News

"Angel" Featured at the 61st Berlin International Film Festival

“Angel” Featured at the 61st Berlin International Film Festival The film Angel was selected for screening at the 61st Berlin International Film Festival held in Berlin in 2011.

"Angel" Nominated for Best Directorial Debut at the 20th Golden Rooster and Hundred Flowers Film Festival

“Angel” Nominated for Best Directorial Debut at the 20th Golden Rooster and Hundred Flowers Film Festival From October 19 to October 22, 2011, the 20th China Golden Rooster and Hundred Flowers Film Festival was successfully held in Hefei, Anhui. The film “Angel” was nominated for the Best Directorial Debut Award.

"Caring for Blind Children, Helping Dreams Grow" Accessible Film Public Welfare Initiative

Caring for Blind Children, Helping Dreams Grow" Accessible Film Public Welfare Initiative On June 1, 2013, our company officially donated the rights to the film Angel to the China Braille Library for the “Caring for Blind Children, Helping Dreams Grow” accessible film public welfare initiative. China has 17 million blind people, including 130,000 school-age blind children. This is a large, particularly vulnerable group that needs assistance. They long for light, knowledge, social integration, and the equal enjoyment of film art, just like everyone else.

Mongolian Pingpong: Memories in Pictures

Mongolian Pingpong: Memories in Pictures Mongolian Pingpong Set against the vast grasslands of Inner Mongolia, the serene and beautiful natural scenery of “Mongolian Pingpong” offers a refreshing contrast for audiences living in bustling urban environments. Director Ning Hao has crafted this innocent little story with both charm and hidden depth. (Review by Southern Metropolis Daily) “Mongolian Pingpong” is a film rich in regional color. The beautiful landscapes of Inner Mongolia, the sincerity and simplicity of the herdsmen, and the persistence and innocence of the children deeply move the audience.

HaoNing:Director's Statement for Mongolian Pingpong

Director’s Statement for Mongolian Pingpong The Mongols have always been an enigmatic people, both to the East and the West. Eight hundred years ago, they swiftly traversed every grassland of the world with their small horses and lightweight yurts, establishing the largest empire in history in a very short time with their undefeated legends. Shortly thereafter, they mysteriously disappeared from the annals of history. Only by returning to the barren East Asian steppes where their ancestors originated can you find them still adhering to their last nomadic way of life.