Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Trần Vịnh (director); Bành Mai Phương (writer); Lê Vi, Trung Hiếu, Thu Nguyệt, Thành An, Trần Thu Hương, Vân Anh, Hồng Vân, Thu Hương, Quang Thập, Lâm Bình, Thu Hiền, Hoàng Chiến, Hương Dung, Lý Thanh Kha, Quang Linh... Drama Adapted from Sương Nguyệt Minh's short story 'Người bên sông Châu' 3-10 Apr
Kim Anh Nhat, Quach Ngoc Ngoan, Luc Tran: Drama: Winner of the 201 Golden Kite Prize: Touch (Chạm) Minh Đức Nguyễn: Porter Lynn, John Ruby, Melinda Bennett, Tony LaThanh, Long Nguyễn: Drama: 2011: Cô dâu đại chiến (Battle of the Brides) Victor Vũ: Huy Khánh, Ngọc Điệp: Romantic Comedy: Bóng ma học đường (Ghost ...
As the filmmaking community in the U.S. and elsewhere spoke out against the government's negative treatment of Duong, the government of Vietnam relented and allowed him and his family to emigrate to the United States. [5] [6] He has also acted in the South Korean film Farewell the River. As of 2006, Duong lived in the San Francisco Bay Area.
At the end of 2002, in the context of modeling work being still new and prejudiced, it was not recognized as a profession by the Ministry of Culture and was only considered as an extra in major musical shows for the US. actors and singers, such as Vietnam Charming, Hue Festival, Anh Thu became the first Vietnamese female model and the second model in history to appear in a national-level ...
Born in 1947 in Thái Bình a province in northern Vietnam, Hương came of age just as the Vietnam War was turning violent. At the age of twenty, when she was a student at Vietnamese Ministry of Culture’s Arts College, Dương Thu Hương volunteered to serve in a women’s youth brigade on the front lines of "The War Against the Americans".
The Lucky Guy; Directed by: Lee Lik-Chi: Written by: Lee Lik-Chi Man-Fai Cheng: Starring: Stephen Chow Eric Kot Daniel Chan Sammi Cheng Kristy Yang Shu Qi Ng Man Tat
Muoi is considered the first horror film production to be made in Vietnam. [4] Despite high public expectation, the picture also received bad reactions. Upon examination, it received a disapproval from Vietnamese Bureau of Cinema for "unsuitable contents," [5] which led to a delay in Vietnamese release.
Diên Biên Phu (French for Điện Biên Phủ) is a French 1992 epic war film written and directed by French veteran Pierre Schoendoerffer.With its huge budget, all-star cast, and realistic war scenes produced with the cooperation of both the French and Vietnamese armed forces, Dîen Bîen Phu is regarded by many as one of the more important war movies produced in French filmmaking history.