Drug abuse can catapult celebrities to notorious fame overnight, as well as serve as a catastrophe that devastates their careers.
Veteran actress Liu Xiaoqing's search for something new has her taking the lead in a Shaanxi tourism company's song-and-dance extravaganza.
Han Geng plans to fight a large Korean agency to gain his musical freedom, writes METRO's Xu Fan.
More celebrities are taking to microblogging to promote themselves and bond with their fans.
Mo Wandan takes fame in her stride with long legs that once tackled the high jump, Liu Lu reports.
It has been a good week for celebrity admissions as a number of stars have come clean about their relationship status.
Ip Chun, the 86-year-old son of the late kung fu master Ip Man, could well become the oldest recipient of a best newcomer award.
John Woo's new film has martial arts, but also women and love, reports Liu Wei.
Confucius enlightened people on different elements of life. Some 76 generations later, his descendants are doing the same.
Ge Huijie reveals her attempt to make up for the pain and suffering to her beloved when she was too young, writes Liu Yujie.
For the first time in his 30-year acting career, Jet Li does not fight in a film.
At a forum in Shanghai the maverick director slams American producer Harvey Weinstein and cautions domestic filmmakers about harboring Hollywood dreams.