Navigation



 

Lisez aussi :

Hosting by :

.: Asian Cinema :.

The “Ring” Master: Interview with Hideo Nakata
An in-depth interview with the director of the smash horror hit series Ring.
AmérAsia: Korean New Wave and Beyond
The 1st AmérAsia International Film & Video Festival (Dec. 3-Dec.12, 1999) is following a fairly recent Montreal trend in Asian themed film events, but differs in its slant.
Chinese Cinema: 1933-1949
From May 19th to May 30th Montreal will host an historically important cultural event when The Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema and IITS at Concordia University in association with Ciné-Asia present the film series: Chinese Cinema: 1933-1949.
Sopyanje
Sopyanje is a stirring Korean style road movie that weaves emotive Korean folk music (Pansori) and pastoral landscapes with a powerful plea for Korean identity.
No one to be Missed
Getting an interviewing with Zhang Yimou is difficult. Even in my hometown Beijing, I felt he was harder to reach than he was in Montreal last winter.
Interview Hou Yong : Zhang Yimou’s Cinematographer
No one to be Missed, which in Zhang Yimou's words is one of my best movies, deals with a rural town's school drop-out problem. Zhang Yimou is a director known for having excellent work relations with his film crew.
Interview with Kwangmo Lee, Part 2
Interview with Korean director Kwang Mo Lee
Interview with Kwangmo Lee, Part 1
Korea was the spotlighted nation at the 1998 Montreal World Film Festival (August 27-September 7). One of the nine Korean films featured was Lee Kwangmo's Spring in my Hometown , a poignant story about the effects of the Korean War on two neighboring families in a small village in South Korea.
T.F. Mous : The Man Behind the Sun, part 1
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.
T.F. Mous : The Man Behind the Sun, part 2
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.
An Introduction to Korean Cinema
For the second year in a row, Le Festival des Films du Monde is putting the spotlight on a country in which the cinema is at the heart and soul of its nation's culture.
The Untold Story
The Untold Story: Bun Man is a cracker of a serial killer film, Hong Kong style.
Korean Cinema in Montreal
The first Korean film I saw was Im Kwon-Taek’s Adada (1987) at Montreal’s World Film Festival in August, 1988. But, with virtually no coverage of Korean cinema in the English language, nothing had led me to expect that Adada would be such an interesting work, thematically, stylistically, and in its narrative content.
Mohsen Makhmalbaf: Retrospective
Early in 1997 the CCA (Cinémathèque Canada) ran a near complete retrospective on Iranian director Mohsen Makhmalbaf.
Two Films by Shin Sang-Ok
Having seen only three of the 60 plus films directed by Sang-Ok it may be premature to start tossing out superlatives, but his films seen at the recent Cinematheque Canada’s (CCA) Three Korean Master Filmmakers series represent one of the major international cinema revelations of recent years.

Page 4 of 5 pages
« First  <  2 3 4 5 >



© Offscreen.com 1997-2008. All rights reserved.