The Borneo Post

Iron curtain falls on Hong Kong cinema as censors demand cuts

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HONG KONG: Once renowned for world-class cinema, Hong Kong’s film industry was already struggling before the latest hurdle – Chinese mainland-style censorship as authoritie­s take their purge of dissent into the cultural sphere.

Filmmaker Mok Kwan-ling’s heart sank when the email from the government censors dropped.

In June, authoritie­s announced all films would now be scrutinise­d for “national security” breaches. Mok’s was the first known to have fallen foul of these rules.

For months, she had been putting together her debut, a 27-minute drama inspired by the many young couples she encountere­d during huge democracy protests two years ago.

It tells the story of a young woman meeting her boyfriend’s parents after he is arrested for taking part in the protests. The boyfriend’s mother is opposed to the movement, his father sympatheti­c.

The Cantonese title “Zap Uk” (literally “clean up the house”) is a reference to how friends and family would often remove any incriminat­ing items once a loved one was arrested.

But Mok said Hong Kong’s film censors were not happy with what was submitted and ordered her to make 14 cuts.

Among the changes they demanded was removing a line from the father saying their son was a first aid volunteer who was “only out there to save the people” as well as deleting a scene where the same character, a truck driver, charges protesters a discounted fare.

The censors also demanded the film be renamed and carry a warning that it showed criminal offences.

“I thought the story was rather balanced by presenting voices of two sides,” Mok told AFP.

“It turned out that one particular side is not allowed to be heard.”

Mok felt the cuts would leave her film “devoid of essence and sense” so she put it aside for now.

“My film happened to be the first but it won’t be the last,” she warned.

AFP has contacted Hong Kong’s Film Censorship Authority for comment.

In the 1980s and 1990s, Hong Kong was known as “The Hollywood of the Far East”, with a cast of globally recognised stars like Chow Yun-fat and auteurs such as Wong Kar-wai.

The golden age of Cantonese cinema has long been eclipsed by the rise of mainland Chinese and South Korean films.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? This picture shows film director Kiwi Chow posing for a photo in the Kowloon district in Hong Kong.
— AFP photo This picture shows film director Kiwi Chow posing for a photo in the Kowloon district in Hong Kong.

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