Showing posts with label Poker King. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poker King. Show all posts

Monday, December 28, 2009

12.28.2009 - News

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Two new posters. Movie opens Jan.22.





Producer Jackie Chan launches TV version of The Myth (HunanTV)

Movie season's lesser gems
Midnight Taxi, Poker King, Bright Future

CRI: Xu Jinglei Offers More Office Politics Advice
Xu Jinglei shoots promotional photos for her upcoming film "Du Lala's Promotion" in Beijing on December 26, 2009.

Angry group lashes out at Zhang Ziyi
Zhang Ziyi accused of cheating former business partner

English subtitles missing in Hong Kong's 'Avatar'

Thursday, December 17, 2009

12.17.2009 - News

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Finally! A great Chinese flick (Bodyguards and Assassins)
Bodyguards stars dish dirt


Andy Lau trains for New Shaolin Temple Slide show (13) (Sina)


Poker King Shanghai publicity visit with Lau Ching Wan, Stephy Tang and director Chan Hing-Kar (Sina)
Mainland version is 20 minutes shorter

Scriptwriter Lawrence Chou, Gillian Chung

Sze Na, William Chan
Gillian Chung is preparing for her comeback film Former/Ex a Chapman To project also featuring Chan Wai-Ting and Sze Na/Shi Ya (Sina)

Almost Pefect - Edison Chen

Kelly Hu
Indie film Almost Perfect featuring Edison Chen and Kelly Hu is slated for a Christmas holiday release. (Xinhua) (IMDB)

Annie Yi says role in 'Great Porcelain Merchant' saved her

Former actress Gigi Lai changes name in hopes of bearing a son
A geomancer claimed that Lai's old name "Li Zi" benefited her career but conversely decreased the chances of her having a child. Even if she conceived, the child will more likely be a daughter than a son.

Jay Chou is CNN's Entertainer Extraordinaire for 2009

AngelaBaby Super slide show (100) (Sina)
Born and raised in Shanghai, AngelaBaby is of one quarter German descent and moved to Hong Kong at the age of 13 when she only spoke Mandarin.

Zhang Jingchu


Zhang Jingchu promoting apparel brand in Shanghai

After finishing Feng Xiaogang's Aftershock/Tangshang Earthquake last month, Zhang Jingchu's next film will be the comedy Flirting Scholar 2 to be directed by Lee Lik-Chi and co-starring Huang Xiaoming. [I think this is a different Flirting Scholar project than the one featuring Fan Bingbing in a reversal of gender role announced earlier this year.]

A-mei - Macau



A-Mei performed in Macau with a mix of rock and roll, metal, and Turandot's Nessun Dorma. (Xinhua)

Monday, October 19, 2009

Poker King Premiere Is Also Louis Koo's Birthday

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Cherrie Ying


Louis Koo, Lau Ching-Wan

Sam Lee

Stephy Tang


Jo Kuk



The boss' wife, Tiffany Chen






Poker King opens Oct. 22 (Sina.com)

Friday, October 16, 2009

HK Magazine and bc magazine Film Reviews

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HK Magazine and bc Magazine Film Reviews
The Message
Seeing “The Message” makes one realize just how strong mainland cinema has become in recent years, and also makes you worry about whether Hong Kong cinema can keep up.

The end result is a propaganda film that is more embarrassing than patriotic. I would have preferred to be brainwashed than to see this piece of crap.

Chrissie Chau proves she has more potential than just as a seducer of teenage boys with her life-size cushion. 

The film suffers from very slow pacing and, at over two hours, has probably managed to successfully alienate its intended demographic. It is genuinely surprising that the film’s producer, acclaimed filmmaker Ann Hui, didn’t have a quiet word in her protégé’s ear to suggest that if the film lost half an hour, it would stand a far better chance of being appreciated by those who will benefit most from it.

It’s easy to roll your eyes and dismiss this film as yet another popular Japanese romance weepie, but the truth is it’s a dramatic interpretation and enactment of a real person’s last days, a young woman given the short end of the stick by Fate. 

HK PICKS
The Warrior and The Wolf
(China) An army commander during the Han Dynasty falls in love with a beautiful widow while stranded in the desert, with disastrous results. Directed by Tian Zhuangzhuang. Starring Maggie Q, Joe Odagiri. Opens Oct 22.

Poker King
(Hong Kong) Another local gambling-themed romantic comedy except this time they’re playing Texas Hold’em in Macau. Directed by Chan Hing-ka, Janet Chun. Starring Lau Ching- wan, Louis Koo, Stephy Tang. Opens Oct 22.

Astro Boy
(USA) The popular Japanese manga gets a slick, 3-D facelift in this animated feature. Directed by David Bowers with an all-star voice cast including Kristen Bell, Nicolas Cage, Charlize Theron and Samuel L. Jackson. Opens Oct 23.

bc magazine's HKAFF Preview

The Warrior and the Wolf
The opening film is a large scale historical epic, starring Japanese navel-gazing superstar Odagiri Jo and originally Tang Wei – her with the hairy armpits in Lust, Caution. But since being banned from appearing in Mainland productions, the infinitely more attractive, though perhaps not as talented Maggie Q, steps into the fold. Directed by Tian Zhuangzhuang – not a New Romantic band, but rather the highly acclaimed director of films like The Horse Thief and Springtime in a Small Town, as well as the elegant snoozefest, The Go Master. This looks bigger, louder, faster and sexier, so here's opening the festival opens with a bang.

At the End of Daybreak
The closing film this year comes from Ho Yuhang, the award-winning Malaysian director of Sanctuary and Rain Dogs. The film details a secret relationship between a simple working class lad and a wealthier schoolgirl, a tryst that turns sour leading to blackmail and far worse. Examining their fractured family lives, the lack of parental control, class divisions and broader criticisms of society, At The End of Daybreak continues to cement Ho's reputation as one of the most important filmmakers in a region of ever-increasing relevance.

Breathless
Actor Yang Ik June turns Writer, Producer and Director in this bold, brutal and uncompromising tale of domestic violence and self-destruction. Picking up a slew of awards on the global festival circuit, Breathless is the largely autobiographical tale of a brutish, deeply disturbed debt collector, who crosses paths with an equally abrasive schoolgirl, only for this mismatched pair to strike up an unlikely friendship. The cutting edge of Korean Independent Cinema.

Mother
Highly acclaimed and internationally successful director Bong Joon Ho (Memories of Murder, The Host) has, by all accounts, turned in another masterpiece. Controversially centring this tale of murder, corruption, justice and revenge on an aging female protagonist, the film follows the titular matriarch as she sets out to clear the name of her handicapped son, accused of murdering a schoolgirl and coerced by authorities into signing a confession. Mother is slated to be Korea's official entry into next year's Academy Awards and promises to be an intelligent, yet thrilling experience.

Air Doll
Hirokazu Koreeda's latest film, after a string of critical hits including Nobody Knows and Still Walking, seemed at first glance to be a controversy-baiting piece of poorly judged titillation, casting Korean star Bae Doo Na as a sex doll that miraculously comes to life. What has emerged, however, is a different beast entirely. Air Doll is a delightful tale of unrequited love examining what it means to be human and the loneliness of urban life, while putting a decidedly Japanese spin on the old Pinocchio story.

Face
Always a talking point, the films of Taiwanese director Tsai Ming Liang often defy description. This is especially true of his latest French co-production, Face. Purportedly about a Taiwanese filmmaker (Tsai's regular cohort Lee Kang Sheng) travelling to Paris in order to stage an adaptation of Salome at The Louvre, Face is a bold, challenging spectacle, brimming with beautiful imagery and even the occasional show tune. Some have loved it, some have hated it, some have been bored to tears – but everybody who has seen Face has come away with a strong, opinionated response.

Crows: Zero II
Whether he is making depraved horror films like Visitor Q or Audition, or big budget family-friendly fare such as The Great Yokai War or Yatterman, a new Miike Takashi movie is always worthy of attention.
This clumsily titled sequel to 2007's Crows: Zero (which played at last year's HKAFF) guarantees fisticuffs galore as he continues to adapt Takahashi Hiroki's school gang manga for the big screen. Expect fighting, swearing, wonderful accessorising of militaristic school uniforms and, this time out, an entire army of skinheads. Not particularly highbrow, but sure to be lots of fun.

The Housemaid
Widely hailed as one of the greatest Korean films ever made, this 1960 psychodrama tells the tale of a regular family torn apart after their newly-hired maid turns out to be a sexual predator with her own increasingly evil agenda. Largely unknown outside of Korea until the 1990s, this is a revelatory piece of work that had the Global Film Community finally looking East to the Han Peninsula.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Poker King Cast Promo

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Lau Ching-Wan, Louis Koo


Louis Koo



Lau Ching-Wan


Josie Ho


Stephy Tang


Josie Ho, Stephy Tang, Kama Law

Lau Ching-Wan, Louis Koo and cast attend the Poker King promtional event. (Xinhuanet.com) (Sina.com)