ISSN 1717-9559
Keyword : Hong Kong Cinema
1.
An in-depth interview with one of the driving forces behind the promotion and critical appreciation of Asian cinema, Tony Rayns.
2.
Rist celebrates the Honk Kong Film Festival as it celebrates its 30th Year Anniversary.
3.
An exploration of the art of fight choreography as defined by wuxia pan master King Hu.
4.
A report on the 29th International Hong Kong Film festival.
5.
Festival report which covers events from 2002 to 2004.
7.
As an invited guest to Pi-Fan, Professor Rist was asked to share his knowledge of King Hu to interested observers. Offscreen extends the privilege to its readers.
8.
Vesia offers a culturally based analysis of the Gangster film, Hong Kong style.
9.
Professor Peter Rist visits and revisits one of the most exciting Film Fests anywhere.
10.
An in-depth festival report on the fifth installment of the Fantasia Film Festival (2000).
11.
What happens when Hollywood begins to copy Hong Kong, and Hong Kong begins to copy Hollywood?
13.
Read here about The 24th International Hong Kong Film Festival.
14.
Interview conducted by Donato Totaro, Mitch Davis, and Jason J. Slater in Montreal, Canada during the 1999 Fantasia Film Festival. Photos taken by King-Wai Chou.
15.
Interview conducted by Donato Totaro, Mitch Davis, and Jason J. Slater in Montreal, Canada during the 1999 Fantasia Film Festival. Photos taken by King-Wai Chou.
16.
The extreme levels of violence found in Hong Kong and Japanese films confounds many Western viewers because Western culture, unlike most Eastern cultures, tends to moralize violence. Read on for a cultural contextualisation of violence Asian style.
17.
Montreal's Fantasia Film Festival returns for its third successful year, presenting challenging Asian and International films. Read here for in-depth converage of Montreal's most popular (populist?) film fest.
18.
The Untold Story: Bun Man is a cracker of a serial killer film, Hong Kong style.
19.
The Asian Cinema Studies Society held its fifth biennial Conference for the first time ever in Canada. The result was a hotbed of wide-ranging activities and academic pursuits from scholars across the world.
20.
Fantasia ’97 promises to be as spectacular as last year’s edition, Montreal’s first festival of commercial (Fantasy and Action) Asian cinema, Fantasia, which was arguably the city’s most popular film festival of all time.
21.
After wishing to visit the city since childhood, I finally got the opportunity in 1997 to attend what is probably the best of the Asian film festivals and perhaps the finest non-competitive film festival anywhere in the world, the Hong Kong International Film Festival (HKIFF).
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