Archive for the ‘Chinese Cinema Events’ Category

NEH Summer Institute on Chinese Film and Society

Friday, December 23rd, 2011
Chinese Film and Society, a National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Institute for Teachers

July 9-August 3, 2012

The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Open to all K-12 educators, the Institute will include films from the May Fourth period to contemporary times, both documentary and feature, and examine the complex relationship between film, politics and society in China.  A stipend of $3300 covers travel and lodging costs.

For more information, contact the co-directors Dr. Nancy Jervis (njervis@illinois.edu), Professor Gary Xu (garyxu@illinois.edu) or coordinator Susan Norris (norris@illinois.edu) or call her at 217-333-9597 or 888-828-2367.

Additional information and applications are available at www.aems.illinois.edu/nehchinesefilm.

CinemaTalk: A Conversation with Filmmaker Wu Wenguang on the Memory Project

Friday, December 16th, 2011

By Maya E. Rudolph 

After his screening series premiering many works from the Getting the Past Out Loud: Memory Projects at New York University, I spoke with filmmaker and Memory Projects organizer Wu Wenguang about the project, a new generation of filmmakers, and his view on screening works in the US. The event was held at the NYU Center for Religion and Media and co-sponsored by the Department of Cinema Studies, with generous support from China House.

Special thanks to NYU Professors Angela Zito and Zhang Zhen for curating the program and arranging this interview with Wu Wenguang. 

Wu Wenguang at NYU

dGF: When and how did the Memory Project begin?

Wu Wenguang: The project started last year. It was last summer that we had the opportunity to start this. It was during this time we first started going to villages to conduct interviews. It had to be summer, this was the ideal season for heading off to these villages. So, everyone headed off to their own villages, their hometowns, for these interviews. When they got back, everyone started to edit, give advice, collaborate. This is how we got started.

dGF: The majority of the people participating in this project as filmmakers are pretty young, born in the 80s or 90s. You’ve said that your generation’s view of cinema differs greatly from that of these young people. What do you feel you have to teach one another—what kind of exchange do you have?

WWG: These kids have a lot of confidence, real self-starters. I don’t know if I really can teach them much. We can simply work together. Sometimes, the people in these villages think I’ve taught them how to shoot and what to shoot. This isn’t the case; they’ve chosen how and what to shoot by themselves. What I have to teach them isn’t important. What is important is their own work and how they choose to conduct it.

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“Getting the Past Out Loud”: Wu Wenguang’s Memory Project and New Voices In Documentary Film at NYU

Thursday, December 15th, 2011

By Maya E. Rudolph 

From L to R: Dan Streible, Angela Zito, Wu Wenguang, Zhang Zhen

“Independent film has gone from underground to come above ground.” Wu Wenguang’s most recent project in mentorship and documentary filmmaking, which made its US premiere at NYU under the title Getting The Past Out Loud: Memory Projects with Wu Wengugang, is an exploration of individual and collective memory, of personal storytelling, and of the evolving talents of China’s newest generation of filmmakers. The event was organized by Professors Angela Zito and Zhang Zhen at the Center for Religion and Media Studies at NYU, which Zito co-directs and was co-sponsored by the Department of Cinema Studies, where Zhang is Associate Professor. The event was also made possible thanks to generous support from China House.

Wu, often extolled to as the godfather of the New Documentary Movement in Chinese independent cinema, presented two of his own projects at the weekend screening series, but emphasized the significant work of those young people involved in the Memory Project.  “My generation of filmmakers often started out working within the state system, but we were dissatisfied and bored,” Wu expressed in conversation with Professors Zhang, Zito and Cinema Studies Professor Dan Streible. “Filmmaking twenty years ago was about throwing tantrums. The new generation is more introspective, they don’t need to throw tantrums. They’ve adapted a more authentic independent posture.”

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CIFF Roundup: John Berra Reports on Nanjing Festival

Tuesday, December 13th, 2011

CIFF Official Logo

Reporting for the Electric Sheep blog, John Berra delivers a comprehensive account of the sights and sounds of the 8th annual China Independent Film Festival. Commenting on festival highlights, Berra offers an opinion on Shu Haolun‘s No. 89 Shimin Road, a staple of the current festival circuit throughout Asia.

The turbulent political landscape of the late 1980s is filtered through a nostalgic lens in Shu Haolun’s No. 89 Shimen Road (2010), although reference to Tiananmen ensures that this engaging drama will not receive a mainland release. High school student Xiaoli lives with his strict but understanding grandfather in Shanghai following his mother’s relocation to the United States, and becomes romantically involved with two girls who represent opposing social ideologies; next-door neighbour Lanmi becomes an escort for easy money while classmate Lili is more politically motivated. Shu resorts to some coming-of-age clichés, but this is still an evocative snapshot of youthful uncertainty at a time of social instability.

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Shelly on Film: Fall Festival Report, Part Two: Under Safe Cover, a Fierce Debate

Wednesday, December 7th, 2011

By Shelly Kraicer

Shu Haolun's "No. 89 Shimen Road" won the top prize at CIFF, but wasn't shown on Awards Night.

The Nanjing-based China Independent Film Festival (28 October-1 November 2011), unlike the Beijing Independent Film Festival described previously, benefited from a substantial degree of official and semi-official “cover”. Unlike BIFF, there is a certain amount of practical compromise with official bodies and officially approved cinema: purity isn’t such an issue.  Co-sponsors include the Nanjing University School of Journalism and Communication, The Communication University of China (Nanjing) and the RCM Museum of Modern Art. The second day of CIFF includes a forum attended by local propaganda department officials. A sidebar of the festival (nicknamed the “Longbiao Section” for the dragon-headed insignia that appears at the beginning of all officially approved film prints in China) included screenings in a luxurious commercial cinema of several films that that are strictly speaking non-independent (i.e. censor-approved) but are made in a spirit of independence. These films would not appear at BIFF, for example, but might show later in official venues like Beijing’s Broadway Cinematheque MOMA, where approved “arthouse cinema” (i.e. non-commercial) finds a refuge in Beijing.

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Shelly on Film: Fall Festival Report, Part One: Keeping Independence in Beijing

Tuesday, December 6th, 2011

By Shelly Kraicer

Just having a party: This year's Beijing International Film Festival had to take a more casual tone. (photo: ArtInfo)

I’m often asked how it is that I keep track of new Chinese independent films. One answer: just be in China for a few weeks in October and November. The film festival season here is packed right now. Two major indie film festivals have just concluded: the 6th Beijing Independent Film Festival (BIFF, in the Beijing exurb of Songzhuang) and the 8th China Independent Film Festival (in Nanjing). In Beijing itself, we’ve had the 4th First Film Festival (an international festival for films by first-time directors) at various campuses in China including Peking University, and the 6th Chinese Young Generation Film Forum. Coming up is the 5th Chongqing Independent Film and Video Festival (CIFVF).

That’s a lot of films and festivals. Of course there is substantial overlap, especially between the three main indie film festivals (BIFF, CIFF, CIFVF). BIFF and CIFF each had its own issues this year: external and internal conflict that showed just how much pressure independent filmmakers are under in China at the moment. These conflicts, which I’ll describe below, also demonstrated the urgency with which these filmmakers conceive of their practice, their autonomy, their mission, and their very existence.

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This Weekend: Documentary Memory Project with Wu Wenguang at NYU

Wednesday, November 30th, 2011

Getting the Past Out Loud: Memory Projects with Wu Wenguang

December, 3 2011 | 12:00 – 1:00pm721 Broadway, 6th Floor

SCREENING AND DISCUSSION

Co-sponsored by the Department of Cinema Studies.  With generous support from China House

Getting the Past Out Loud: Memory Projects with Wu Wenguang

Saturday, December 3, 4, 2011

A five-film weekend with documentary director and artist Wu Wenguang where he will present films from The Memory Project, based at Coachangdi Workstation in Beijing.  From there, young filmmakers fanned out to return to family villages and their own pasts, real and imagined, to inquire about The Great Famine of 1959-61 — a disaster of which memories have been actively abandoned by the state.  But the films reveal as much about the wish for memory as of memory itself and of the interesting role of film in such projects of retrieval.  Two of Wu’s works will be featured.
Program:

iSunTV Chinese Documentary Awards Honor Searching for Lin Zhao’s Soul, Beijing Besieged by Waste

Wednesday, November 23rd, 2011
By Isabella Tianzi Cai

"Searching For Lin Zhao's Soul"

iSunTV hosted the 1st Chinese Documentary Awards from Nov. 4 to 5, 2011 in Hong Kong. Hu Jie’s Searching for Lin Zhao’s Soul (2004) won the gold award in the feature-length documentary section. Wang Jiuliang’s Beijing Besieged by Waste (2011) won the bronze award in the iSunTV TNC (The Nation Conservatory) Films section. (Both films are available through the dGenerate Films catalog)

iSunTV claims to be the only independent Chinese television channel in China. It was founded in 2000 in Hong Kong as a Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS) channel. Now headquartered in Hong Kong, Beijing, and Taipei, it produces and broadcasts programs in Chinese around the clock. Currently its programs are divided into eight categories; they are news, reviews, histories, biographies, documentaries, dialogs, cultural talks, and world cultures. A strong focus on free speech permeates all its programs. Documentaries, in particular, are a staple with them.
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On the Road: Post WTO New Chinese Cinema

Wednesday, November 9th, 2011

By Tianqi Yu

Originally published on ArtinChina issue 3

Chinese version published on Contemporary Art and Investment, 2011 June issue

Republished with permission of the author

The International ConferenceNew Generation Chinese Cinema: Commodity of exchange” took place at King’s College London on 26th and 27th May 2011. It is regarded as the first international conference that focuses solely on contemporary Chinese cinema in the UK.

The conference focuses on how China’s market forces and new eco-political role on the global stage have impact on Chinese cinema from the year 2000 onwards. It aims to explore a diverse range of films, from commercial Chinese blockbusters to regional films; from popular genre waves to avant-garde art works; from ethnographic documentaries to amateur works that use digital filming techniques, to examine how these films are exchanged as commodities within the global and local film festival circuits and markets.

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Independents Day at the 2011 China Independent Film Festival

Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

By Chris Hawke

"Shattered" (dir. Xu Tong)

(Originally published in the China Global Times)

A convicted bordello madam who once dabbled in illegal coal mining played a starring role at the 8th China Independent Film Festival (CIFF), accepting an award during the opening ceremony at Nanjing University and breathing life into an otherwise-dull forum on filmmaking.

Tang Caifeng won the True Character award for Xu Tong’s Shattered, which followed Tang back to her hometown to reunite with her irascible father, a former engineer educated under Japanese rule.

Subplots involve Tang’s efforts to get into mining and her efforts to “assist” a young prostitute who later turned her in to authorities, leading to a prison term.

The 600-seat auditorium was packed for the ceremony, with 200 left standing in the aisles to watch a high-octane preview of the 24 documentaries, 10 feature films and 20 shorts that screened from October 28 to November 1.

Organizers emphasized their independence and a clenched fist thrust upward in a gesture of empowerment served as their icon.

CIFF is the most important event on China’s indie film circuit, drawing buyers and festival programmers from the US and Europe. It is also one of the few opportunities for independent filmmakers to show to large audiences.

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