Asian Film Awards 2018 – Red Carpet

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bc’s Arra Aranas and Jade Manalac checked out the red carpet at the 12th Asian Film Awards. Some very beautifully dressed ladies and elegant gentlemen and some people wearing outfits where you assume they had been paid a fortune to wear something so hideous or that they need some friends who will say “Really we know you love it, but it just doesn’t suit you”. The ‘beauty’ of fashion is we can all agree to disagree.
Click on any photo to see the full red carpet gallery.

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Louis Koo Wins Best Actor at Asian Film Awards

Hong Kong films had a big night at the 12th Asian Film Awards. Louis Koo won the Best Actor award while Paradox (2) and Legend of the Demon Cat (4) picked up multiple awards.

The 12th Asian Film Awards Winners List

Best Film: Youth (China)

Best Director: Ishii Yuya – The Tokyo Night Sky Is Always The Densest Shade of Blue (Japan)

Best New Director: Dong Yue – The Looming Storm (China)

Best Actor: Louis Koo – Paradox (Hong Kong)

Best Actress: Sylvia Chang – Love Education (China)

Best Supporting Actor: Yang Ik-june – Wilderness (Japan)

Best Supporting Actress: Zhang Yuqi – Legend Of The Demon Cat (Hong Kong)

Best Newcomer: Chutimon Chuengcharoensukying – Bad Genius (Thailand)

Best Action Film: Paradox (Hong Kong)

Best Screenplay: Mayank Tewari, Amit V Masurkar – Newton (India)

Best Editing: Shin Min-kyung – The King (South Korea)

Best Cinematography: Kim Ji-yong – The Fortress (South Korea)

Best Original Music: Hisaishi Joe – Our Time Will Come (Hong Kong)

Best Costume Design: Chen Tongxun – Legend Of The Demon Cat (Hong Kong)

Best Production Design: Tu Nan – Legend Of The Demon Cat (Hong Kong)

Best Visual Effects: Ishii Norio – Legend Of The Demon Cat (Hong Kong)

Best Sound: Tu Duu-chih – The Great Buddha (Taiwan)

 

Mapfre Leads Volvo Fleet Out of Auckland

It was a spectacular start to Leg 7 of the Volvo Ocean Race. The sun was out, the wind near 20 knots as the fleet left Auckland for Brazil in beautiful sailing conditions.

The Kiwi spectator armada consisted of foiling kite-boards, windsurfers, stand-up paddleboards, kayaks, dinghies, as well as hundreds of power and sail boats, along with the former Whitbread Round the World Race winner, Steinlager 2.

It was MAPFRE, the overall race leader, who made the best start to lead the fleet around a loop of the Waitematā Harbour and out into the Hauraki Gulf, with Dongfeng, Team Brunel and Turn the Tide on Plastic in close and giving chase.

Watch a replay of the start here

In a return to the heritage of the event, Leg 7 of the Volvo Ocean Race will take the teams on a 7,600 nautical mile journey into the Southern Ocean, and around the iconic Cape Horn, before returning to the Atlantic Ocean towards the finish in Itajaí, Brazil.

“100% of the sailors that have done this leg have at one moment said it is too hard or too tough,” said Charles Caudrelier, the skipper of Dongfeng Race Team. “But when you pass Cape Horn you have a huge feeling of pride that you have faced your fears.”

“We’re going into one of the more gruelling legs of the race,” added Brunel’s Peter Burling, a hero in New Zealand for bringing the America’s Cup home last summer.

“The biggest challenge is the endurance aspect, having to keep the intensity high through some very difficult conditions… It’s going to be pretty tough for any of us Kiwis to leave here, but we’re all pretty excited to get into it.”

The initial Ice Exclusion Zone will allow the teams to sail as far south as 59-degrees south latitude, well into the ‘Furious Fifties’, where wind and waves circle the planet unimpeded by land, allowing them to build to fearsome levels. It will be very cold that far south, and the routing will take the fleet to the most remote part of the world, Point Nemo, where the international space station is closer than any point of land.

There is a balance to be struck on this leg, between pushing the crew and equipment hard in the quest for victory, and ensuring the team is able to finish the leg at all.

“This is a part of the world where sometimes you have to forget about the race and just take care of the people and the boat,” noted Caudrelier. “It’s a special place, sailing in the South – the sea is bigger, the wind is stronger, so you need to be mindful.”

The teams are getting straight into it – after leaving the final turning mark, the forecast is for an upwind slog into a 30-knot easterly as they aim to clear the Coromandel Peninsula and then the East Cape of New Zealand, before turning south in search of the low pressure systems that will power them towards Cape Horn, some 11 days away.

“It’s going to be upwind and bumpy until East Cape,” said Vestas 11th Hour Racing navigator Simon Fisher. His team is returning to the race after retiring from Leg 4 and missing the leg into Auckland while repairing damage to their hull.

“Going around Cape Horn represents a real milestone in the race. It’s a big thing to get around the Horn and it’s a moment of celebration for everyone on board as it means the end of the Southern Ocean and back to the relative safety of the South Atlantic.

“But by no means is it a moment to relax as some of the biggest challenges of this leg can be found between Cape Horn and the finish in Itajaí.”

The initial ETA for the finish in Itajaí, Brazil is between April 4th and 6th.

Additional reporting and images: Volvo Ocean Race, Ainhoa Sanchez, Jesus Renedo

Hong Kong Cricket Club Close Down Rugby Section

Hong Kong Cricket Club have announced that the rugby section of the club will close down and merge with HKU Sandy Bay effective immediately.

The full details of the announcement are here:

Hong Kong Cricket Club (HKCC) has had a proud tradition in rugby both on and off the field since 2003. Despite HKCC’s lack of on-site rugby facilities, HKCC Rugby Section has an enviable reputation and has been highly competitive over a number of seasons in the Premiership and other levels, including winning the Premiership on several occasions. Through HKCC’s successful affiliation with HKU Sandy Bay RFC for almost 10 years, HKCC has been able to further support the development of both new players and coaches. This affiliation has contributed significantly to the development of local rugby especially on West Island Hong Kong.

Over the past few months, HKCC and the Rugby Section have been considering how rugby in Hong Kong is evolving and how HKCC can best respond to the challenges and opportunities facing the sport, including the increasing drive towards high performance rugby and the desire to create a ‘top to bottom’ structure encompassing all levels of rugby from high performance to social grade to youth and mini rugby. To continue supporting the development of rugby, HKCC and the Rugby Section have participated in extensive discussions with key stakeholders and proactively explored a number of options within the constraints of the Club’s on-site facilities and governance as a not-for-profit members’ club.

 After careful consideration, focused around how HKCC can best support the development of rugby in Hong Kong, it has been agreed that the Rugby Section will transition away from HKCC and officially merge with HKU Sandy Bay RFC at the end of 2017/18 season.  The combined rugby club will be one of the largest in Hong Kong, with approximately 1,000 players, and encompass all levels of rugby from high performance to social grade to youth and minis. HKU Sandy Bay RFC’s committee has recently unanimously approved the merger and transitional arrangements are currently underway.

The transition of HKCC Rugby Section to HKU Sandy Bay RFC will enable the sport to continue to develop at all levels and provide the operational flexibility and agility needed to fund and support the continuing development of the sport of Rugby at the highest levels.

This is truly an exciting opportunity that will create playing opportunities for all members of the community, further develop the sport of rugby in Hong Kong, and allow players to reach their full potential at whatever level they choose to play.  HKCC and the Rugby Section are both committed to ensuring that there is a smooth transition to, and successful future for, rugby at HKU Sandy Bay RFC.

HK Women Beat Malaysia in Super Over

At the Asean Women’s T20 Cup in Thailand, Hong Kong faced Malaysia in their fourth match, still looking for their first win after a disappointing start to the tournament.

The pitch had dried considerably and upon winning the toss Captain Mariko Hill chose to bat first. After several disappointing performances with the bat there was considerable pressure on the team to post a respectable score. Coach Richard Waite rejigged the batting order opting to have Mariko Hill and Shanzeen Shahzad open the batting. With the early loss of Shanzeen Shahzad in the second over, it looked as though the players hadn’t learnt from the previous games and were failing to adapt to the pitch and the situation.

Yasmin Daswani though scored an elegant half-century (56 from 57 balls) as she and Hill put on 59 for the second wicket. Wicketkeeper Bella Bo Yee came in at number five and the pair added an unbeaten 60 runs to lift Hong Kong to 119 for 3 after 20 overs.

Malaysia got off to a good start but lost opener Yusrina Yaakop at the end of the second over bowled by the 14-year-old Maryam Bibi for 1. Allison Siu bowled Winifred Duraisngam for 6 with the score on 38 after 7.4 overs. Hong Kong’s bowlers though were spraying the ball all over the place, conceding 20 wides in the innings, and Christina Baret (44 not out) and Elysa Yasmin (33) looked to have combined for a match winning partnership with Malaysia needing just five off the last over.

With two runs Shahzad bowled Yasmin with the second to last ball, leaving Mahirah Izzati to score two off the last ball for victory. A scampered single tied the scores to create the first ‘super over’ of the tournament.

Malaysia batted first in the super over and Hill conceded just 5 runs while taking 2 wickets. With Hill and Shahzad opening Hong Kong needed 6 runs to win the match. If Hong Kong scored only 5 they would still win based on amount of boundaries scored during the innings (10 against 4).

Hill faced the first ball and got a single, Shahzad had a big swing and a miss at the second. On the third Shahzad steered the ball past third man for 4. Needing just 1 to win, Shahzad smashed another four to lift Hong Kong to their first win of the tournament.

Hong Kong face Tanzania in their final game on the 13 March.

Additional reporting and images: HK Cricket, Cricket Thai

29th Macau Arts Festival

The theme of the 29th Macao Arts Festival, which runs from 27 April to 31 May, is “Origin” as the festival’s programme looks to broaden audiences’ thinking about life as well as have them recall and ponder on the core meaning of life.

Das Kapital by the Shanghai Dramatic Arts Centre opens the festival. A new version of Karl Marx’s grand classic – created in celebration of the 200th anniversary of his birth – it incorporates elements of Macau’s and looks to illustrate the duality of capital through black humour. The festival closing production is Cloud Gate 2‘s 13 Tongues, a dance, music and folklore show.

Organised by the Cultural Affairs Bureau  this year’s festival features 26 programmes grouped across 7 categories: Thematic Highlights: Origin; Groundbreakers: Connection; Cross-Disciplinary Creations: Theatre; Family Entertainment; Quintessence of Tradition; Melodious Music and Exhibitions. Plus an outreach programme aimed at promoting arts in the community.

Japanese playwright Tadashi Suzuki presents his adaptation of The Trojan Women which showcases the misery and desolation of the post-war period; while renowned Korean theatre group Sadari Movement Laboratory renders its adaptation of Kafka’s classical work The Trial to explore the definition of crime with unique body movements and language. Emerging Filipino choreographer Eisa Jocson, who has been performing in Europe, presents a work that examines the feminine body and gender politics; while Subject to_change from the United Kingdom introduces its highly-acclaimed work Home Sweet Home, allowing participants to build their cardboard houses and form a community.

Local Macanese artists join hands with European and Asian artists in the performances in the “Groundbreakers: Connection” category. Dirks Theatre Arts Association, in collaboration with an Irish director and its international actors team, presents their adaptation of The Night just before the Forest by famed French playwright Bernard-Marie Koltès. The play Sunset at the Shipyards by Dream Theatre Association tells the history of the local shipbuilding industry while Migration is documentary theatre from the Macau Experimental Theatre that features Indonesian migrant workers.

Tickets for the 29th Macau Arts Festival are onsale now from Macau Ticket, unfortunately there are no ferry packages available to reduce the cost of attending. Full details of the programme are in the event diary and you can find out more from the festival website www.icm.gov.mo/fam/29/en/

Hong Kong Beat Afghanistan at ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifiers

Hong Kong resurrected their ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier campaign with an historic triumph over Afghanistan in Bulawayo. The 30-run win was the first ever victory for Hong Kong over a Test playing nation in the One Day International format.

Results in other matches now mean Hong Kong can guarantee a passage through to the Super Six stage with one win in their remaining two matches against Zimbabwe and then Nepal.

After being dismissed for just 91 against Scotland in their opening encounter, Hong Kong’s batsmen produced a much improved performance against an Afghanistan team containing the world’s top ranked bowler, Rashid Khan.

Cameos from Nizakat Khan (28) and Babar Hayat (31) got Hong Kong’s innings going but the starts meant the innings threatened to lack substance at one stage 4-93 in the 24th over.

But 20-year-old Anshuman Rath showed great determination to hold the innings together as he compiled 65 off 90 balls from number five in the order. That allowed the lower order to chip in around him but it was the final overs assault from Tanwir Afzal (22 off 9 balls) who lifted the Hong Kong target to a more imposing mark of 241-8.

In reply it was Tanwir (1-37) who gave Hong Kong the early breakthrough but at 56-1 Afghanistan were trundling along steadily in pursuit of 242 when Ehsan was brought on from the clubhouse end in the 16th over. With loop and flight, he tempted Rahmat Shah into an expansive drive. With dip and turn, he spun the ball sharply in between bat and pad to disturb the stumps. With that, Afghanistan were 56 for 2, and Hong Kong had their opening. Before his first over was up, Ehsan had also dismissed the set Ihsanullah for 20, a gloved sweep landing in the hands of Rath, tumbling to his left at slip.

The pressure built up by the bowlers brought desperate strokes and with the required rate closing in on six an over, Samiullah Shenwari bent low to sweep Ehsan but missed the ball entirely to be bowled for 9, as Afghanistan slipped to 73 for 4.

From there Hong Kong continued to keep the scoreboard pressure on and the climbing rate brought more wickets when rain intervened at 7-167. Play did resume but Afghanistan only had 18 balls to chase a revised target 226.

Eshan later picked up a fourth wicket as Afghanistan were held to 195-9 and for his career best figures of 4 for 33, Ehsan was named Man of the Match.

Hong Kong coach Simon Cook said “We sat down after the Scotland game an had an honest chat and the players got together as a group and talked about what they needed to do to beat Afghanistan. Each individual identified how they were going to play and what impact they wanted to have and executed that in training yesterday. The pitch spun a lot and so it’s a credit to how our guys nullified their spin options. We trained with purpose and got results.”

“240 was about par, however the pitch – spun quickly and a lot so it was a challenge for anyone going out there. We learnt from the experience of playing Rashid in Hong Kong in November and it was hugely pleasing to see the improvement.” Cook continued “We had a World T20 victory against Bangladesh which stands out as our biggest – today was great but it is only one game in a tournament that means so much so we will enjoy it tonight and then refocus quickly for Zimbabwe.”

Additional reporting and images: HK Cricket

One Cup To Rule Them All

Gai Wu Falcons and Valley Black have contested the past five Premiership Grand Championship Finals. Can Gai Wu add the Cup to their league title or will Valley’s reign as Grand Champions continue…

Kicking off at King’s Park at 4.30pm, this clash has an extra layer of spice with Gai Wu defeating Valley 22-15 last time they met to bring an end to the Black’s three year 51-game winning streak.

Finally I have a full strength squad to select from this week so it will bring me a bit of a headache at selection,” Gai Wu coach “Sailo” Lai Yiu-pang said. “The set piece is going to be a big area, if we can secure the set piece, especially the scrums, and put pressure on them, then we will have more opportunity to create a platform for ourselves. If we fail to secure that platform in defence there will be more challenges.”

Gai Wu breezed past Tai Po 63-0 in the semi-finals while Valley outlasted a gallant Tigers side 17-10 and Lai knows his team will need to be on the ball throughout this weekend.

“The two teams will be throwing everything at it, I expect it to be a close game and a big battle,” he said. “We have to be able to play 80 minutes of rugby, they have some experienced players – Bella [Milo] and Aroha [Savage] can turn every opportunity into points.”

“We can’t let up and we have to defend well. The reason we beat them last time is because we defended really well, we shut them down early so they didn’t have too much front-foot ball and then we put pressure on them and forced them to make turnovers.”

Chong Ka-yan and Lee Ka-shun will be among the key players for the Falcons as they look to end Valley’s run of three consecutive grand championship wins.

For Valley coach Milo, it’s about building on the basics. We’re excited and nervous at the same time,” she said. “We have got to get our set piece right and put a bit of pressure on their key players. Our biggest work this week has been our defence. We didn’t really slow down their breakdown last time we played so they had faster ball and we were just a bit too slow to get out wide.”

“We’ve just focussed on ourselves and how we can get better from last week’s semi-final, we didn’t start too well. We have been talking about how we can control our game, ” added Milo.

Grand Championship Finals 2018

Additional reporting and image: hkru