Actress Maggie Cheung calls for unity to save Hong Kong
film industry
- Credits:
AFP
HONG KONG
March
20, 2006 - Award-winning
Hong Kong film-star Maggie Cheung appealed on Monday for
the local media to help save the territory’s struggling
movie industry as she was voted most charismatic Chinese
actress in an online poll.
Cheung, who won the best actress
gong at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival for her role in
“Clean”, criticized the press for putting down new
actors at a time when the once-dynamic Hong Kong film
industry is going through its worst time in a decade.
“I know that the Hong Kong film
market is small but I hope the press will stop putting
down local actors. Why can’t we be united and work
together to promote the Hong Kong film industry?” she
said to an audience at the second Entertainment Expo,
the southern Chinese territory’s biggest entertainment
event.
Cheung, 41, made her comments after
she was voted the most charismatic Chinese actress by
43,000 people from Hong Kong, China and Taiwan in an
online poll by Expo organizers.
Hong Kong heart-throb Tony Leung
Chiu-wai of “In the Mood for Love” was voted the most
charismatic actor, while directors Johnnie To of triad
gangster flick “Election” and Tsui Hark of kung fu epic
”Seven Swords” were both voted the most admired Chinese
directors.
Hong Kong’s main annual film awards
will be handed out at another ceremony on April 8,
which is also part of the month-long Expo. Among the
celebrities who attended the Expo, which runs for a
month, was acclaimed “2046” and “In the Mood for Love”
director Wong Kar-wai, action hero Jackie Chan, “The
Lover” actor Tony Leung Ka-fai and “Infernal Affairs”
director Andrew Lau.
Singers Jacky Cheung and Joey Yung
also performed at the gala opening ceremony.
The Expo is hoped to provide a shot
in the arm for the territory’s ailing film industry
which suffered its worst year in a decade in 2005 with
plunging domestic box-office receipts and a decline in
the number of local productions.
Hong Kong released just 55 films
last year, the lowest number in 10 years and well down
from the 64 movies that hit cinema screens in 2004.
Piracy and the inability of moviemakers to meet the
changing tastes of local audiences in the face of
Hollywood blockbusters have been blamed for the decline.
Hong
Kong's Entertainment Expo is showcase for its movie
industry
HONG KONG
March
17, 2006 -- Leading Hong
Kong film stars including Jackie Chan and Maggie Cheung
will open the southern Chinese territory's biggest
entertainment event on Monday.
Acclaimed director Wong Kar-wai and
actor Tony Leung, the event's ambassador, are also
expected at the red-carpet opening of the city's second
Entertainment Expo, which runs for one month.
The event combines movies, digital entertainment, music
and TV under one showcase banner, with a film festival
and awards show as the centerpiece.
The 30th Hong Kong International Film Festival has a
roster of more than 200 movies and will be opened by
director Johnnie To's Election 2 and
Pang Ho-cheung's Isabella, which won
the Silver Bear award for best film music at last
month's Berlin Film Festival.
Also among the 100 industry players expected at the
Expo's gala opening are Perhaps Love
director Peter Chan Ho-sun and Rumble in the
Bronx director Stanley Tong, while singers
Jacky Cheung and Joey Yung will also appear, event
organizers said.
At the ceremony eight prizes will be awarded to
directors and actors from China, Hong Kong or Taiwan.
Expo organizers held an Internet poll to find the
winners in categories including the most admired Chinese
director, the best screen hero as well as the most
glamorous actor and actress.
Hong Kong's main annual film awards will be handed out
at another ceremony on April 8th.
The Expo is hoped to provide a shot in the arm for the
territory's ailing film industry which suffered its
worst year in a decade in 2005 with plunging domestic
box-office receipts and a decline in the number of local
productions.
Hong Kong released just 55 films last year, the lowest
number in 10 years and well down from the 64 movies that
hit cinema screens in 2004.
Piracy and the inability of moviemakers to meet the
changing tastes of local audiences in the face of
Hollywood blockbusters have been blamed for the decline.