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Jade Green Station

In 1910, the Chinese were commissioned by the French to construct a rail connection between the Chinese Yunnan province and Vietnam. In very little time, this turned the sleepy village of Bise (Jade) into a lively stopover. Director Yu Jian quietly observes the daily bustle along the railroad tracks that are populated by traders, sellers of sweets, passengers and railroad employees. Initially, we only hear the surrounding sounds (dogs, birds, the radio), but gradually more and more people tell about their memories and ambitions. A land worker, for instance, recollects the era of collective farming, and how he made his toiling comrades laugh by singing a song. Another calls attention to the shifting opinion about marrying people off. We also hear how the railroad workers are edified by a memo from the authorities that praises good work ethic and once more states the security regulations.

Jade Green Station

NR 2004
Every Meeting seems a Parting

The film documents a trip that the filmmaker took with her parents. Both in their sixties, they had lived their lives in rural areas and never seen the sea. Thanks to the film, she had the opportunity to take her parents to the seaside. She found the island closest to home, Weizhou Island, and asked a photographer to film this trip. Different layers of reality — her parent’s fear of modern society, the daughter’s doubt about her own motivations, and the photographer’s change from an impartial documentarian to an emotional participant — emerged together. In the course of this short trip, the filmmaker started to reflect on art, family, and self, all through the recorded images.

Every Meeting seems a Parting

NR 2016
How are you doing , Kungliao

This film documents how the residents in Kong-liao, a picturesque fishing town,have been fighting against a nuclear plant intruding their beautiful hometown since 1988,the year when they established a community anti-nuclear plant club.It has been a bitter long journey in the past 16 years.However,the switch of governing power forced another political strorm of changing nuclear policy.It was in effect a torture for the Kong-liao people.Who would have known the stories behind the beautiful coastal line?

How are you doing , Kungliao

NR 2004
Snippets

Snippets is a video about the sweet reluctance to become an adult in a country where everyone seems to be seeking only status symbols and advancement. Yan Junjie and his friends belong to a new Chinese generation, uncompromising and free, standing apart from mainstream Chinese society. Yan Junije attempts to capture the irrecoverable moments of youth, a time that is destined to be lost. But all he finds are snippets, fragments and pieces of a unique period of being, of the lust for life.

Snippets

NR 2005
Morning Tears China

Morning tears works for children whose parents are sentenced to death or who serve a long prison sentence. Children whose parents are executed suffer tremendous emotional pain. Besides their trauma they have to cope with stigmas and prejudices from society. Often nobody wants to take care of them because children of convicts are themselves considered as criminals. These children bring bad luck. Nobody wants to take care of them and they end up on the street. The children that Morning Tears intends to help need a safe and caring environment where they can heal from their traumas and grow up in dignity. The project "Coming Home- after the death sentence of a parent" tries to answer to those needs. The project Coming Home is situated in Zhengzhou, the capital of Henan Province. Zhengzhou is an industrial city amid the farmland of central China. It has 6 million inhabitants.

Morning Tears China

NR N/A
Ninth Uncle

Nicknamed "Mayor of the Night Market", Ninth Uncle has been a temporary worker managing the night market for over 30 years. Despite of his success in the night market, his family life appears quite the opposite. Almost 70 years old now, he continues his life in the night market. As the night falls every evening, Zhong Shan Road and its hundred years of history are now facing reconstruction and the night market full of yummy food venders [sic] is soon to be gone. Ninth Uncle helplessly watches the empire he worked his whole life for slowly fall apart.

Ninth Uncle

6.0 2014
Speaking Up 2

Using the same interview techniques applied in her highly successful Speaking Up (2005), Tammy Cheung turns her attention from Hong Kong to Mainland China. In Speaking Up II, she interviews around two dozen students from a well-respected primary school in Jiangxu (near Shanghai). They are asked to express their views on different topics such as personal issues, family, gender, society, and more. Presented in a skilfully edited montage and intertwined with footage of their daily lives at school, their answers highlight the changing face of today’s China.

Speaking Up 2

NR 2007
All matters will pass

A middle-aged couple living in Suzhou played a "divorce" at home, recalling the sweetness of having met each other, and the triviality of life now seems to contrast, but it is the inevitable trend of life. A man who loves playing cards and does not care about his family but has a good temper, also walked into the kitchen after his wife fell ill and picked up POTS and pans; A woman who is worse than her word and takes care of her family, even if she is dissatisfied with her husband, will be aroused again by a missing letter from her youth. They face each other's gaps and problems, and finally choose to tolerate and continue, life is riddled with holes, but they do not give up life.

All matters will pass

NR 2023