|
Gallery: Star-studded Golden Horse
BEIJING, Nov. 15 -- Hong Kong blockbusters swept the
major prizes of Taiwan's 42nd Golden Horse Film Awards, considered one of the
top awards events of the Chinese-language film industry.
 |
| Veteran actress Hsu Chi was named best
actress at Taiwan's Golden Horse awards for her performance in "Three
Times," a sensual examination of three love affairs in three different
eras. Hsu plays a pool hall hostess, a retrained courtesan and a
hedonistic rock
singer. | Stephen Chow
("Kung Fu Hustle") was the big winner, with best picture and best director
awards, his first Golden Horses. But he was not present to claim his prizes.
Set in 1930s Shanghai, Chow's trademark slapstick
comedy has broken through to overseas distribution, particularly the United
States.
In what may have been the biggest surprise of this
year's Golden Horse awards, Aaron Kwok ("Divergence") edged out fellow Hong
Konger Tony Leung for best actor.
Kwok said he had not starred in many movies and the
award marked "another beginning" for his career.
Also vying with Leung in the best actor category were
Taiwan's Chang Chen ("Three Times"), and Chen Kun ("A West Lake Moment").
Taiwanese screen siren Hsu Chi, five-time Golden
Horse nominee, walked away with the best actress award for her role in the
three-segment romance "Three Times."
Hsu's rivals were Chen Shiang-chyi ("The Wayward
Cloud"), Miriam Yeung ("Drink, Drank, Drunk") and Michelle Krusiec ("Saving
Face").
Taiwanese pop sensation Jay Chou, a singer-songwriter
and one of the Chinese-language music industry's biggest names, won for best new
performer with "Initial D," signaling the appearance of a new Asian film
presence.
"I'm not very confident about acting, unlike my
music," Chou said in his acceptance speech. "But after winning this award,
getting this recognition, I'm very happy."
Six out of 10 film critics surveyed by the
Taipei-based Ming Sheng Daily had favored Leung to take home one of the 18
Golden Horses for his role in "Election," the story of a bloody power struggle
in a Hong Kong gang society.
Critics had expected Chow to win for best director
following his sweep of the Hong Kong Film Awards earlier this year for "Kung Fu
Hustle," the most commercially successful movie in the competition.
An array of stars paraded along the blue carpet at
the cultural center in northern Keelung city, where police tightened security
after the first death threat in the history of the Golden Horse awards.
A man who demanded five million Taiwan dollars
(US$148,809) from event organizers was arrested earlier in the week.
"Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" director Ang Lee and
heart-throb actor Takeshi Kaneshiro attended the gala but Hong Kong superstar
Jackie Chan and Andy Lau, injured on location in Beijing, were not in the VIP
crowd.
Hong Kong blockbusters eclipsed Taiwanese art house
films at this year's event, with Hong Kong director Johnnie To's "Election" up
for 11 Golden Horses including best director and best picture, and "Kung Fu
Hustle" nominated in 10 categories.
Legendary Taiwanese auteur Hou Hsiao-hsien's "Three
Times" lost to Chow despite nine nominations.
|