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The Rebel (Vietnamese: Dòng Máu Anh Hùng) is a 2007 Vietnamese martial arts film directed by Charlie Nguyen and starring Johnny Tri Nguyen, Dustin Nguyen and Veronica Ngo.It premiered on April 12, 2007, at the Vietnamese International Film Festival in Irvine, California.
His film credits include Hung Vuong the 18th/Thời Hùng Vương 18 (1994, writer/director), Chances Are/Vật Đổi Sao Dời (2002, writer/director), Finding Madison (2005, co-producer), Fool For Love/Để Mai Tính (2009, director), [2] the award-winning hit release by The Weinstein Company, The Rebel/Dòng Máu Anh Hùng (2006, co-writer ...
Truyện vợ chồng Anh Lực (The Story of Anh Lực and His Wife) Feature Film: 1972: Bão tình (Stormy Love) Lưu Bạch Ðàn: Kiều Chinh, Ôn Văn Tài, Hùng Cường, Kiều Phượng Loan, Thúy Liệu: Feature Film: Nắng chiều (Afternoon Sun) Lý Đức Thư: Thanh Nga, Hùng Cường, Phương Hồng Ngọc, Tùng Lâm ...
Clash (Vietnamese: Bẫy Rồng) is a 2009 Vietnamese action martial arts film directed by Le Thanh Son and starring Johnny Tri Nguyen and actress/singer Veronica Ngo.Johnny Tri Nguyen and Veronica Ngo had recently appeared together in the 2007 film The Rebel.
Ngô Thanh Vân was born on 26 February 1979 in Trà Vinh, Vietnam. [1] She is the youngest child with two older brothers. When she was 10, her family put her in a boat to escape the Vietnamese communist government.
After a sabbatical, Hung returned with the noir psychological thriller I Come with the Rain (2009), which featured a star-studded international cast including Josh Hartnett and Elias Koteas. [16] Hung directed Norwegian Wood, [17] an adaptation of Haruki Murakami's novel of the same name, which was released in Japan in December 2010. [18]
Đông Hung is the homeland of hát chèo, a traditional Vietnamese music genre, and water puppetry. The district is also well known for Cay cake. Geography
The Vertical Ray of the Sun (Vietnamese: Mùa hè chiều thẳng đứng, French: À la verticale de l'été) is the third feature film by Vietnamese-born French director Trần Anh Hùng. It was released in 2000 and is the final part of what many now consider to be Tran's "Vietnam trilogy."