3500+ Films - 2.5 million words – 1 million viewers! Founder and Curator Carmela selects some of our most entertaining, powerful and inspiring China films at We Are Moving Stories. These include short and feature length documentary and drama covering family, cities, scifi, queer voices, diaspora, Tibet, protest, real lives - and the past.
Total length of this section: 27 films.
<FAMILY>
Under the flag - A driven and conscientious girl at China’s premier dance school gets the lead position in a prestigious performance but struggles to accept it after she learns that her mother has bribed the teacher to buy her the part. Length: 15 minutes. Writer/Director Jiawei Cheng:
Under The Same Sky - During the national campaign of the Chinese government on equal education, city boy Huang's life and schooling are totally different from Chen’s who lives in the countryside. Length: 15 minutes. Writer/Director Yoyo Li:
New Year's Eve - On Chinese New Year’s Eve, a 19-year-old boy tries to reconnect with his mother after going to kung fu school against her will. Length: 22 minutes. Director Yuhaojie Zheng:
Winds of Spring (Un Printemps) - Unfolding with the rhythm of the seasons, Winds of Spring tells the tender story of a young girl who, driven by the irrepressible need for self-fulfillment, decides to leave the family nest. Keyu Chen employs her signature style of fluid transitions and fine, spare lines inspired by Chinese ink painting in her delicately crafted first film. Length: 6 minutes. Writer/Director Keyu Chen:
A Roadside Banquet - An eleven years old Chinese girl turns into a feather duster at her baby brother's first birthday party, soon after learning her parents only ever wanted a boy. Length: 16:03 minutes. Writer/Director Peiqi Peng:
Go Back to China - After spoiled rich girl Sasha Li blows through half of her trust fund, she is cut off by her father and forced to go back to China and work for the family toy business. Length: 96 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Emily Ting:
The Story of This Life - A Chinese father flies over to Los Angeles to collect his son's remnants. Not knowing how to speak English, he hires a Chinese college girl as his translator. Length: 17 minutes. Producer Xinyu "Ciao" Zhao:
<CITIES>
Somebody Else - A car valet pretends to be a golden boy to charm a beautiful socialite. They wander through Shanghai at night, their budding attraction threatened by his lies... and her secret. Length: 15 minutes. Director Laurent King:
<SCIFI>
Zalla - In order to save her son, Zalla escapes the futuristic lab and travels through time and space to find Maggie, the daughter of her arch enemy, to convince her to join in the fight. Length: 8 minutes. Writer/Actor Amy Shi:
Last Sunrise - A future reliant on solar energy falls into chaos after the sun disappears, forcing a reclusive astronomer and his bubbly neighbor out of the city in search of light in the perpetual darkness. Length: 104 minutes. Writer/Director Wen Ren and Writer Elly Li:
<QUEER VOICES>
Sweet and Sour - Wei believes that his traditional Chinese mom would have a hard time accepting his boyfriend. However, she turns out more complex than Wei supposed. Length: 6 minutes. Writer/Director Ann Sun:
Goodbye, My Big Cat - Harry, a young Chinese man travels to America in an attempt to reunite with his first lover, Sam. Harry and Sam met a year prior during an exchange in China and Harry hopes to relive the love and intimacy they once shared. Length: 11 minutes. Writer/Director Oates Yinchao Wu:
<DIASPORA>
Bunny Man - Over a meal at a Chinese restaurant, four Taiwanese friends' discussion over the differences between FOB (fresh off the boat) and CBC (Canadian born Chinese) grows heated when a mysterious Bunny mascot enters. Length: 8 minutes. Writer/Director Athena Han:
My Mother, Myself & I - Four vignettes, four mother-son moments, one unspoken truth. Length: 8 minutes. Writer/Director/Editor King Yaw Soon:
<TIBET>
Ritoma - Tradition and modernity collide on the Tibetan Plateau. Length: 6 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Ruby Yang:
A Little Wisdom - See the world through the eyes of five-year-old Tibetan novice monk Hopakuli and share in his joys and sorrows as he endures the rigors of monastic life. A Little Wisdom endeavours to tell a story of children who find happiness through simple life and the power of their imaginations inside monasteries. Length: 92 minutes. Director Yuqi Kang:
Chomo - As the first group of Tibetan nuns prepare to be awarded the prestigious Geshema degree, a young Indian nun, Chomo, reflects on her life and future. Length: 42 minutes. Director Maayan Arad:
<PROTEST>
Ai Weiwei: Yours Truly - Human rights become profoundly personal when dissident artist Ai Weiwei's monumental exhibition on Alcatraz inspires thousands of visitors to connect with prisoners of conscience worldwide. Length: 76 minutes. Producers Cassandra Jabola and Christy McGill:
Inside These Walls - Wang Bingzhang has spent the last 14 years in a Chinese prison. His family chooses to fight for the freedom of the man who once abandoned them. Length: 44 minutes. Directors Juliet Lammers and Lorraine Price:
Letter from Masanjia - An SOS from Across the World - When an SOS note from a political prisoner in China is discovered in a box of Kmart Halloween decorations by a mom in Oregon, it sparks headlines that push the Chinese government to abolish its cruel labour camp system, and inspires the note’s author to expose ongoing human rights violations In China, despite the risks. Length: 77 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Leon Lee:
ETERNAL SPRING (長春) - When members of Falun Gong hack China's state TV to expose repression, lives are changed forever. Filmmaker Jason Loftus and celebrated comic artist Daxiong tell the resilient story of those fighting for religious freedom in this vivid and stirring hybrid documentary. Length: 85 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Jason Loftus:
<REAL LIVES>
Maineland - Chinese teenagers from the wealthy elite, with big American dreams, settle into a boarding school in small-town Maine. As their fuzzy visions of the American dream slowly gain more clarity, their relationship to home takes on a poignant new aspect. Length: 90 minutes. Director Miao Wang:
China Love - A must for any newly engaged Chinese couple is the pre-wedding photo shoot. A marked break from the austere, purely functional weddings of the generation who grew up in the shadow of the Cultural Revolution, this multibillion dollar industry is the ultimate display of romance, status and wealth. Take a trip through modern-day Shanghai following couples on their crazed quest for the perfect photos. It’s a fantasy ride of glitz, excess, glamour and love. Length: 90 minutes. Director/Producer Olivia Martin-McGuire.
A Golden Marriage - A couple recounts their marriage through seasons of struggles and joy as they are about to celebrate their 50th anniversary. Length: 4 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Stephen Bullen:
Her Scents of Pu Er - Master Tseng, the first woman tea master in China's history, takes us on a sensorial journey steeped in history. We travel through her delicate and timeless world as she unveils the secrets of Pu Er tea. Length: 17 minutes 5 seconds. Director Anna-Claria Ostasenko Bogdanoff:
<THE PAST>
Thousand Pieces of Gold - Set in a mining town in the 1880s, Thousand Pieces of Gold was developed by the Sundance Institute and premiered at the San Francisco International Film Festival in 1990. It won immediate acclaim for its portrayal of the real-life story of Lalu (Rosalind Chao), a young Chinese woman whose desperately poor parents sell her into slavery. She is trafficked to a nefarious saloonkeeper in Idaho’s gold country. Eventually, Charlie, a man of a different ilk, played by Chris Cooper, wins her in a poker game and slowly gains her trust. Length: 1 hour 45 minutes. Director/Producer Nancy Kelly:
Sealed Off (封鎖) - During an unexpected air-raid lockdown in the 1930s, an accountant and a university teacher meet, and quickly fall in love. Then, unexpectedly, their connection was as momentary as the lockdown. Length: 17 minutes 23 seconds. Writer/Director/Producer/Editor Tianyu “John” Jiang: