Team China Victorious in Return of the Legends

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Team China: Misaya, WeiXiao, CaoMei, Fzzf and Ruo beat Team Hong Kong/Macau/Taiwan: Toyz, GodJJ, Lilballz, MiSTakE
and Stanley in the Return of the Legends final at the e-sports Festival. The Return of the Legends tournament, featuring 20 former professional league players, was the sold-out highlight of Hong Kong’s first e-sports festival.

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SMTown Live!

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As part of the e-Sports and Music Festival SMTown performed live at a sold out HK Coliseum concert featuring artists: Super Junior; DE; Yesung; Shinee; fx Luna; Exo; Red Velvet; NCT127 and NCT Dream.

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And They’re Off…

Hong Kong’s women rugby players depart for the Women’s Rugby World Cup in Ireland. The tournament runs from the 9-24 August with the pool matches played in Dublin, while the knockout games and final are in Belfast.

Coach Jo Hull’s side under Captain Chow Mei-nam will make their Pool A debut against Canada (9 Aug), before taking on the New Zealand All Blacks (13 Aug) and Wales (17 Aug).

Winger Aggie Poon posts a team selfie from the airport.

bc magazine will have full coverage of the tournament

Hong Kong Squad for Women’s Rugby World Cup 2017:

Forwards: CHOW Mei-nam (captain); CHAN Ka-yan; CHAN Leong-sze, Royce; CHAN Tsz-ching, Agnes; CHENG Ka-chi, Christy; CHEUNG Shuk-Han, Jasmine; Christine GORDON; LAU Nga-wun, Tammy; LEE Ka-shun; PUN Wai-yan; Amelie SEURE; SIU Wing-ni, Winnie; SO Hoi-ting, Karen; TSANG Sin-yan; WONG Yuen-shan.

Backs: Adrienne GARVEY (vice captain); CHONG Ka-yan; CHOR Lik-fung, Laurel; Kelsie BOUTTLE; HO Wai-on, Jessica; Rose HOPEWELL-FONG Siu-lan; LAU Sze-wa; LEE Tsz-ting; MAK Ho-yee, Chloe; Natasha OLSON-THORNE; POON Pak-yan, Aggie; Colleen TJOSVOLD; Lindsay VARTY.

Photos: copyright their respective owners

 

Hong Kong’s Team Scallywag Announce Volvo Ocean Race Crew

Hong Kong’s first ever Volvo Ocean Race entry Team Sun Hung Kai/Scallywag have announced their crew for the upcoming 2017-18 edition. Led by skipper David Witt, it features a mix of rookies and veterans, including a winner from 2014-15, a history-making navigator back for his sixth edition and local sailor Tiger Mok,.

Australian Luke Parkinson, who won the trophy as a rookie onboard Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing last edition, will race as part of skipper Witt’s crew – and he is joined by navigator Steve Hayles, who returns to the event after almost a decade.

“I’m delighted to have a crew of guys I’ve known for a long time – they’re all great sailors, and we’ve done a lot of miles together over the years” said Witt

Hayles made his debut as a 20-year-old onboard Reebok/Dolphin & Youth in 1993-94 – and still holds the title as the youngest ever navigator to compete in the history of the event. He went on to make it five consecutive races over 15 years, onboard Silk Cut in 1997-98, Team Tyco in 2001-02, Ericsson in 2005-06 and Green Dragon in 2008-09.

Also named in Witt’s squad are New Zealand’s Mark Fullerton, who raced with Brunel in the 2005-06 edition, Briton John Fisher, Hong Kong’s Tiger Mok and Australian trio David Mann, Alex Gough and Ben Piggott.

“Steve Hayles is the best navigator I’ve ever sailed with, and Luke Parkinson comes with bags of Volvo Ocean 65 experience. That’s one of the areas where we’re a little bit light, so he’s a big asset to us and brings a lot to the team.”

“We want to create a team ethos where everyone can reach their potential in whatever their role is – and to do that, you’ve got to trust and respect each other 100%,” Witt added.

“We’re all a team and want to succeed in a team, but we recognise that part of our role is to promote and let everyone be as good as they can in an individual role in the team without ego or conflict.”

“Tiger (Mok) is Hong Kong born and bred, and he’s a great sailor,” continued Witt. “He will race some legs – and he’s also the backup navigator, so will do a lot of onshore navigation and work closely with Steve (Hayles). Having him onboard will help to build the profile of the sport in the region, and encourage kids in Hong Kong to see that there’s a real future in offshore sailing.”

Sun Hung Kai/Scallywag had their first taste of competitive Volvo Ocean 65 action in the opening stage of Leg Zero, the Cowes “Round the Island Race” where they finished last – and now prepare to tackle the Rolex Fastnet Race, starting on 6 August.

Witt added: “We’ve finished with our squad selection for now, but the only thing that’s up in the air with us is whether we need to take more crew on the boat or not. Right now, we’re playing catch up a little bit with all of the idiosyncrasies of the boat. We still think we’re on the right track going with minimal crew – but we’re still open, and that could change as the race draws nearer.”

Team Sun Hung Kai/Scallywag
David Witt (skipper, AUS), Steve Hales (GBR), Luke Parkinson (AUS), Mark Fullerton (NZ), Alex Gough (AUS), Ben Piggott (AUS), David Mann (AUS), John Fisher (UK), Tiger Mok (Hong Kong).
On Board Reporter: Konrad Frost (GBR).

Additional reporting: Volvo Ocean Race, Jonno Turner.
Images: Copyright their respective owners.

10th Chinese Documentary Festival

The 10th Chinese Documentary Festival, which runs from 9th September to 19th October, is screening 34 films across several programmes: Competition (Shorts and Features); Hong Kong Selection; The New Taipei City Documentary Awards Selection; International Selection; and Retrospective. The documentaries encompass a wide range of themes including art, politics, religion and current affairs. Several directors will be attending the Festival to share their experience with the audiences either after the screenings or at seminars.

A festival prelude on the 6 August features two films and a talk from Shen Ko-shang. The director’s critically acclaimed documentary A Rolling Stone and feature film End of A Century: Miea’s Story will be screened and after the screenings, Shen will give a talk about his creative life during which he will present his short film A Nice Travel.

The Shorts and Features Competition includes 13 films from China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan. Local productions in the Shorts Competition include Call Me Mrs Chan, co-directed by Chan Hau Chun and Chui Chi Yin about the endless toil of a cleaning lady, and This is The Man Fu directed by Tse Nga In, in which the filmmaker tries to get to know her estranged father by filming his life. Other shortlisted entries include four works from Taiwan: Happy Birthday advocates the benefits of natural childbirth; About the Maritime Drifters records the struggles of foreign fishermen; Cheng Hsing Tse’s 48 hours chronicles a death row prisoner’s release after a decade-long struggle for freedom, and BRIGADE27, portrays a Taichung voluntary brigade that resisted the Kuomintang army after the 2.28 Massacre. Craftsmen of Coffin is an entry from Gansu, China that shows the increasingly obsolete craft of coffin-making.

The Features Competition has six titles, two from Taiwan and four from China. The Taiwanese entries are Small Talk, a mother-daughter dialogue on mom’s sexual orientation, and Boys in Pixelation, a story about juvenile delinquents from Taoyuan’s Halfway House. Competing Mainland titles include We the Workers, a report on union struggles in a wharf; Old Couple and Old House, a tale of an old villager’s effort to save his village from demolition orders; Factory Youth, an examination of the everyday lives of factory workers in Shenzhen, and Songs from Maidichong, a testimony of the Miao ethnic group’s strong Christian faith under brutal repression.

The Festival’s 10th anniversary sees the addition of two new programmes: International Selection and Retrospective. The International Selection features the local premiere of documentaries from Europe, India, Thailand and Myanmar respectively: A Family Affair is a story about complicated family history; We Come as Friends depicts how the African continent is exploited by foreign countries; Cities of Sleep portrays the destitute homeless in India; Sinmalin follows a Myanmarese migrant family working in Thailand, and My Leg documents a group of disabled army veterans-turned prosthesis makers in Myanmar.

The Retrospective programme presents popular titles from previous Festivals including: Though I Am Gone, Survival Song, Emergency Room China, Farewell BeijingSomeday, My Fancy High Heels and The Moment.

Continuing it’s collaboration with The New Taipei City Documentary Awards the festival will screen four of their award-winning films.

The seminars at this year’s festival are The Craft of Storytelling (10 September) with Taiwanese producer Gary Shih and winners of The New Taipei City Documentary Awards as guest speakers. On 12 October, The Future of Chinese Independent Documentary invites mainland directors to discuss the future prospects of the genre under the influence of state politics. On the 15 October, On the Road with Taiwanese Documentary sees directors in a dialogue about the relationship between commercialism and artistic creation in Taiwan.

10th Chinese Documentary Festival
Date: 9 September – 19 October, 2017
Venue: Hong Kong Arts Centre’s agnès b. CINEMA, Hong Kong Space Museum’s Lecture Hall, Hong Kong Science Museum’s Lecture Hall, The Grand Cinema.
Tickets: $100, $70, $60
More info:
www.visiblerecord.com

Crafted Tea Salon – Flamingo Bloom

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Coffee has been flavour of the month locally for years now with numerous coffee chains and single shops offering from an averagely awful to a boutique cup of java. Flamingo Bloom a new tea salon in Central obviously aspires to establish a chain of outlets offering floral teas.

The owners creative branding of flamingos and pink ‘n’ blue colours is targeted heavily towards the ladies but it’s all done quite nicely and makes a welcome change to the drab browns of our local java outlets.

What about the tea? Flamingo Bloom uses four base tea flavours Jasmine Tips Green, Honey Orchid Black, Highland Oolong and Chrysanthemum Pu’er and brews using full leaves to get a better flavour and they’re pretty solid beverages. Everyone has a different preference for how long they like their tea to steep, but the flavours here are good.

On top of the basic teas you can add a wide range of flavours including fresh fruits, salted milk cap – a mix of fresh milk, whipped cream, cheese powder and sea salt – and boba pearls. With most available in hot (500ml) and cold (650ml) options. The choice is wide and prices range from $23 upwards and likely it’ll take a few visits or sharing with friends to find your favourite.

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Each drink is prepared to order and the back area resembles a cocktail bar with servers blending and shaking. A lot of thought has obviously gone into the drinks and there are some nice little touches: the ice is blended into the drink so with a cold drink you get a consistent taste rather than a continually diluted one as the ice melts. A little beetroot has been added to the milk to give a pink colour.

Iced Drink Update: this was during the first week and how their tea crafter explained it to bc, but on recent visits the drinks are just like normal iced drinks with ice-cubes – which is a shame.

All good so far, but there are a few niggles. Flamingo Bloom’s is looking for a healthy and refreshing image, unfortunately what’s not made clear on the menu and in the drink ingredients list is that unless you specifically ask for no sugar, each drink has a large, and we mean large, amount of sugar syrup added to it. Most of the flavour combinations shouldn’t need it – but the sugar hit as with fizzy and sports drinks is the unseen addictive hit.

The owners have carefully thought about drink presentation, yet have gone with a thick opaque plastic cup which hides the attractiveness of the drink. And with all the plastic and straws being handed out it would be nice to see FB aggressively pushing recycling.

Flamingo Bloom is a vibrant new tea salon with lots of tasty teas – our current favourite is the salted milk cap Pu’er – remember to hold the sugar if you want a healthy drink. Just because a drink comes with a straw doesn’t mean it’s best enjoyed through the straw. Many of FB’s drinks are best enjoyed from the top down, rather than bottom up.

Flamingo Bloom
50B Stanley Street, Central. Tel: 2483 1778. 11am-9pm
www.flamingo-bloom.com

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The Hong Kong Series, Book Launch @ Alvy’s – 26 July, 2017

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Books, beer and pizza at Alvy’s for The Hong Kong Series launch: A System ApartBorrowed Spaces; City of ProtestCantonese Love StoriesDear Hong KongGeneration HK and Uncharted Territory. 7 diverse views about Hong Kong. Available at most good book stores or in e-book.
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Paradox Highlight of Summer Film Fest

This year’s Cine Fan Summer International Film Festival 2017 (SummerIFF17) programme has been released. Opening a festival that will showcase 33 films next month is the world premiere of Wilson Yip’s new film Paradox.

Paradox, the third in Yip’s popular SPL action drama series, stars Louis Koo as a police negotiator searching for his abducted daughter in Bangkok. With action choreography by Sammo Hung, the film should have some dynamic martial arts scenes featuring Tony Jaa.

Closing the festival is 24 Frames, the posthumous final work of Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami, which intriguingly gives life to still images in a collection of 24 short four-and-a-half minutes film.

Mohsen Makhmalbaf

One of the founders of the new wave of Iranian cinema, director Mohsen Makhmalbaf will visit Hong Kong for the screening of his controversial 1990 critique of Iranian society The Nights of Zayandeh-rood, which was not officially screened in Iran for 26 years after it’s release. He will also present Salaam Cinema, a documentary about the casting and screen tests of would-be actors who respond to a casting call advert for a new film. The director will meet the audience after the screenings.

Festival Films

Roy Szeto’comedy-drama Shed Skin Papa, stars Francis Ng as a dementia-ridden father who regains his youth, and explores themes of rebirth and reconciliation through a father-son relationship.

Deadpan comedy master Aki Kaurismaki’s The Other Side of Hope is a refugee story intertwined with absurdity that took home the Berlinale Best Director Award.

The festival also features three competition films from this year’s Cannes Film Festival. Korean director Hong Sang-soo had the rare distinction of having two films selected for Cannes, including The Day After, his adept play about infidelity and mistaken identity. Academy-Award-winning director Michel Hazanavicius (The Artist) pays a stylistic homage to the great maestroJean-Luc Godard in Redoubtable. In the Safdie Brothers’ heist thriller Good Time, Robert Pattinson hits a career high playing a scuzzy bank robber.

Great actresses can illuminate a film with their performances. Isabelle Huppert is back in Hong Sang-soo’s orbit to play “a tourist in Cannes” in Claire’s Camera, partnering with Berlinale Best Actress Kim Min-hee. The chameleonic Cate Blanchett plays 13 wildly different characters in Manifesto, bringing fresh possibilities to ideas that rock the world. Nacho Vigalondo’s monster movie Colossal sees Anne Hathaway give one of her her fiercest performances as a killer kaiju.

From legendary rockers to promising outfits, films about musicians can be very hit or miss. Music fan Jim Jarmusch traces the destruction and survival of iconic rock star Iggy Pop and the Stooges in Gimme Danger. While Michael Wintervottom’s On the Road follows British neo-grunge outfit Wolf Alice during its UK-Ireland tour, intertwined with a fictional love story. Liberation Day is perhaps the most interesting film of the three chronicling as it does ex-Yugoslavian art-metal band Laibach as they become the first foreign rock band to tour North Korea.

Kings of Comedy – The Art of the Comedians

Is a series of six films where comedians like Charlie Chaplin and Jerry Lewis showcase the serious art of being funny in The Freshman, Steamboat Bill, Jr., City Lights, A Night at the Opera, Some Like it Hot and The Nutty Professor.

Monty Python’s surreal comedies are both popular and cult favourites but it’s been a long time since they were on the big screen in Hong Kong. Their influence on the style of modern comedy is profound, so take a seat and enjoy Monty Python and the Holy Grail and Monty Python’s The Meaning of Life on the big screen again.

Also returning to local screens are two droll masterpieces from two of America’s best directors. Woody Allem’s Love and Death explores life with a playful touch of Russian philosophy, while Martin Scorsese’s The King of Comedy, featuring Robert De Niro and Jerry Lewis helped create the current vogue of “anti-comedy.”

Local Classics Restored

Two local classics, Derek Yee’s C’est la Vie, Mon Cheri and Peter Ho-Sun Chan’s Comrades, Almost a Love Story seem to have taken on extra meaning when seen today.

The Cine Fan Summer International Film Festival runs from 15-29 August, tickets are only $28 and you can find the full list of films and screening schedule here http://cinefan.com.hk

Cine Fan Summer International Film Festival
Date: 15-29 August, 2017
Venue: Various
Tickets: various