The festival includes Japanese director Shuhei Fujita's debut Quiet Summer, which tells the story of a young man raised in Japan, who travels to Taiwan to bury the ashes of his mother.
Hollywood's Warner Bros studios said Tuesday it had sealed a deal with file sharer BitTorrent, once a key haven for online movie pirates, to distribute its films and television shows.
Taking the attitude that if you can't beat them, join them, Warner becomes the first Tinseltown studio to turn to the previously feared peer-to-peer technology to help distribute their products.
Starting in the middle of this year, more than 200 Warner movies and television shows will be offered for sale on the BitTorrent Web site.
Available titles will include Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, Tim Burton's Corpse Bride, the 1973 classic Dog Day Afternoon, Natural Born Killers, and the 1970 television show Dukes of Hazzard.
Until relatively recently BitTorrent was considered the scourge of the movie industry, which estimates it lost more than US$6 billion to piracy last year.
Under the new deal, the estimated 65 million BitTorrent users will be able to download video-on-demand or for-sale movies and shows onto their computers, but will not be able to copy the files to another computer or burn them onto a DVD.



