Bangkok Post

HK actor Anthony Wong wins at Taiwan’s Golden Horse Film Awards

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Veteran Hong Kong actor Anthony Wong took top honours at Taiwan’s Golden Horse Awards on Saturday while a Chinese short film won for the first time since Beijing shunned the event due to political tensions.

Dubbed the Chinese-language Oscars, the Golden Horse awards took place for the fourth straight year without most of the Chinese and Hong Kong A-listers who used to walk the red carpet in Taipei.

Beijing officially boycotted the event in 2019 after a Taiwanese director advocated for the island’s independen­ce in an acceptance speech the year before.

China claims self-ruled democratic Taiwan as part of its territory and has long blackliste­d its entertaine­rs over any perceived support for independen­ce.

Wong was reportedly declared persona non grata by Chinese authoritie­s for backing Hong Kong’s 2014 pro-democracy Umbrella Movement and a supporter of the city’s independen­ce, which he denied.

He won the award for best actor — his first prize on his third nomination — for playing a Hong Kong taxi driver helping a Pakistani refugee boy in The Sunny Side Of The Street.

“I think new directors bring me luck and I should only work with new directors for my future films,” Wong joked at the ceremony as the crowd erupted into laughter.

He was referring to Malaysia’s Lau Kok-rui, who won the awards for best new director and best original screenplay. The Sunny Side Of The Street was among seven Hong Kong films in the running this year in a strong showing for the semi-autonomous Chinese territory.

Five Chinese independen­t films were also contending, although there was still no submission of a feature-length film or major commercial release.

Chinese director Huang Shuli’s documentar­y short film Will You Look At Me was the only work from the mainland that bagged a prize.

“There are so many fears in the world... but I believe love can conquer fear,” Huang said in a rare appearance by a Chinese filmmaker at the ceremony.

“I hope everyone can keep making films, and face the world and face yourself honestly.”

There were only two nomination­s from China in both 2020 and 2021 in the best documentar­y and animated short film categories, but no winners.

Huang’s film, about a conversati­on with his mother on acceptance of his homosexual­ity, was a Queer Palm best short film winner at the Cannes Film Festival.

Coo-Coo 043, depicting Taiwan’s pigeon racing, took the best picture and Indigenous Taiwanese Laha Mebow won the best director for her family drama Gaga.

Veteran Taiwanese director-actor Sylvia Chang was crowned best actress for her role in Hong Kong social drama A Light Never Goes Out.

Hong Kong crime thriller

Limbo led the pack with 14 nomination­s but walked away with only four technical awards.

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