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Actress Maggie Cheung walks on the red
carpet in Shanghai Grand Theater on Saturday night, June 16, 2007, before
the opening ceremony of the 10th Shanghai International Film
Festival.(Photo:news.cn)
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BEIJING,
Jun 18 -- The 10th Shanghai International Film Festival opened at the
Shanghai Grand Theater on Saturday night, and its first order of business was to
bestow special awards on industry members who had made significant contributions
to Chinese cinema.
Hong Kong actress Maggie Cheung, renowned local
filmmaker Xie Jin and 90-year-old film artist Zhang Ruifang received the honors
at the festival's grand opening.
Prior to the ceremony, nearly 300 domestic and
foreign celebrities walked the red carpet, including Cheung, Hollywood sexpot
Sharon Stone, actor Reggie Lee, acclaimed Japanese director Yoji Yamada and
South Korean icon Lee Jun-ki.
Cheung expressed gratitude to everyone who had worked
on her films - and even applauded those who don't like her movies.
"They have kept me moving to do better," she said.
During her acting career, Cheung has captured many
international prizes, including the best actress Silver Bear at the 1992 Berlin
Film Festival for "Center Stage" and the best actress honor at Cannes for the
French film "Clean" in 2004.
The other two artists also received huge applause at
the opening gala for their outstanding achievements in Chinese cinema.
This year 16 films are vying for the festival's top
prize, the Golden Goblet. Three Chinese offerings, "The Go Master" by Tian
Zhuangzhuang, Yin Li's "The Knot," Hong Kong director Yau Nai-hoi's "Eye in the
Sky," and a Sino-US co-production, "Shanghai Red" by Oscar Costo, are among the
nominees.
Mainland filmmaker Chen Kaige heads the seven-member
jury panel, which also includes Spanish director Fernando Trueba and Italian
actress Maria Cucinotta.
The police film "Eye in the Sky" was the festival's
opening offering.
Yesterday's Jin Jue International Film Forum featured
the heads of nine international film festivals, including representatives from
Tokyo and Venice, to exchange their experiences.
"Each film fest needs to find its own position and
style to match its culture and tradition," said Tsuguhiko Kadokawa, president of
the Tokyo International Film Festival. "Providing a platform for young film
talent is also our important mission."
Over the next few days, forum topics will include
film co-production, film marketing, the making of digital-video shorts and new
Asian films.
A Chinese film exhibition, a Japanese movie show and
retrospective screenings of the works of the late Italian film master actor
Marcello Mastroianni also kicked off yesterday.
Italian classics such as "Divorce Italian Style" and
"8 1/2" as well a recent Japanese production, "Love and Honor," and the Chinese
comedy romance "The Longest Night in Shanghai" will be shown at 21 theaters
across town as part of the festival's panorama section.
Tomorrow, the festival will launch special showcases
of Brazilian and German films.
Festival ticket sales have topped five million yuan
(658,000) so far, a slight increase from the same period last year.
The festival will close at the Shanghai Grand Theater
on Sunday.
Renowned Taiwanese director Hou Hsiao-hsien will
attend with his "Looking for the Red Balloon" as the closing film. French
actress Juliette Binoche, who stars in the film, may also attend.
(Source: Shanghai Daily)