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by Feer Han (Film Blog)
The world can always use another superhero. Another superhero flick? That’s another story. Fortunately, no matter how many cinematic superhero adventures you’ve seen, you’re not going to want to miss The Avengers.
Based on the comic book series of the same name, the film pits the forces ... Read more »

by Feer Han (Film Blog)
A senior high school girl, clad in her school uniform, walks back home with an upset look on her face. After taking a short break on her bed, she jumps up, sheds her high school gear and dons a bright yellow T-shirt, jeans and a black jacket. Freshly painted red ... Read more »

by Feer Han (Film Blog)
James Cameron's in Beijing. He showed up at the opening ceremony of the Second Beijing International Film Festival, and he's slated to attend a co-production film forum, a 3D technique and film development forum and a Titanic 3D seminar. But before Cameron starting schmoozing with local celebs, he ... Read more »

by Lisa Gay (Film Blog)
Even though the inaugural Beijing International Film Festival was a complete disaster, we're still getting a second round next week. Last year's farce didn't even release a screening schedule until a day or so before the event—and even worse, none of the movies were currently on ... Read more »

by Sienna Parulis-Cook (Film Blog)
The re-release of Titanic 14 years after it first came out has a lot of people feeling deeply nostalgic, and stories of where we were and who we were when we first saw it in 1998 have brought up memories long forgotten. While Americans remember queuing up to see the ... Read more »
thefobbymotherlandgood to know I wasn't the only one who got a lot out of seeing it again 15 years later! http://thefobbymotherland.wordpress.com/2012/04/23/international-film-festival-titanic-take-2-mr-cameron/
siennapcSo Rose was actually a Chinese sailor! I'd like to see THAT version of the movie haha.
lisa_gayNot planning to see Titanic (unless we can fast forward straight to propeller man), but I was fascinated that 6 Chinese sailors survived the sinking! One strapped himself to a ...
alexjsearsonThis actually makes me want to see it again. I heard that something like 80% of men died, while only 20% of women and children - good work, chivalry! And that ...- leemackYep, agreed, I took my wife to see it basically thinking it was going to be a trip down memory lane for her and snoozesville for me, but I really ...
by Amber Wu (Film Blog)
School uniforms, wooden desks, bike rides, a basketball field and rebellious classmates are the backdrop of the recent Taiwanese blockbuster You Are the Apple of My Eye. Unprotestingly, you feel yourself transported back to the sweet days of adolescence. In this romantic drama based on a semi-autobiographical novel (那些年,我们一起追的女孩 ... Read more »

by Feer Han (Film Blog)
Even after the most heart-rending tragedy, life still moves on. In his documentary The Next Life, Fan Jian records the trials of middle-aged women undergoing government-sponsored in-vitro fertilization in the hopes of conceiving another baby after losing their only child in the devastating 2008 Sichuan earthquake.
The film begins with ... Read more »

by Feer Han (Film Blog)
Star Wars and Avatar are both highly successful films that have inspired parody, spinoffs and sequels, but few people know that George Lucas and James Cameron drew inspiration for these films from Edgar Rice Burrough’s series of novels, A Princess of Mars and its leading man, John Carter. Produced ... Read more »

by Amber Wu (Film Blog)
In Weibo Watch, City Weekend takes a look at the most talked about topic circulating China's biggest microblogging site. This week everyone is wondering why Chinese films aren't making it through to the Oscars. What are Chinese netizens saying?
It's been over a week since the 84th ... Read more »
- leemackI really enjoyed Love Under the Hawthorne Tree. I still hold that Zhang Yimou is China's best director and certainly will go down as the only 5th generation director ...
lisa_gaySadly, Zhang Yimou hasn't made a good movie in years. I was just reminded of this when I saw Raise the Red Lantern again a few weeks ago.

by Feer Han (Film Blog)
Xu Haofeng’s first martial arts film showcases real kung fu, not flash and dazzle of superimposed scenes and stunts that defy the laws of physics.
Incredible stunts and dazzling action scenes have come to define Chinese kung fu movies. But in reality, the rollicking action audiences pay to see ... Read more »
hey_zhu_deCheck me if I'm wrong but it looks like this one's already showing: http://www.bc-cinema.cn/showing_detail_movie.do?filmId=503 Definitely looks worth checking out.

by Feer Han (Film Blog)
Documentaries aren’t the most visually stimulating cinematic fare, but they are the best way to get a view of a life that isn’t yours, a better grasp of fate, and a better sense for small truths that often slip under the radar. Yu Guangyi offers all of these ... Read more »

by Feer Han (Film Blog)
Berlin is a lucky place for Chinese director Wang Quanan, who took home a Golden Bear Award for his drama Tuya’s Marriage in 2006 and a Silver Bear for the screenplay of the movie Apart Together in 2010. Just two days ago, his new movie White Deer Plain was ... Read more »

by Jennifer Wu (Film Blog)
If you’re going to venture out to one movie this winter, go see the latest Mission Impossible. Plenty of action series lose steam by the fourth installment, but Mission Impossible―Ghost Protocol actually makes for a spectacular cinematic experience that happens to be the franchise’s best so far ... Read more »

by Amber Wu (Film Blog)
China’s first sex shop comedy, Red Light Revolution,
recently participated in a slew of film fest globally and nabbed several awards. Now the controversial and hilarious film is available to all of China, albeit sans English subtitling. Consider it good Chinese practice.
It premiered on Tudou last week and ... Read more »

by Feer Han (Film Blog)
From the title, you can guess Wu Na’s Song and Moon is about romance. If your knowledge of putonghua and Chinese minorities is up to speed, you’ll also pick up on the film’s Chinese title, Xing Ge Zuo Yue (行歌坐月), which refers to a set of ancient ... Read more »

by Erica Chen (Film Blog)
North Korea may be bewailing the loss of Dear Leader now, but next year Koryo Tours says they'll be back taking tourists into one of the most mysterious countries on the planet. Just in case you can't take their tours (or you're South Korean), check out Koryo ... Read more »

by Lee Mack (Film Blog)
This is Zhang Yimou's big production. This is China's big Oscar hope. And with Christian Bale as John Miller, it's the biggest Hollywood star ever to play a China expat (though we haven't seen the Kevin Spacey vehicle Inseparable yet).
Critics are mixed about this film ... Read more »
- leemackBeijinger reviewed this movie [HTML_REMOVED]here and took issue with my review above writing, [HTML_REMOVED]"We think if you're turning to Zhang Yimou epics for answers to your complicated ...

by City Weekend (Film Blog)
Christian Bale was turned away from visiting blind activist Chen Guangcheng ... with fists.
Bale invited a CNN team on his visit to Chen's house to raise awareness about the lawyer who gained fame (and notoriety with the government) for his advocacy on behalf of victims of China's family-planning ... Read more »

by City Weekend (Film Blog)
Robert Ong curates submissions for local indie film group Electric Shadows. Currently, he has 250 films to sift through, with everything from a Pashtun music video to a passionate (maybe) Bulgarian romance. Interested in helping out? Join in by subscribing to the Electric Shadows email list at electricshadows.bj@gmail ... Read more »
by Feer Han (Film Blog)
First-time director Lu Sheng set out to make a film about love, but what he ended up with was a story about the keen sense of ennui and melancholy that accompanies loss.
Here, There tells three interconnected stories crossing three generations. A man who raises reindeer in the mountains of ... Read more »

by Feer Han (Film Blog)
Spring Festival comes early this year, so the local film industry is racing to get their movies out to meet the crowds. We've picked out the hottest movies that will grace the big screen this winter.
Zhang Yimou’s The Flowers of War (金陵十三钗) is the most highly anticipated ... Read more »

by Feer Han (Film Blog)
In advance of the UCCA film showcase, we interviewed Apichatpong Weerasethakul on the Thai film industry, what Thai films he recommends and the dream-like quality to his body of work.
Apichatpong Weerasethakul is Thailand’s most internationally recognized filmmaker. He has produced a considerable number of shorts, videos and installation ... Read more »

by City Weekend (Film Blog)
ChinaGeeks blogger Charles Custer has been busy filming a documentary about the awful practice of child trafficking, which came to public notice after a series of high-profile rescues on Weibo earlier this year. Though media attention has waned, the fact is that child kidnapping is still a serious problem here ... Read more »

by Laura Fitch (Film Blog)
Though many will know him best from his controversial Palme d’Or winning “Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives,” Thai film director Apichatpong Weerasethakul has long been on the radar of the international film scene. A showcase of the groundbreaking auteur's films is happening at the UCCA ... Read more »

by City Weekend (Film Blog)
Carol Liu has made a moving documentary film about visually impaired people living in one of the poorest regions of China. She's screening her film, Restoring the Light, next Tuesday at the American Chamber of Commerce in China.
When did you know you wanted to tell this story? I ... Read more »
