Netflix to Launch in Hong Kong in Early 2016

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Netflix press release 8 September 2015 – Netflix, Inc. announced today it will expand into South Korea, Singapore, Hong Kong and Taiwan in early 2016 as it moves to complete its global rollout by the end of next year.

Once launched, Internet users will be able to subscribe to Netflix and instantly watch a curated selection of popular TV shows and movies in high-definition or even Ultra HD 4K on nearly any Internet-connected screen. Netflix first became available in Asia earlier this month with the start of service in Japan.

“The combination of increasing Internet speeds and ubiquity of connected devices provides consumers with the anytime, anywhere ability to enjoy their favorite TV shows and movies on the Netflix service,” said Reed Hastings, chief executive officer of Netflix. “These four markets well represent those trends.”

With a constantly improving user experience, advanced personalization technology and a curated selection of TV shows and films, Netflix members are able to create their own viewing experience and can easily discover new favorites, while reconnecting with popular characters and stories.

Netflix members connected to the Internet can watch whenever, wherever they like, and on any device they choose. Members can start watching on one device, pause, and then pick up where they left off on another, at home or on the go.

Netflix will be available at launch on smart TVs, tablets and smartphones, computers and a range of Internet-capable game consoles and set-top boxes. Additional details on pricing, programming and supported devices will be available at a later date. Consumers can sign up to be alerted when Netflix is available on www.netflix.com.

We can only hope the full range of shows and films will be available!!!

Chinese Documentary Festival 2015

Chinese Documentary Festival 2015

The Chinese Documentary Festival 2015 featuring 31 documentaries from China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and France starts on 8 September with 40 screenings running until the 5 October. There’s an Award Ceremony on the 19 September to announce the winners in the three competition categories Hong Kong Documentary, Documentary Features and Documentary Shorts.

Hong Kong Documentary
This year the Festival again includes a Hong Kong Documentary Award with an aim to promoting local films. There were over 30 Hong Kong entries with eight making it to the festival. ‘Search for one’s identity’ is a popular theme among Hong Kong entries, this includes Tsang Tsui Shan’s Flowing Stories and Wong Siu Pong’s Connection. Karl shows us the social and familial pressure faced by a student movement leader. Taiwanese director Kuo Shiao-yun’s inspiring film, Adversity Challengers, follows a group of Hong Kong youth competing in Taiwan cycling contest. A new work by agricultural activist Chan Hao Lun, Open Road after Harvest, focuses on three contemporary farmers. Van Drivers by Kanas Liu is the story of a group of volunteer van drivers who transported supplies back and forth to the protestors during the Umbrella Movement.

Lee Po

Features
Competition is fierce in this year’s features category. Celebrated Taiwanese director Yang Li Zhou’s The Moment – Fifty Years of Golden Horse narrates in a light-hearted manner the history of Taiwan’s Golden Horse Awards. Bridge Over Troubled Water is filmed in a small village where a tug of war competition by primary school students takes place. It also looks at the issue of immigrant brides. It is uplifting without being sentimental. Ninth Uncle and Heaven’s Will from China allow us a glimpse of the country’s social condition through the eyes of two ‘nobodies’. Su Beng, the Revolutionist, is the biography of the 90 year old political activist. Wu Kang: The Village Committee is a remarkable documentation of the resistance in Shantou’s Wu Kang village and the changes that followed. The Taste of Apple follows Next Media, from its move to Taiwan to its sell-off which has sparked off a fierce discussion on Taiwan’s freedom of the press.

Bridge Over Troubled Water

Shorts
The short films include Taiwan’s Water is Life, a film about conservation whose underwater filming is absolutely stunning. Old Soul looks at five people from different fields who share the same commitment to conservation and the future of Taiwan’s agriculture. One of the protagonists is the director of Water is Life Ke Chin-yuan. In Southland Soldier, a group of soldiers who once fought in Burma for the Chinese Nationalist Party find themselves forgotten by the government and are left to face the plight of forced relocation and land reclamation in a foreign land. Fishing Life, Lingering Sound documents Taiwan’s soon to be extinct fish fry counting technique. Cantonese Rice is an attempt by a French born Chinese-German woman to understand the longing for their homeland of the older generations living overseas.

New Taipei City Documentaries
The New Taipei City Documentaries features six award-winning works with different topics and styles. Some of the Taiwanese directors will attend the festival’s seminars to share their experience on filming and how to promote their works.

Seminars
The festival includes four seminars including Go Hong Kong or Mainland China where two directors from Hong Kong and Taiwan whose works all focus on ‘the search of identity’ talk about their own views on immigration. Freedom of press in Hong Kong and Taiwan hosted by The Taste of Apple’s director Kevin H.J. Lee where local journalists discuss the freedom of press and the hegemony of large corporates. Hong Kong and Taiwan Agricultural Documentaries”invites several speakers including directors Ke Chin-yuan and Chan Ho Lun who are strongly committed to agricultural issues to share their views on agriculture in Hong Kong and Taiwan.

Special Selection
There are three special selections at the 2015 festival. Sunflower Occupation is about Taiwan’s Sunflower Movement. The other two are in a genre less familiar for audiences –the mockumentary. Taiwan’s We Are Happy Family and Hong Kong’s The Aqueous Truth blur the line between fiction and reality and are meant to provoke discussion and self-reflection.

Chinese Documentary Festival
Date:
8 September to 5 October, 2015
Venue:
HK Arts Centre, agnès b. CINEMA (2 Harbour Road, Wanchai)
HK Space Museum, Lecture Hall (10 Salisbury Road, TST)
HK Science Museum, Lecture Hall (2 Science Museum Road, TST)
Tickets: $65 from Urbtix
More info: www.cdf.asia

Additional reporting: Visible Record

Summer International Film Festival 2015

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Enjoy films on the big screen? Or simply have nothing to do this summer? The Summer International Film Festival returns for another year! This summer, it’s showcasing 32 films across 59 screenings all surrounding the theme of complexity and sentimentality.

This year’s SIFF 2015 opens on 11th August with 聂隐娘 (The Assassin (2015)) directed by Hou Hsiao-Hsien, about a thoughtful killer Nie Yin Niang (Shu Qi 舒淇), who has to decide whether to go against her morals as an assassin or as a woman. The film won the Best Director award at the Cannes Film Festival 2015. The Director and and cast will meet the audience on the 11 August and there’s a masterclass with the Director on the 12 August. The festival closes with Woody Allen’s Irrational Man about a philosophy professor Abe Lucas (Joaquin Phoenix), who finds himself in an existential crisis, but rediscovers himself through meeting Jill Pollard (Emma Stone). Blurring comedy and drama, it nicely closes with the theme of complexity and sentimentality.

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The festivals Gala Premiere is the new Ringo Lam film Wild City starring Louis Koo, Shawn Yue and Tong Liya. With his trademark exhilarating car chases along Hong Kong city streets, director Ringo Lam returns after a 12-year hiatus to the crime genre that, together with City on Fire and Full Alert, can be considered his “City Trilogy”. A film about people in the modern world who worship money to the point of dogmatic ignorance, Wild City issues a warning to the greedy and selfish lost souls in Hong Kong… The Director and cast will meet the audience at the 18 August screening.

The two most interesting festival programmes this year are:
The Battle of Sexes: Screwball Comedy. A genre that originally emerged during the Great Depression when Hollywood responded to the hardships of everyday life with films whose sparkling dialogue and romantic complications played havoc with perceptions of class, gender and love. Typically it’s the female who dominates a relationship, challenging the male central character’s masculinity… The two then engage in a humorous battle of the sexes; a new theme for Hollywood and audiences at the time, but one which has become a core of film makers globally since.
Films: Trouble in Paradise (1932, Director Ernst Lubitsch), It Happened One Night (1934, Director: Frank Capra) My Man Godfrey (1936, Director: Gregory La Cava), His Girl Friday (1940, Director: Howard Hawks), The Philadelphia Story (1940, Director: George Cukor), The Lady Eve (1941, Director Presto Strugess).

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Tsai Ming-Liang, Now and Then. The Malaysian born Taiwanese director’s five film retrospective, presents works which illuminate the themes of superstitions and reincarnation, sexual desperation, and isolation. The director’s uncompromising aesthetic of long fixed shots with little movement, complex characters and minimal dialogue, set him apart from other Asian directors, leading him to be one of Asia’s most significant filmmakers of the last 25 years.
Films: Rebels of the Neon God (1992), Vive L’Amour (1994), The River (1997), What Time is it There? (2001), Walker/No No Sleep (2014).

Film festivals are a chance for old and new films to once again appear on the big screen locally, an opportunity to appreciate a film in the surroundings for which it was created. They also offer, through the extended programme of seminars and panel discussions, a chance to enrich your experience and appreciation of a film that going to your local multiplex does not.

Other films shown in Cine Fan SIFF include:
The Assassin (聂隐娘), Yakuza Apocalypse (極道大戦争), Diary of a Chambermaid (Le journal d’une femme de chamber), Standing Tall (La Tête haute), Prophecy (予告犯), Seashore (Beira-Mar), A Touch of Zen (俠女), The Brand New Testament (Le Tout Nouveau Testament), Trouble in Paradise, Kumiko, The Treasure Hunter, The Lady Eve, Piku, It Happened One Night, Love & Peace (ラブ&ピース), My Man Godfrey, Slow West, Flying Colours (ビリギャル), Güeros, The Double Life of Veronique (La double vie de Véronique), Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Love letter, The Philadelphia Story, Wild City, PK, His Girl Friday, Vive L’Amour (愛情萬歲), The River (河流), What Time Is It There?( 你那邊幾點), Irrational Man

Tickets for the Cine Fan SIFF will be on sale on 21st of July, from URBTIX.

Summer International Film Festival (SIFF) 2015
Date:
11–25 August 2015
Venues:
UA Cine Moko, The Grand Cinema, The Metroplex, MCL Telford Cinema, HK Arts Centre, HK Science Museum
Tickets: $75, $65, $85 from URBTIX
More info: screening schedule http://cinefan.com.hk/cms/schdeule/

Support Your Local Shops

https://youtu.be/EC1gFKJYQYc

It’s too late to support your local shops and restaurants when they are about to close. To survive they need your long term support or before you realise it your neighbourhood will be full of 24-7 convenience stores, pharmacies and jewellery outlets. Light-hearted video about a old store that is about to close – made by 一字馬

Russian Film Week: 18-25 March, 2015

Russian film week takes place from the18-25 March as part of the Festival of Russian Culture in Hong Kong – an event presented by the Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation and the Consulate General of the Russian Federation.

The festival features Russian cinematographers: Evgeniy Abyzov, Mikhail Gorevoy, Pavel Derevyanko, Maria Smolnikova, Vladimir Sterzhakov, Artem Tkachenko.

The film week program includes 7 modern Russian movies:

18 March,7pm (by vip invitation only)
Stalingrad (2013)
Director: Fedor Bondarchuk
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u3axbdfzidy

19 March, 7:30pm
Champions (2014)
Directors: Dmitriy Dyuzhev, Artem Aksenenko, Aleksey Yakulov, Emil Nikogosian
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hufbtloreru

20 March, 5pm
Vasilisa (2014)
Director: Anton Sivers
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-kqe47j0ri

21 March, 7:30pm
Fort Ross (2014)
Director: Yuriy Moroz
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lxehcqpunje

22 March, 7:30pm
Spiral (2014)
Director: Andrey Volgin
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aqzuglibyjq

23 March,7:30pm
Speak of the Devil (2014)
Director: Evgeniy Abyzov
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jnpvylp2lj0

25 March, 7:30pm
22 minutes (2014)
Director: Vasiliy Serikov
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vm49mxqcrc0

All films are shown in their original language version with english subtitles.

Free invitations to the screenings are available at the Hong Kong Film Archive on a first-come-first-served basis.

Chinese Documentary Festival 2015 – Call for Entry

Chinese Documentary Festival 2015 - Call for Entry

The 8th Chinese Documentary Festival will be held in September 2015. The Festival comprises two sections: Competition and Special Selection. The Competition section is now open to submission. Documentary filmmakers from all over the world are invited to join.

Since its inception in 2008, the Festival has drawn the attention of filmmakers from around the world, especially those of mainland China, Taiwan and Hong Kong. Thanks to their support, the Festival is attracting bigger audience each year and has become a major event for Chinese documentaries.

Founded in 2004, Visible Record, a non-profit art organisation, has dedicated itself to promoting Chinese documentaries. The Festival is supported by the Lee Hysan Foundation, the Hong Kong Arts Development Council and Art & Culture Outreach.

Entry Requirements
1. Documentary films produced between 1 January, 2013 and 15 April, 2015
2. Such films should contain no less than 50 percent of dialogues in Chinese (including dialects) or issues on Chinese society
3. Feature film: 60 minutes or above; Short film: 59 minutes or below

Submission
Please obtain an application form by downloading from the Festival website (www.cdf.asia) or by sending an email request ([email protected]). Five duplicates of the film (on DVDs) must be sent along with the completed application form to Visible Record before the 15 April, 2015 deadline.

Cheung Chau Diary 2014 Outdoor Screening – 8 November, 2014

長洲誌 2014 - 其哥_Brother Key

The Cheung Chau Diary 2014 Outdoor Screening, part of the Chinese Documentary Festival has been rescheduled to Saturday 8 November 2014. The programme will include the new films of 2014 as well as works from Cheung Chau Diary 2013. There will also be a performance by Cheung Chau musicians.

Cheung Chau Diary 2014
Earlier this year veteran documentary filmmakers from Hong Kong and Taiwan worked with 20 young participants at the “Young Talent Training Camp” on Cheung Chau as they explored the island for interesting film topics. After eight days of heat, rain, frustration and the confusion of filming, they present us with 10 short films that make up Cheung Chau Diary 2014.

The films include people features such as Brother Key, An Ambulanceman, Postman and The Ukulele. Luthier; A Qilin Story of Two Generations, Flower Banner and Man Beside the Sea on preserving traditional businesses; Family on what it is like to be the small shop owners on the island while The Pier and Too Many Cheung Chau Guests are about life on the island. Through the films discover more about the different facets of life in Cheung Chau and the sense of community and tradition that lies in the heart of Hong Kong.

Cheung Chau Diary 2013
Selected shorts from last year’s “Youth Talent Training Camp” including Life, Neighbourhood and Brother Wah, which portray friendship among neighbours; Uncle Fai and The Hair Salon, which examine old traditional shops; The Savage in the Hill and A Man from Cheung Chau, which are character sketches, and Insects and On the Wretched Lives of Fish, which explore nature. The films investigate, each with its unique style, a broad range of subject matters, from intriguing characters to important social issues to the vanishing culture of old districts.

Schedule:
1pm–2:45pm – Screening of Cheung Chau Diary 2013
4-6pm – Music performance
6:30pm-9pm – Outdoor Screening of Cheung Chau Diary 2014

Cheung Chau Diary 2014 Outdoor Screening
When: 1-9pm 8 November, 2014
Where: LOHAS Cheung Chau (Fisheries Joint Association School), Tung Wan Road, Cheung Chau
How much: Free
More info: www.visiblerecord.com

New cinema – The Metroplex

The Metroplex

Located in East Kowloon at KITEC, The Metroplex opened on the 14 February, 2014. It features a ‘state-of-the-art’ 9 screen multiplex, restaurant and all the trimmings associated with a modern cinema. To see what’s showing www.metroplex.com.hk

The Metroplex
Where: G/F., E-Max, KITEC, 1 Trademart Drive, Kowloon Bay, Hong Kong
Contact: 2620 2200
How to get there:
Free Shuttle Bus: operates daily from Kowloon Bay MTR Station, 7am to 11:45pm
Public Transportation:
Bus: 215X, 219X, 224X, 98D, 296D
Mini Bus: Mini bus services are available to and from Sincere Plaza (Tung Choi Street)
Green minibuses 110: Tiu Keng Leng – Kowloon City (Circular route)
Green minibuses 111: Po Lam – San Po Kong