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Strong Chinese turnout in this year's Berlin Film Festival

By Raymond Zhou ( China Daily ) Updated: 2014-02-13 08:29:07

Strong Chinese turnout in this year's Berlin Film Festival

(L-R) Actor Daniel Wu, Nick Cheung, director Dante Lam and actress Christie Chen pose for photos during a photocall to promote the movie "That Demon Within" at the 64th Berlinale International Film Festival in Berlin, Germany, on Feb 8, 2013. [Photo/Xinhua]

Strong Chinese turnout in this year's Berlin Film Festival
Still photos of No Man's Land
Strong Chinese turnout in this year's Berlin Film Festival
Chinese film 'Tui Na' screens in Berlin
Strong Chinese turnout in this year's Berlin Film Festival
Kwai Lun-mei's new film explores bizarre reality
After a conspicuous and pride-busting absence from the three biggest European film festivals, Chinese movies staged a surprise comeback at the 64th Berlin International Film Festival, known as Berlinale, which runs from Feb 6 to 16. As many as three Chinese films have been selected for the 23-film-strong main competition, including No Man's Land, Ning Hao's dark take on humanity that took four long years to go through the censorship pipeline. The film, which opened on Dec 3, 2013, in China, was both a critical and commercial hit, raking in 260 million yuan at the box office.

The other two contenders have not been released in their homeland yet, but Massage is a well-known story adapted from Bi Feiyu's widely acclaimed novel. Last year saw the birth of both the stage play and the television drama series, and Lou Ye's film treatment could not possibly embed any narrative spoilers. However, those who love the story, about a bunch of blind people who make a living from the massage business, may compare the different artistic approaches and conclude which one successfully comes out of the shadow of the literary original.

Black Coal, Thin Ice is set against the wintry landscape of Northeast China where the desolate scenery may reflect the mental state of the main characters. Director Diao Yinan loves film noir, but his style of portraying murder and misery is uniquely his own, where the cop, the perpetrator and the hapless bystander are not suave or sophisticated enough to spew bon mots. "I love black because it gives a sense of discontinuity, and it blends social realism with surrealistic fantasy; I love to subvert conventions," Diao explains.

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