Posts Tagged ‘ying liang’

Hail! Hail! Hail! The State of Chinese Cinema, Part Three

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

This is the second part of a three-part essay by Zhang Xianmin on the state of contemporary Chinese cinema. Read Parts One and Two.

Translation by Yuqian Yan

IV. New Theaters

Another aspect of capital operation is the development of new theaters and their surroundings. A significant trend is that after international capital was fully withdrawn from China due to policy reasons, the newly raised major players are all domestic partnerships.

Megabox Sanlitun Theater, Beijing

Withdrawn capital is mainly from the States and Europe, but those from Hong Kong or Korea are allowed to stay. Even though according to government policy, Hong Kong and Korean capital can only account for a small proportion, their existence allows theaters to maintain their original status as international chain brands. For example, the new theater built in the middle of Sanlitun, Beijing uses a Korean theater brand. One reason is that Hong Kong and Korean investors sometimes agree to disguise international capital under the name of domestic capital through an intermediary, whereas European and American investors always hesitate to make such a suspicious deal. For instance, Warner has stopped expanding its business in China for years. But European and American giants are just waiting for new policies that will offer better opportunities. In the long run, more than half of the Chinese theaters will be controlled by American capital in the future.

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Ying Liang wins Rotterdam Tiger Award for New Short

Monday, February 8th, 2010

Condolences (dir. Ying Liang)We’re proud to announce that Ying Liang, whose films The Other Half and Taking Father Home are standouts of the dGenerate catalog, has another international award to add to his collection.

During the IFFR 2010 Awards Ceremony for Short Films on Monday, February 1, 2010 in festival location Rotterdamse Schouwburg, the award-winning short films of the 39th International Film Festival Rotterdam were announced. The three Tiger Awards for Short Film were granted to Wei Wen (Condolences) by Ying Liang (China), Atlantiques by Mati Diop (France/Senegal) and Wednesday Morning Two A.M. by Lewis Klahr (USA).

The film was even cited by film critic Neil Young in his top ten list for the 2000s in the Best Chinese Films of the 2000s Poll conducted by dGenerate.

The jury had this to say of Ying Liang’s new short in their award citation:

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Taking Father Home Screening at China Institute

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

yaziWinner of several international festival awards, Taking Father Home is the debut feature of radical independent filmmaker Ying Liang, who borrowed equipment and recruited friends and family to realize his fierce vision of an emotionally scarred society. The film presents “a side of China that is rarely, if ever, seen on film.” (Richard Brody, The New Yorker)

More details can be found on the film here.

Friday, January 29 2010 ~ 6:00–8:00 PM
$5 member / $10 non-member

This film series is made possible through the generosity of the public and private grantors, and the support of the general public. Free popcorn and refreshments will be served and an open discussion will follow the screening. Seating is LIMITED. Reservations are on a first-come, first-served basis. To purchase tickets, please visit the China Institute website. For further information, please contact sinomatheque@chinainstitute.org, or call 212-744-8181 x137.

Location Details:

China Institute
125 65th Street
New York NY 10065

Lessons from the Underground: China’s Indie Music Scene

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

The blog for the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, MN, published an interesting article about the film series “The People’s Republic of Cinema: 60 Years of China on Film” we mentioned before. Rather than a regular film review, the article tries to summarize “New China’s” turbulent history, the “intense economic, political, and cultural growing pains” that led to today’s emerging global power, and rightly points out that “Chinese filmmakers (those both inside and outside of the border) are in a unique position to process and reflect their current cultural moment.” The author further alludes to her own encounter, from a study trip, with some Shanghai boys who strongly identified with American hip-hop culture and formed their own band 021 Crew to travel throughout southern China and rap in Mandarin, Japanese, and English. Hip-hop offers them a sense of freedom and participation in global culture. The author notes, “To them, it is a platform of revolution.”

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CinemaTalk: Conversation with Richard Brody, Film Editor of The New Yorker

Monday, December 7th, 2009

dGenerate Films presents CinemaTalk, an ongoing series of conversations with esteemed scholars of Chinese cinema studies. These conversations are presented on this site in audio podcast and/or text format. They are intended to help the Chinese cinema studies community keep abreast of the latest work being done in the field, as well as to learn what recent Chinese films are catching the attention of others. This series reflects our mission to bring valuable resources and foster community around the field of Chinese film studies.

Richard Brody (Photo courtesy of <i>The New Yorker</i>)

Richard Brody (Photo courtesy of The New Yorker)

Richard Brody began writing for The New Yorker in 1999, and has contributed articles about the directors François Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard, and Samuel Fuller. Since 2005, he has been the movie-listings editor at the magazine; he writes film reviews, a column about DVDs, and a blog about movies, The Front Row. He is the author of the book “Everything Is Cinema: The Working Life of Jean-Luc Godard.”

In this interview, dGenerate Films’ Kevin Lee talks to Richard Brody about his top ten films of the 2000s, in which he lists three Chinese feature films: Jia Zhangke’s The World, Wang Bing’s Fengming: A Chinese Memoir, and Ying Liang’s The Other Half. This conversation touches on all three films, and why Brody considers Chinese cinema to be “the crucial story in cinema of the past decade.” Brody also discusses two other films on his list, Jean-Luc Godard’s In Praise of Love and Claude Lanzmann’s Sobibor, 14 October 1943, 4PM, and their connection to the Chinese films he selected.

Brody’s full top ten list, and a topical index of the podcast with timecode follows after the break.

Play the Podcast (Time: 22:39) (right click to download)

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

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Canadian Premiere of The Other Half

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

the_other_half-thumbOn Friday, November 6, the Gibsone Jessop Gallery in Toronto, Canada, launches a screening series of contemporary Chinese films in partnership with dGenerate Films. This five film series will begin with Ying Liang’s The Other Half, “a fierce and harrowing cry of political rage.” (The New Yorker)

This marks the first in a five-film screening series at Toronto’s Gibsone Jessop Gallery.  Gibsone Jessop not only showcases international contemporary art from around the globe, with a special focus on China, they also host nightly events such as film screenings, theater and music that deepen the understanding of the cultures and context their artists create within.  The next five Fridays will highlight different dGenerate films.  Subsequent screenings include San Yuan Li, Little Moth, Using, and Queer China, ‘Comrade’ China.

Visit Gibsone Jessop’s site for more information about the event.

Friday, November 6, 2009, 7:30pm
To reserve tickets, please email info@gibsonejessop.com
Tickets: $10 in advance, $12 at the door
Limited Seating.

YING Liang

Friday, September 25th, 2009
Ying Liang Ying Liang graduated from the Department of Directing at the Chongqing Film Academy and Beijing Normal University. He directed his first feature film,TAKING FATHER HOME (2005), which won awards at the Tokyo Filmex Film Festival, the Hong Kong International Film Festival, and the San Francisco International Film Festival. In 2006, Ying made THE OTHER HALF (2006), which is supported by the Hubert Bals Fund (HBF) from the International Film Festival Rotterdam. The film also won the Special Jury Prize at the Tokyo Filmex Film Festival.

FILMOGRAPHY

Good Cats
2008, 103 min, narrative

• 2008 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival

The Other Half
2006, 111 min, narrative

• 2007 San Francisco International Film Festival
• 2007 New Directors/New Films
• 2007 Jeonju International Film Festival, Woosuk Award
• 2007 Singapore International Film Festival, Special Jury Award
• 2007 International Film Festival Rotterdam
• 2006 Tokyo Filmex Film Festival, Special Jury Prize Kodak VISION Award

Taking Father Home
2005, 100 min, narrative

• 2006 San Francisco International Film Festival, SKYY Prize for First Feature
• 2006 Hong Kong International Film Festival, Golden Digital Award
• 2006 Singapore International Film Festival, FIPRESCI Prize and NETPAC Award
• 2006 International Film Festival Rotterdam
• 2005 Tokyo Filmex Film Festival, Special Jury Prize

The Missing House
2003, short

• Beijing Student Film Festival, best script award
• Hong Kong Independent Short Film Festival, Critics Award

Gold Coin of Heaven
2002, 8 min, short

• 2002 Worldwide Short Film Festival

Fourth BIFF Celebrates Chinese-Language Indies

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

Co-sponsored by Fanhall Films and Li Xianting Film Fund, the 4th annual Beijing Independent Film Festival was held from September 1st to September 7th in Songzhuang Arts District in suburban Beijing.  The program focused on Chinese-language independent films from around the world and consisted of six units.  Films from Greater China were divided into three units: fictional features, documentary features and short films (including experimental shorts and animations).

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Far From Center

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

Recent d-generation films are considered “underground” not only due to subject matter. More often than not their production methodology helps define their independence. This is part of a series looking behind the scenes of Digital Underground in the People’s Republic.

Ying Liang

Ying Liang

I’ve long been a fan of Ying Liang’s films (Taking Father Home, The Other Half).  They travel the festival circuit to great acclaim and show a side of China missing from official and Western media.  But it was interesting and inspiring to learn that Ying Liang’s production methods are in contrast to the worldliness of his films’ reception.

I met Ying Liang at the China Independent Film Festival in Nanjing last Fall.  It was also his first time attending.  Ying Liang lives in the Sichuan province, far from China’s center of film – Beijing – and far from the avant-garde and documentary communities of Guangzhou.  Isolated from the “industry,” Ying Liang makes his films with a combination of readily available digital technology, film festival prize money, family members – in front and behind the screen – and the collaboration of his producer / girlfriend Peng Shan.  His films cost the equivalent of a month’s rent in Manhattan.  In essence, Ying Liang has built his own production center.

But it is illegal to distribute his films in his home country.  So Ying Liang pirates his own movies.  Think about it.  When the marketplace is no longer part of the equation, filmmaking and distribution are freed to become what you make it, including the means to building a more politically aware populace.

dGenerate in the Blogosphere

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

A couple nice mentions lately of a couple of our filmmakers as well as on dGenerate Films.  Cindy Carter of website Paper Tiger includes Cui Zi’en amongst her list of China’s leading documentarians, while Richard Brody of The New Yorker reminds us not to forget about Ying Liang.