Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-50 of 83
- An animated adventure in which the free-spirited UglyDolls confront what it means to be different, struggle with a desire to be loved, and ultimately discover who you truly are is what matters most.
- A young American boy visiting China helps his zoologist father rescue a panda cub from unscrupulous poachers while its reserve is threatened with closure from officious bureaucrats.
- An international action superstar and his assistant are involved in a transnational rescue operation of the mysterious protagonist P, the top international superstar.
- Bass-heavy and neon-coloured portrait of the alternative Chinese youth in a country in constant state of change that now threatens the underground club Funky Town.
- A story of how Zhou Fei and Xie Yun went through struggles and challenges to become legendary heroes in the pugilistic world.
- When a factory is being torn down in Chengdu, China, workers reflect on their experiences and the importance of the factory in their lives.
- When the windshield of his commercial airplane shatters at 30,000 feet in the air, a pilot and his flight crew work to ensure the safety of the passengers and land the plane.
- A mesmerizing, one-of-a-kind window into modern China, PEOPLE'S PARK is an exhilarating single shot documentary that immerses viewers in an unbroken journey through a famous urban park in Chengdu, Sichuan Province. PEOPLE'S PARK was produced at Harvard's groundbreaking Sensory Ethnography Lab, which has been responsible for some of the most critically-acclaimed, envelope-pushing documentaries of recent years (including SWEETGRASS, LEVIATHAN, and the upcoming MANAKAMANA.) The film explores the dozens of moods, rhythms, and pockets of performance coexisting in tight proximity within the park's prismatic social space, capturing waltzing couples, mighty sycamores, karaoke singers, and buzzing cicadas. A sensory meditation on cinematic time and space, PEOPLE'S PARK offers a fresh gaze at public interaction, leisure and self-expression in today's China.
- A father and mother rack their brains in order to help their son achieve early success in China's education system.
- A remarkable imagining of the historic voyages of 16th-century explorer and writer Fernão Mendes Pinto, one of the first Europeans to sail to and travel the Orient-- India, Japan, and places in between. Choral renditions of Portuguese singer-songwriter Fausto's progressive 80's pop album "Por Este Rio Acima" add inspiration to a lush period drama.
- A traveling architect meets an old friend from his student years; the pair realize their connection has always been a romantic one.
- An Ni, a talented prosecutor who joins the Jiangcheng Prosecutor's Office and faces a number of difficult cases, working with criminal police chief He Luyuan to find the truth in a series of cases.
- The show focuses on a group of students who are preparing for the exam that will determine their future.
- Liliane, a provincial nurse in her peaceful fifties, must cope with the accidental death of her son in China. She decides to fly there in order to repatriate the body. This mourning journey will soon turn out to be a trip of discovery of her son whom she didn't see for years and a trip to make a fresh start through the insight of a new culture.
- It follows a group of idol trainees with dreams to brave the winds and waves in their journey to stand on stage. Gu Yang who has been playing piano since he was a child was accepted to the Julliard School of Music. Alas, with his family going bankrupt, he can no longer enroll as planned. In order to hold on to his musical dreams and appease his distressed mother, Gu Yang joins an agency as a trainee. Since Gu Yang only knows classical music and practically nothing about pop music, he is put into the backup group. Here, he meets Zhao Zhengnan who dances well and Lu Xinghao, who sings well. With their help, Gu Yang steadily improves and manages to beat out the rest to become part of the debut group. Meanwhile, Lin Chen who used to follow Gu Yang around is no longer the person he once was. He considers Gu Yang to be his fiercest competitor and will do anything to surpass him.
- A social butterfly who commits suicide after her fake identity is revealed on TV is given a second chance to right her wrongs on Earth - IN THE BODY OF A MAN.
- The story of how a million Chinese orphans were moved into local foster families after an extraordinary intervention by a British footballer.
- The turbulence of sex, love and mystery between an American journalist and a young ceramic artist in an ancient Chinese town.
- The show focuses on the love and lives of three females.
- A journey of passion, a bitter night. Xiao Cheng ask for help to resolve a big trouble, the guy with whom he spend the afternoon is dead on his bed from the effect of a drug, not something the Chinese authorities look kindly on.
- A king who offended the all-powerful Emperor, and then rebelled against him, but failed. How do these dramatic events in China's history link to the finding of 4000 buried terracotta warriors discovered in Jiangsu Province, China?
- How Bach Defeated Mao is a quiet but compelling film about the tremendous power of music. It is a very personal film about the pianist Zhu Xiao-Mei, who personally experienced the Cultural Revolution and learned how art can be political, how owning a piano can be dangerous and how playing one of Bach's Inventions can be potentially deadly. And yet, it is also at the same time a film about a new China, a country that is undergoing a process of change and is searching for meaning.
- Summer, 1996. In a small community in South West China, an 8-year-old tries to capture the thief responsible for stealing his grandma's bike and enters the moral quandary for the first time.
- Through encounters in the ancient Dujiangyan Irrigation System - China, nearby the birthplace of Tao, the film opens a window onto contemporary Chinese tourists lives, questioning if it's still possible to follow the basic "losing the sense of self" principle of Tao, in the digital era, where everyone is more inclined to record their experience rather than living it.