Celebrities across Asia will bring glitz and glamour, as well as some healthy competition, to Hong Kong tomorrow for the first ever pan-Asian film awards ceremony.
The Asian Film Awards are launched this year by the Hong Kong International Film Festival (HKIFF).
Among the stars to attend the glitzy event are renowned French director Luc Besson and South Korean director Park Chan-wook, whose film Old Boy was a Grand Prix winner at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival.
Korean actor and singer Jung Ji-hoon, better known as Rain, Japanese idol Hirosue Ryoko, and actor Tony Leung (梁朝偉) will tread the red carpet, along with local director Andrew Lau (劉偉強), whose Infernal Affairs was remade into the Oscar-winning gangster flick The Departed.
"With more than four billion people in Asia — 60 percent of the global population — a celebration of Asian cinema is long overdue," HKIFF chairman Wilfred Wong (王英偉) said.
More than 30 films across the region will be competing for 10 prizes in the Asian Film Awards: best film, director, actress, actor, screenwriter, cinematographer, production designer, composer, editor and visual effects.
South Korea's huge box office hit and monster flick, The Host, received five nominations, including best film, actor, cinematographer, editor and visual effects.
Veteran Chinese director Zhang Yimou's (張藝謀) Curse of Golden Flower — the most expensive Chinese film to date with a budget of US$45 million — won three nods including best film, visual effects and best actress for Gong Li (鞏俐).
Hong Kong director Johnnie To's (杜琪峰) gang war epic, Exiled, earned nominations for best director and best film.
Chinese movie Still Life, winner of a top prize at the Venice Film Festival last year, garnered three nominations: best film, composer and director for Jia Zhangke (賈樟柯).
Japanese smash drama, Love and Honor and Indonesia's Opera Jawa also received best film nods.
The award show and the film festival will be held in conjunction with the third Entertainment Expo, which combines eight events in film, digital entertainment and music.
The Expo, which runs from March 20 through April 15, includes a film and TV market, local film awards, a digital entertainment forum as well as a music fair and awards.
"We certainly welcome and support events like this because they bring the Hong Kong film industry more exposure in the region," said Woody Tsung (叢運滋), chief executive of Motion Picture Industry Association. "I hope this will create more business opportunities for us," he said.
Alongside To and Jia, Iran's Jafar Panahi will be competing for the best director gong for his black comedy Offload with Korea's Hong Sang-soo (Woman on the Beach), Taiwan's Tsai Ming-liang (蔡明亮) (I Don't Want to Sleep Alone) and Thailand's Apichatpong Weerasethakul (Syndromes and a Century).
Apart from Gong Li, Chinese starlet Zhang Ziyi (章子怡) was nominated as best actress for The Banquet, along with Korean actresses Kim Hye-soo (Tazza: The High Rollers) and Lim Soo-jung (I'm a Cyborg, but That's OK) as well as Japan's Miyazawa Rie (Hana) and Nakatani Miki (Memories of Matsuka).
Korean idol Rain will be vying for the best actor prize for his role in romantic comedy I'm a Cyborg, but That's OK, alongside Hong Kong heart-throb Andy Lau of historical action drama A Battle of Wits and acclaimed Bollywood actor Shahrukh Khan of Don.
Their rivals are Taiwan's Chang Chen (張震) (The Go Master), South Korea's Song Kang-ho (The Host) and Japan's Ken Watanabe (Memories of Tomorrow).
Special honors will be given to movie theorist David Bordwell and Josephine Siao Fong-fong (蕭芳芳), legendary Hong Kong actress and winner of the 1995 Berlin Film festival for her role in Summer Snow, for their contribution in Asian cinema.
The movies were selected by a jury of 17 experts from across the world from more than 700 eligible films produced in the region in 2006, organizers said.
May 18 to May 24 Pastor Yang Hsu’s (楊煦) congregation was shocked upon seeing the land he chose to build his orphanage. It was surrounded by mountains on three sides, and the only way to access it was to cross a river by foot. The soil was poor due to runoff, and large rocks strewn across the plot prevented much from growing. In addition, there was no running water or electricity. But it was all Yang could afford. He and his Indigenous Atayal wife Lin Feng-ying (林鳳英) had already been caring for 24 orphans in their home, and they were in
On May 2, Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Chairman Eric Chu (朱立倫), at a meeting in support of Taipei city councilors at party headquarters, compared President William Lai (賴清德) to Hitler. Chu claimed that unlike any other democracy worldwide in history, no other leader was rooting out opposing parties like Lai and the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP). That his statements are wildly inaccurate was not the point. It was a rallying cry, not a history lesson. This was intentional to provoke the international diplomatic community into a response, which was promptly provided. Both the German and Israeli offices issued statements on Facebook
Even by the standards of Ukraine’s International Legion, which comprises volunteers from over 55 countries, Han has an unusual backstory. Born in Taichung, he grew up in Costa Rica — then one of Taiwan’s diplomatic allies — where a relative worked for the embassy. After attending an American international high school in San Jose, Costa Rica’s capital, Han — who prefers to use only his given name for OPSEC (operations security) reasons — moved to the US in his teens. He attended Penn State University before returning to Taiwan to work in the semiconductor industry in Kaohsiung, where he
Australia’s ABC last week published a piece on the recall campaign. The article emphasized the divisions in Taiwanese society and blamed the recall for worsening them. It quotes a supporter of the Taiwan People’s Party (TPP) as saying “I’m 43 years old, born and raised here, and I’ve never seen the country this divided in my entire life.” Apparently, as an adult, she slept through the post-election violence in 2000 and 2004 by the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT), the veiled coup threats by the military when Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁) became president, the 2006 Red Shirt protests against him ginned up by