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e. This is a list of films produced in Hong Kong ordered by decade and year of release in separate pages. For film set in Hong Kong and produced elsewhere see List of films set in Hong Kong. Zhuangzi Tests His Wife (1913), the first Hong Kong narrative film.
The Hong Kong Movie Database (HKMDB) is a bilingual (English and Chinese) website started in 1995 by Ryan Law. [1] It provides a repository for information about movies originating from Hong Kong and the people who created them. The database was initially populated with data on over 6000 films, and reviews from the defunct database hosted at ...
Caught in Time: Lau Ho-Leung: Wang Qianyuan, Daniel Wu, Jessie Li, Michelle Wai, Nina Paw: J U L 15: Time: Ricky Ko: Patrick Tse, Fung Bo-bo: Patrick Tse won Best Actor at the 40th Hong Kong Film Awards: A U G 5: Ladies Market: Wing-chung Kwan: Liu Kai-chi, Lam Suet, Chung Suet Ying: Coffin Homes: Fruit Chan: Wong You Nam, Loletta Lee, Siu Yam ...
The cinema of Hong Kong (Chinese: 香港電影) is one of the three major threads in the history of Chinese-language cinema, alongside the cinema of China and the cinema of Taiwan. As a former Crown colony, Hong Kong had a greater degree of political and economic freedom than mainland China and Taiwan, and developed into a filmmaking hub for ...
The Vengeance of Fu Manchu (1967) Five Golden Dragons (1967) – movie 100% located in Hong Kong with opening footage set in the cross-harbor car ferry. Gambit (1966) Up to His Ears (1965) Lord Jim (1965) Road to Hong Kong (1962) The World of Suzie Wong (1960) – includes footage of the Star Ferry.
23. Enter the Fat Dragon. Kenji Tanigaki. Donnie Yen, Teresa Mo, Niki Chow. [2] 24. All's Well, Ends Well 2020. Raymond Wong Pak-ming. Julian Cheung, Raymond Wong Pak-ming, Louis Cheung.
Hong Kong Film Archive building, opened 2001. Main entrance. The Hong Kong Film Archive is a public film archive collects, preserves, and screens Hong Kong films and other related materials. The archive was founded in 1993, when its Planning Office was opened by the Urban Council. [1] It joined the International Federation of Film Archives in 1996.
Hong Kong Cinemagic. Hong Kong Cinemagic, sometimes referred to as HKCinemagic, was a bilingual (French and English) website providing a repository for information about Chinese language films from Hong Kong, China and Taiwan, and the people who created them. The website contained news, interviews, film reviews and a database of people, films ...