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Tag: Chinese cinema

Italian Film Wins at Golden Rooster Awards

The Italian film production “C’è ancora domani” (還有明天), or “There’s Still Tomorrow,” a film dealing with themes of domestic abuse and women’s emancipation, won the Best Foreign Film award at the 38th Golden Rooster Awards (中國電影金雞獎) on November 15. The annual state-sponsored film awards event, first inaugurated in 1981, is regarded as the premier film event in the People’s Republic of China, and is its answer to Taiwan’s more longstanding (and often better regarded) Golden Horse Awards. 

The GRA’s, as they are often called, have generally focused on blockbuster productions, and have been criticized for their commercial pomp and circumstance, while Taiwan’s GHA’s have attracted more artistic films from across Asia. “There’s Still Tomorrow,” a black-and-white drama set in 1946 Rome, during a pivotal time when women in Italy first achieved their right to suffrage, was perhaps a more artistic choice than usual for the Chinese festival. But the film, the directorial debut by actress and comedian Paola Cortellesi, has also enjoyed undoubted commercial success in China. Released in the country on March 8  for International Women’s Day, the film earned more than six million dollars during a four-week theatrical run, attracting more than one million filmgoers — and achieving a 9.4/10 rating on Douban (豆瓣), China’s leading film review platform. This performance made China the second-largest market in the world for the film after Italy.Co-organized by the China Film Association (中國電影家協會), an official body under the Central Propaganda Department-run China Federation of Literary and Art Circles (中國文學藝術界聯合會), the Golden Rooster Awards were previously held every two years. Since 2019, they have been held every year in the city of Xiamen, as the government in Beijing has sought to establish an alternative to the GHA’s held just over 300 kilometers away across the Taiwan Strait.

Southern Celebrations

Actress Xin Zhilei (辛芷蕾) won the Best Actress Award at the 82nd Venice International Film Festival on Saturday for her performance in The Sun Rises on Us All (日掛中天), a story by neo-noir director Cai Shangjun (蔡尚君) about a pair of estranged lovers. As the state-run China Daily noted, Xin was just the second actress from China to win the honor — coming more than three decades after Gong Li (鞏俐) clinched the title for her role in Zhang Yimou’s The Story of Qiu Ju in 1992.

Coverage of Xin Zhilei’s Venice win made the front page of yesterday’s Southern Metropolis Daily newspaper in Guangzhou — and received (above) a full page spread on page 3.

Produced in Guangdong, The Sun Rises on Us All derives its title from the Cantonese opera The Purple Hairpin (紫钗記). The film is the first production from the province to compete in the main competition of a major European film festival. The news has been reported enthusiastically by media across southern China, and in Hong Kong — including HK01 and the state-controlled Ta Kung Pao (大公報) — as well as by Taiwanese outlets such as Mirror Media and ETToday.