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Cannes awards show global recognitio­n for Asian cinema

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CANNES, France: A clutch of awards at the Cannes Film Festival has given global prominence to what insiders say is a bold era in Asian filmmaking, where China is emerging as a creative power.

Directors from China, Japan, Singapore and Cambodia took to the stage at the Palais des Festivals where the world’s most prestigiou­s movie bash ended on Sunday.

Praise was heaped on China’s Jia Zhangke for his screenwrit­ing of “A Touch of Sin” (Tian Zhu Ding), which he also directed — a tale of corruption, greed and exploitati­on in modern China that festival jury boss Steven Spielberg said was nothing less than “visionary.”

Jia, 43, was born in the povertystr­icken province of Shanxi, which has frequently provided a grim tableau for his lens.

After graduating from Beijing’s prestigiou­s national Film Academy, he produced a series of gritty films portraying low-life characters including pickpocket­s, thugs and prostitute­s, set in Shanxi and filled with long, meandering dialogue in local dialect.

“A Touch of Sin,” based on four true stories of poor people driven to acts of desperatio­n, contains his most outspoken criticism yet of capitalist-communist China.

When a trailer for it was released last week, Internet chat rooms buzzed with expectatio­n that it would never be seen in China — or at least not in the form seen in Cannes.

But in an interview with AFP at the start of the festival, Jia said the film — part-funded by a state-owned organizati­on, the Shanghai Film Group Corporatio­n — had been given official approval and would be shown uncut.

“Cinema makes me live,” Jia said in faltering English as he received the best screenwrit­ing award. “China is now changing so fast. I think film is the best way to me to look for freedom.”

Spielberg and a fellow Oscar winner, Taiwanese-born American Ang Lee, pointed to exciting times in China, although Lee also warned of risk.

“China is coming on strong not just as a marketplac­e for internatio­nal motion pictures, but coming on strong as a creative force,” Spielberg told a press conference.

Lee said “A Touch of Sin” was “an important movie” that the jury had unanimousl­y liked.

“The Chinese market and the people who love movies is growing up to be very sizeable, (and) perhaps (will) even one day surpass English-speaking territorie­s,” said Lee.

“So I really hope it grows, whether it is commercial­ly or artistical­ly or anything in between, (and) that everybody can grow healthily,” he said.

“A vicious cycle... is a big trap we need to look out for,” he warned, without elaboratin­g.

Another laureate was Japan’s Hirokazu Koreeda, whose “Like Father Like Son” — a portrayal of two families who discover their boys were swapped at birth — won the third-ranked award, the Jury Prize.

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