closing Night Fim: THE PEOPLE I'VE SLEPT WITH (2009), Dir: Quentin Lee (SOUTHWEST PREMIERE)
    THE TALE OF ULULU'S WONDERFUL FOREST (2009), Dir: Makoto Naganuma (NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE)
    TOAD'S OIL (2009), Dir: Koji Yakusho (U.S. PREMIERE)
    VISAGE (2009), Dir: Tsai Ming-Liang (SOUTHWEST PREMIERE)
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,202

    T i f f

    Tokyo fest to feature Bruce Lee retrospective
    TIFF to screen "Enter the Dragon," others
    By Gavin J. Blair
    August 26, 2010, 12:06 AM ET

    TOKYO – To commemorate the 70th anniversary of the birth of Hong Kong kung fu flick legend Bruce Lee, Tokyo International Film Festival will screen some of his classic films, including a rare Japanese print of “Game of Death” during the fest in October.

    The "The 70th Anniversary: Bruce LEE to the Future" tribute will be part of the Winds of Asia Middle-East section and also include "Enter the Dragon” and Hong Kong kung-fu comedy “Gallants” (2010), as well as “The Legend is Alive” (2008) from Vietnam, to show Lee’s continuing influence on Asian cinema.

    “We are now negotiating over the screening of two or three more Bruce Lee movies and hope to make an announcement in the next few weeks,” said Winds of Asia-Middle East programming director, Kenji Ishizaka.

    Lee’s short film career – “Enter the Dragon” was released after his death in 1973 – helped spark a worldwide boom in martial arts.

    The 23rd edition of TIFF will run October 23-31 at Roppongi Hills and other central Tokyo locations.
    Another tribute to Lee's 70th.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,202

    T.i.f.f.

    I didn't put any coverage of the Venice Film Festival here but it appeared on different threads: Legend of the Fist: The Return of Chen Zhen, Reign of Assassins (Jianyu Jianghu) & Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame were showcased.

    I'm thinking as Chollywood rises, every film festival is having a stronger Chinese showing now, so it's not just about Asian Film Festivals anymore, as the current title of this thread states. Maybe I'll change that.

    Chinese language films promote diversity at TIFF
    English.news.cn 2010-09-16 05:42:47
    by Tony King

    TORONTO, Sept. 15 (Xinhua) -- Nearly 20 exciting Chinese language films from Chinese mainland, Hong Kong, Taiwan and around the world have been presented at the 35th Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF), which was open on Thursday night in Canada' s largest city.

    In the next coming days, Toronto has rolled out the red carpets to welcome super stars like Ben Affleck, Matt Damon, Nicole Kidman, Colin Firth, Robert De Niro, Helen Mirren, Kevin Spacey and Bill Gates.

    However, true film lovers also have had opportunities to enjoy the beauties and mysteries in the films from across the sea, exploring a different world and life style that they may not be familiar with.

    The long term TIFF's "most favorite" Chinese film maker Jia Zhangke has brought his "I Wish I Knew" to Toronto for its north American premiere. Jia was honored by TIFF as "one of the youngest masters of cinema" early this year.

    In his newest feature documentary production commissioned to commemorate the 2010 World Expo, Jia was trying to portray a chapter of modern Chinese history through interviews and scenic views of Shanghai, the largest city in China and Far East, in its continuous evolution.

    Chinese Director Feng Xiaogang's "Aftershock" was mentioned as "the most successful Chinese movie of all time"at TIFF. The film sweeps across three crucial decades in recent Chinese history and explores the resilience of a family devastated by the 1976 Tangshan earthquake.

    "All About Love" by Hong Kong's Ann Hui takes a rare look at the lives of Queer women in Hong Kong, as well as the challenges of creating a family. The TIFF mentioned this film as "expertly balances the serious themes of motherhood, sexuality and discrimination, rarely addressed in Hong Kong films, with wit, humor and compassion."

    "Break Up Club"directed by Hong Kong's Barbara Wong captures the mood of Hong Kong's young generation and delivers an ultra- modern romantic comedy about the end of one's innocence and the understanding that love is ultimately about the sacrifices one must take.

    "The Fourth Portrait"by Taiwan's Chung Mong-Hong casts a sobering look at the troubling issues of domestic violence, and the difficult family dynamics that are born of marriages of convenience.

    Other Chinese movies that will be presented at Toronto Film Festival include "The Legend of the Fist, The Return of Chen Zhen" ,"The Butcher, the Chef and the Swordsman","Fire of Conscience", "Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame","The Piano in a Factory", and"Pinoy Sunday"

    Toronto International Film Festival, known as the largest of its kind in North America, was held from Sept. 9 to 19 in celebrating its 35th anniversary this year.

    The festival will be screening some 340 films selected from 3, 526 submissions from 59 countries and regions like U.S., England, China, Finland, Russia, South Korea, Spain, Thailand and many places in between.

    Total length of the screened movies are around 27,000 minutes. The organizer expects some half million people will be in attendance at this year's 10-day festival.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,202

    Sfiaaff

    29th San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival, March 10-20, 2011

    # A Loud Quiet
    # A Lover's Fragments
    # A Moth in Spring
    # Abraxas
    # Affliction
    # Almost Perfect
    # Amazonia
    # Amin
    # Andy
    # Anna May Wong: In Her Own Words
    # Auntie and Uncles
    # Barbara Kawakami: A Textured Life
    # Beholder
    # Bend It Like Beckham
    # Bi, Don't Be Afraid!
    # Bicycle
    # Boys and Girls
    # Break Up Club
    # Brides Wanted
    # Charlie Chan at the Olympics / In Conversation with Yunte Huang
    # Chima #2
    # Chinatown Overture
    # Chubby Can Kill
    # Clash
    # Dance Town
    # Digital Antiquities
    # Dirty *****
    # Dog Sweat
    # Dooman River
    # Elizabeth Street
    # Emir
    # Exposure
    # Firecracker
    # Florence
    # Fumiko Hayashida: The Woman Behind the Symbol
    # Gold and Copper
    # Gophers in Space
    # Grandpa's Wet Dream
    # Grant St. Shaving Co.
    # Hang in There
    # Hip Star
    # Histeria
    # Hovering Proxies
    # How to Party
    # I Wish I Knew
    # I'm in the Mood for Love
    # Inhalation
    # It's a Wonderful Afterlife
    # Junko's Shamisen
    # Kunjo
    # Linger
    # Lipsync
    # Living in Seduced Circumstances
    # Lychee Thieves
    # M/F Remix
    # Made in China
    # Made In India
    # Masala Mama
    # My Name is Mohammed
    # Nang Nak
    # Nature On Its Course
    # Once Upon a Rooftop
    # One Kine Day
    # One Voice
    # Open Season
    # Passion
    # Peace
    # Piano in a Factory
    # Pink Chaddis
    # Plastic Future
    # Pretty Lucky
    # Raavanan
    # Raju
    # Rare Fish
    # Resident Aliens
    # Room #11
    # Saigon Electric
    # Sampaguita, National Flower
    # Slaying the Dragon Reloaded
    # Solitary Moon
    # Spring of Sorrow
    # Suite Suite Chinatown
    # Summer Pasture
    # Surrogate Valentine
    # Tales of the Waria
    # That Which Once Was
    # The Bus Pass
    # The Fourth Portrait
    # The Godmother
    # The House of Suh
    # The Imperialists Are Still Alive!
    # The Last Dance
    # The Learning
    # The Man from Nowhere
    # The Taqwacores
    # To Get a Date
    # To Wander in Pandemonium
    # Top Spin
    # Triangle
    # Upaj
    # Victor Ramirez Asesino
    # Wahid's Mobile Bookstore
    # West is West
    # When Love Comes
    # Withholding
    # Worker Drone
    # You Can't Curry Love
    # Yulia
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,202

    Beijing International Film Festival

    Beijing unveils ambassadors, first titles
    Beijing unveils ambassadors, first titles
    By Patrick Frater
    Wed, 16 March 2011, 13:58 PM (HKT)



    Jackie Chan (成龍) and Zhang Ziyi (章子怡) have been selected as "image ambassadors" for the inaugural edition of the Beijing International Film Festival (北京國際電影季, 23-28 April).

    Festival organisers also named four recent Oscar contenders — The Social Network, Black Swan, True Grit and 127 Hours — as highlights of its 100-strong lineup of foreign films.

    It also named South Korean film Mother (마더), India's Three Idiots and South Africa's White Wedding.

    The festival said in a statement that Chan and Zhang had been chosen after several rounds of selection and public participation. It said that selectors had received over 420 submissions from 50 countries.

    Some 60 Chinese films are also expected to be named at a later date. The festival will play out at 20 theatres, mostly in Beijing's central business district.
    Here's the official site: Beijing International Movie Festival
    Wait now...is it BIMF or BIFF?
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,202

    Asian Film Awards 2011

    Lifetime Achievement for Raymond Chow!

    Kung fu film producer Chow gets Hong Kong tribute
    CBC News
    Posted: Mar 18, 2011 1:12 PM ET
    Last Updated: Mar 18, 2011 1:12 PM ET

    Raymond Chow, the Hong Kong film producer who brought martial arts stars such as Bruce Lee and Jackie Chan to the screen, is to be honoured at the Asian Film Awards.

    The Asian film community will pay tribute to Chow, 83, with a lifetime achievement award on Monday at the awards gala in Hong Kong.

    Chow founded Golden Harvest studios in Hong Kong in 1970 and one his first films, Fists of Fury, introduced Lee to international audiences. He had lured the kung fu legend from Shaw Brothers studios, where Chow began his career.

    Golden Harvest was a box office leader in Hong Kong throughout the 1970s and 1980s, releasing films such as Enter the Dragon, The Man from Hong Kong and Hand of Death. Chow produced dozens of movies and gave the green-light to projects from directors such as John Woo, Sammo Hung and Robert Clouse.

    In 1979, he signed Jackie Chan and introduced him to international audiences with 1981's Cannonball Run. Chan also directed films such as Police Story for Chow.

    Golden Harvest also made the Once Upon a Time in China series for whichJet Li is renowned.

    Chow was "instrumental in making Asian cinema the global cinematic and box office force it is today," awards ceremony organizers said in a statement.
    Award for Pusan fest founder

    The awards gala will also honour Kim Dong-Ho, founder of South Korea'sPusan International Film Festival, which he established in 1996. He will receive an award for outstanding contribution to film.

    A former vice-minister of culture in South Korea, Kim also helped establish initiatives to foster Asian talent, including workshops, a cinema fund and the New Currents Competition.

    Asian Film Award-nominated titles such as Sacrifice, Moss, The Unjust and Madame X had premieres in Hong Kong this month, so the public could see them ahead of the awards ceremony.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    CA, USA
    Posts
    4,901
    Pretty cool!
    Although Chow and director Robert Clouse actually introduced Jackie to Western audiences a year earlier, in 1980, in Battle Creek Brawl (a.k.a., The Big Brawl).

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,202

    Sammo!!!

    Sammo deserves any recognition he gets. He's one of Asia's most under-sung stars, IMO.

    We'll have more on 13 Assassins later today.
    List of winners at the 5th Asian Film Awards
    By The Associated Press – 3 days ago

    HONG KONG — Winners at the fifth Asian Film Awards announced Monday in Hong Kong:

    Best film: "Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives," Thailand

    Best director: Lee Chang-dong, "Poetry"

    Best actor: Ha Jung-woo, "The Yellow Sea"

    Best actress: Xu Fan, "Aftershock"

    Best newcomer: Mark Chao, "Monga"

    Best supporting actor: Sammo Hung, "Ip Man 2"

    Best supporting actress: Yoon Yeo-jeong, "The Housemaid"

    Best screenplay: Lee Chang-dong, "Poetry"

    Best cinematographer: Mark Lee, "Norwegian Wood"

    Best production designer: Yuji Hayashida, "13 Assassins"

    Best music score: Indian Ocean, "Peepli Live"

    Best editing: Nam Na-young, "I Saw the Devil"

    Best visual effects: Phil Jones, "Aftershock"

    Best costume designer: William Chang, "Let the Bullets Fly"

    Outstanding contribution to Asian cinema: Kim Dong-ho

    Lifetime achievement: Raymond Chow
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,202

    Inaugural Beijing International Film Festival

    Maybe this should go on our Chollywood rising thread...
    Jackie Chan, Zhang Ziyi Kick Off Inaugural Beijing Film Festival
    2:09 PM 4/23/2011 by Jonathan Landreth

    Director John Woo is also on hand Saturday to help launch the six-day event.

    BEIJING – Jackie Chan and Zhang Ziyi joined an array of Chinese government officials to welcome global movie industry guests to the opening night of the 1st Beijing International Film Festival on Saturday at the National Center for the Performing Arts.

    On the red carpet inside the glass and steel structure known informally as "the Egg," director John Woo also helped wave in a select group of international film festival directors, trade delegates, heavy hitting producers and a handful of Hollywood studio representatives.

    The six-day BJIFF will mix the screenings of 100 imported and 60 Chinese films, including such Hollywood blockbusters as The Social Network and acclaimed recent Chinese fare such as Buddha Mountain by director Li Yu.

    The festival opens at a time when China's sales of movie tickets are strong – up 64% last year to $1.5 billion – but few Chinese films sell overseas. Organizers in the Beijing government now are keen to bring their city's cinema culture and movie business up to par with the global reputation the capital gained in sports in 2008.

    Guest of honor, Liu Qi, president of the erstwhile Beijing Olympic Organizing Committee and a member of China's Politburo, declared the festival open and Co-Chairmen Beijing Mayor Guo Jinlong and Cai Fuchao, minister of the State Administration of Radio Film and Television, offered welcoming remarks that were super-titled for non-Chinese speaking guests.

    Each politician emphasized to the nearly full house of about 5,000 guests seated just a few hundred yards west of the symbolic heart of China's one-party government in Tiananmen Square, that Beijing is the center of China's film industry.

    To help them drive their point home, the night's third speaker, Marco Mueller, director of the Venice International Film Festival, addressed the crowd in both English and, to the crowd's delight, good Mandarin.

    "The birth of BJIFF is a great event for the international film industry," Mueller said, noting that China's capital was "well on the path to becoming one of the world's great modern metropolises, yet it still possesses an irresistible charm."

    The hasty organization of the BJIFF, first publicized internationally in February at the Berlin International Film Festival, had some observers wondering if it was designed to steal a march on the Shanghai International Film Festival, held each June, and refocus in the hands of the central government control of an industry deemed a key part of the Chinese Communist Party's plans to use all media to improve China's image around the world.

    "As one of the historical cornerstones of China's film industry, Beijing possesses the financial and creative resources to become a film capital," Mueller said. Estimates show that about 200 million Chinese now can afford to go the movies on a regular basis.

    In attendance and hoping to find good Chinese films to take home, were more than a dozen international film festival directors, including, among others, Cameron Bailey from Toronto, Lee Yong Kwan from Busan, John Cooper from Sundance, Wilfred Wong from Hong Kong, Tom Yoda from Tokyo and Maxine Williamson from the Asia Pacific Screen Awards.

    "Beijing always provides a great networking opportunity," Chuck Boller, director of the Hawaii International Film Festival said. "I'm so pleased to see how many people I know who also are here."

    No films showing at the festival will be making a world premiere and, as festival image ambassador actress Zhang, one of China's most exportable film stars, pointed out, it's unusual relative to other festivals.

    "It's already my favorite because there's no competition -- no winner, no losers -- only beautiful films," Zhang said. "I wish the Beijing International Film Festival will be better and better and develop into a top-class festival."

    Some guests wondered aloud how the new event might be affected by its timing considering its competition for attention with the ongoing Tribeca Film Festival and the annual industry rush to prepare for the granddaddy of all festivals in Cannes in May.

    "The fact that the Shanghai International Film Festival has succeeded over thirteen years each June and has inspired Beijing makes sense. Beijing is a major city and it should have its own event," said Michael Werner, the chairman of Hong Kong-based sales and investment company Fortissimo Films. "Is this festival in the best time in the calendar? Probably not."

    Still, healthy contingents of executives from Japan, Korea, Europe, Australia and New Zealand turned up at the festival and for the concurrent and longer-established Beijing Screenings market event, now folded into the BJIFF from its previous date in September.

    Cristiano Bortone of Orisa Productions in Rome was at the BJIFF with hopes of co-producing a romance in China to teach the country's swelling middle class what Italy's really about: "The beauty of our land, our food and our simple way of life," said Bortone, adding, "And about tourism. "Many in the West don't realize just how developed China has become. Rather than blaming China for our ills, we must find ways to work together to make movies that exploit mutual understanding."

    The event's two-hour opening ceremony was punctuated by multi-themed dance routines to lip-synched singing and canned drum music that seemed to have little to do with film.

    By contrast, the appearance on stage of Italy's Orchestra del Cinema, playing the themes from everything from 2001: A Space Odyssey to Chinese classic My Mother, My Father to Fellini's 8-1/2, was a stroke of relevant and truly international programming.

    In the absence of a narrative feature film competition, organizers gave over one section of the evening to sing the praises of 10 commercially successful Chinese films of the last 12 months and show their trailers cut down to just a few seconds each.

    These films honored were Aftershock, Confucius, Bodyguards and Assassins, Sacrifice, Ip Man 2, the animated The Killing of Milu Deer, Walking to School, Shaolin, 72 Tenets of Prosperity and Reign of Assassins.

    Nearly two-dozen key men and women behind these 10 hits took to the stage to receive a scroll and a clear, crystal-like objet d'arte. They included, among others, Aftershock director Feng Xiaogang, actress Zhang Jingchu and producer James Wang, the head of Huayi Brothers Pictures and Yu Dong, CEO of Nasdaq listed Bona Film Group.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,202

    N.Y. Asian Film Festival

    so...anyone seen Milocrorze?
    NY CULTURE
    JUNE 24, 2011
    Martial Art-House
    The N.Y. Asian Film Festival Marks 10 Years of Cult Craziness
    By STEVE DOLLAR
    [ASIAN] Shochiku


    Yoshimasa Ishibashi's 'Milocrorze.'

    No matter how successful it is, the New York Asian Film Festival seems as though it's always about to draw its final breath. At least, the cinephiles of the Subway Cinema organization, who organize the festival each summer through their own sweat and credit cards, like to indulge in gallows humor. Demise, they hint, may be as imminent as the mortal strike of a samurai sword.

    "Every year is our last," said Grady Hendrix, one of the festival's co-founders. "But, as corny as it sounds, the audience saves us every time."

    Against all odds, the festival celebrates its 10th anniversary this year. The marathon of Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Taiwanese and Southeast Asian popular cinema opens July 1 at Lincoln Center's Walter Reade Theater, with its ever-arresting array of Yakuza potboilers and martial- arts extravaganzas, perverse comedies and karate-chopping cyborg romps, ghost stories and historical epics—and guest appearances by legendary figures like Tsui Hark, the architect of Hong Kong's new wave of action spectacles in the 1980s and '90s and this year's major honoree.

    Much has changed in the past decade, including the festival's big move last year from various downtown venues to the splashier screen at the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Likewise, the filmmakers it has championed have garnered wider recognition from the American audience: names such as Mr. Tsui, Johnnie To, Takashi Miike, Park Chan-wook, Bong Joon-ho, Seijun Suzuki, Sion Sono and, most recently, Yoshihiro Nishimura and Noburu Iguchi, makers of underground Japanese sci-fi comedies.

    "We've been doing this for so long that we went from no one caring about Asian movies when we started to the post-'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon' years, when everyone wanted these movies, to today when white people who run film companies don't want these movies," Mr. Hendrix said. "But Korean and Chinese distributors are releasing their movies in American theaters and making a lot of money for themselves."

    New York still has nothing else quite like this festival. "Seeing a Wuxia film in New York is almost impossible at this point," said Brian Belovarac of Janus Films, the New York-based foreign and classic film distributor, alluding to the Chinese martial-arts genre films that remain an Asian Film Festival specialty. "Their focus is on genre film, though not wholly. But New York doesn't have a New Beverly Cinema or Alamo Drafthouse," he noted, referring to the Quentin Tarantino-owned repertory theater in Los Angeles, and the Austin, Texas-based home of the annual, genre-crazed Fantastic Fest.

    Last year, Janus made restored copies of the 1977 Japanese fantasy-horror film "House" and distributed them nationwide. The movie played on about 100 screens before being released as a DVD by the Criterion Collection. But it was truly pried from obscurity by the Asian Film Festival, which screened it to packed houses at the IFC Center in 2009. "The reaction to it and resultant word-of-mouth was huge," Mr. Belovarac said, "and established it as a cult title in New York. The festival didn't do that single-handedly, but almost."

    Even before he took over as senior film-program officer at Japan Society, Samuel Jamier was a fan of the festival: "I followed them for quite a long time. They've always had this shameless film fandom, this populist quality that everybody likes." Mr. Jamier curates the annual Japan Cuts: The New York Festival of Contemporary Japanese Cinema, which opens July 7 and co-presents 10 films with the Asian Film Festival—including the opening-night anime epic "Osamu Tezuka's Buddha: The Great Departure" and a revival of Kinji Fukasaku's cult favorite "Battle Royale."

    Mr. Jamier made a clear distinction between Subway Cinema's tastes and those that shape some other festivals devoted to national cinemas. "There's no ideological agenda behind it," he said. "You really have to know the films that you're showing, and that's not always the case with other festivals."

    International film journalist Todd Brown, who runs the Toronto-based movie website Twitch (twitchfilm.com), noted that New York's festival stands apart from major Asian film festivals "that focus exclusively on the art house" and showcase directors who are practically unknown in their own countries. "They show the cinema that's really popular in Asia," he said. "You get a sense of what's actually happening in those countries."

    As Mr. Hendrix and his cohorts prepared for another whirlwind of high-energy screenings, he was happy to account for the festival's particular triumph. "Audiences want good movies and the audience for Asian movies is bigger, smarter and has more varied taste than cowardly American distributors give them," he said. "One of the things we're all most proud of is the fact that we've got the guts film distributors lack."
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,202

    Busan

    We've discussed the first two already. How Invasion of Alien Bikini got past me, I'll never know.
    Eight Hot Properties on Offer at the Asian Film Market
    5:02 PM PDT 10/9/2011 by THR Staff

    As Busan's sales event opens, these films stand out as ready to move.

    Warriors of the Rainbow: Seediq Bale
    Director: Wei Te-sheng
    Sales agent: Fortissimo Films
    Why it’s hot: Cape No. 7 miracle-maker Wei’s historical epic stormed the Taiwan box office with a NTD474 million ($15.5 million) gross in its first three weeks.

    The Flying Swords of Dragon Gate
    Director: Tsui Hark
    Sales agent: Distribution Workshop
    Why it’s hot: Chinese visual master Tsui’s first 3D martial arts extravaganza starring Jet Li. Need we say more?

    Lost in Paradise
    Director: Vu Ngoc Dang
    Sales agent: Fortissimo Films
    Why it’s hot: This film has at least two things going for it: edgy subject matter and being from an up and coming movie market. Set for an Oct. 14 domestic Vietnam release and with international rights held by Fortissimo Films, this same-sex love story could find its way to an art house niche for itself, especially in the U.S. and Europe. Produced by BHD-Vietnam Media Corp., Lost is based on a script by director Vu and Luong Manh Hai. Vu’s film had its world premiere at in Toronto, and exhibited at the Vancouver Film Festival earlier this month.

    Poongsan
    Director: Juhn Jai-hong
    Sales agent: Finecut
    Why it’s hot: Up-and-coming director brings edginess to the dramatic, action-packed story about the divided Korean peninsula that the esteemed Kim Ki-duk scripted. The noir tale is full of ironic twists, sarcastic humor and steamy chemistry between hot lead actors Yoon Kye-sang and Kim Gyu-ri.

    The Front Line
    Director: Jang Hoon
    Sales agent: Showbox/Mediaplex
    Why it’s hot: “It” director Jang teams up with Joint Security Area scriptwriter Park Sang-yeon for a Korean War flick with the usual explosive battle scenes but with a novel pacifist spin. Actor Goh Soo shows he’s not just a pretty boy anymore with some serious acting opposite Shin Ha-kyun, who also measures up to his heightened reputation since Joint Security Area.

    Invasion of Alien Bikini
    Director: Oh Young-doo
    Sales agent: Indie Story
    Why it’s hot: Oh, who has been garnering a cult following for fantasy flicks like The Neighbor Zombie, promises a zany mix of sex comedy and sci-fi horror. The plotline in itself easily stands out: a young man who’s taken a chastity vow must fight to resist the seduction of an alien trapped inside a beautiful woman’s body in need of human sperm to procreate.

    The Crucible
    Director: Hwang Dong-hyeok
    Sales agent: CJ E&M Pictures
    Why it’s hot: Based on a true case of teachers sexually abusing hearing- impaired children, the film is not only topping the Korean box office but also igniting a nationwide movement to change related laws.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,202

    Tiff

    Tokyo International Film Festival Opens With 'Three Musketeers,' Jackie Chan's '1911'
    9:23 AM PDT 10/22/2011 by Gavin J. Blair


    Jackie Chan - Tokyo Film Festival - 2011

    Chan, Milla Jovovich, Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda and trade and industry minister Yukio Edano were among the speakers on opening day.

    The skies cleared just in time for the celebrities to walk the eco-themed green carpet to the opening ceremony of the 24th Tokyo International Film Festival (TIFF) on Saturday afternoon.

    With an early stage appearance by Jackie Chan scheduled before the ceremony, the Hong Kong star was the first big name to be seen at the Roppongi Hills Venue in central Tokyo where the fest is based. Long hugely popular here, Chan boosted his standing even further with his big fund-raising efforts for victims of the March disasters in Japan.

    For this edition of the festival, the theme of helping recovery from the disasters has joined the eco message that TIFF adopted in 2008.

    The hula dancing girls from a Hawaiian-themed spa resort in Fukushima Prefecture walked the carpet to some of the loudest cheers of the afternoon. The resort had its business devastated as fears about radiaiton kept tourists away and it only reopened this month – an event that was recorded for a documentary that will be screened at the fest.

    The rain held off as the procession of domestic and international celebreties and dignitaries continued for almost three hours.

    At the opening ceremony, Chan, whose 1911 is half of an opening double bill with The Three Musketeers, entertained the audience, and kept the translators busy, as he cut into Japanese and English during his speech in Chinese.

    Chan handed the mic over to Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, who expressed his appreciation to the global film community for its messages of support following March’s triple disasters, before giving a special thanks to Chan.

    “I remember the old version of The Three Musketeers with Gene Kelly as D’Artagnan very well,” said Noda.

    The prime minsiter went on to recall how he had copied James Stewart in Mr Smith Goes to Washington in making a 13 hour filibuster speech when he was a young politician

    “Films have the power to create memories and make impressions of that kind,” said Noda.

    Next on stage was Yukio Edano, the current trade and industry minister, who was the face and voice of the government throughout the darkest days of the nuclear crisis at Fukushima.

    Confessing that he thought the film industry came under the auspices of the culture ministry, Edano said he was surprised to be asked to speak at the opening ceremony.

    “However, I realized how producing and selling wonderful films is a business and one that my industry and I have a responsibility to support. I pledge to put more effort into doing so,” said Edano to the enthusiastic applause of the film industry section of the audience.

    Before the opening screening of The Three Musketeers, director Paul W.S. Anderson was joined onstage by cast members Milla Jovovich (Milady), Logan Lerman (D’Artagnan) and Gabriella Wilde (Constance).

    Jovovich congratulated husband Anderson on “finally making a movie we can show our daughter.”

    TIFF runs until Oct. 30, while the TIFFCOM market will be held at the same Roppongi Hills complex from Oct. 24 to 26.
    From the buzz I hear, I think Noda will be disappointed. Comparing Gene Kelly to Milla is like apples to melons.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,202

    6ht annual Asian Film Awards

    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  15. #15

    One note

    Are we still referring to Jackie Chan as Hong Kong star?

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •