News

Chinese Visual Festival (CVF) returns to cinemas in July – Here is the Programme

The July 2021 festival will complete a decade of activities celebrating films from the Chinese language speaking world in cinemas here in the UK.

The 10th will be held in London 15 – 25 July at BFI Southbank and Genesis Cinema. The UK's only festival dedicated to the cinema of the Chinese language speaking world, this year's event sees a highly anticipated return to in-person screenings for CVF, giving audiences the chance to catch a carefully curated selection of fantastic films on the big screen where they belong. This year's line-up features  a programme of unprecedented variety, covering a wide range of genres, forms and subjects, welcoming film lovers back to cinemas with ten days of unmissable films. CVF 2021 is supported by the Department of Film Studies, King's College London and the Taipei Representative Office in the U.K. and the Ministry of Culture, Taiwan (R.O.C.).

This year's festival opens with the UK Premiere of , from Hong Kong writer director Jun Li, whose ground-breaking trans drama Tracey screened to great acclaim at CVF in 2019. Based on a real life incident, the film is a gritty drama exploring the plight of Hong Kong's homeless, and is already winning praise on the international festival circuit, confirming Jun Li as a passionate filmmaker committed to bringing the stories of marginalised people to the screen. The festival closes with the UK Premiere of , a riveting psycho-thriller starring Stephy Tang that has been hailed as one of the best Hong Kong films of the year, revolving around a sinister murder case in which a social worker is compelled by an inner voice to kill his family and commit suicide. The two films screen as part of , and the festival also features a special screening of Johnnie To's masterful 2003 noir police thriller .

CVF 2021 also sees the return of our popular programme, supported by the Taipei Representative Office in the U.K. and the Ministry of Culture, Taiwan (R.O.C.) and celebrating the creativity and diversity of Taiwanese cinema. For the relaunch of Vision Taiwan, the festival screens two of the most exciting Taiwanese films of the year, the highly acclaimed queer Shakespeare reworking , a visually stunning, light hearted film featuring an all-female cast, and the bloody, high-energy horror satire , in which the Taiwanese parliament is overrun by an infectious zombie virus.

CVF continues its commitment to screening a diverse range of films from the Chinese language LGBTQ+ community, this year in partnership with our friends at Queer East, and as well as As We Like It, the line-up includes , directed by Jia Yuchuan and produced by Kiki Tianqi Yu, Yu Haibo and André Singer. The acclaimed film is an intimate doc following the life of a transgender migrant worker and performer in China over 17 years in search for love and acceptance. The festival also features a special online event hosted by King's College London, with a roundtable discussion on queer and trans Chinese language cinema and a screening programme of LGBTQI+ shorts, including new works from acclaimed directors Fan Popo and Kit Hung.

The rest of the programme features a selection of the very best Chinese language films of the last year, including , a sharply scripted indie which has been winning comparisons to Korean auteur Hong Sang-soo as well as a growing list of awards, and , the first documentary from master filmmaker Jia Zhangke in ten years, exploring modern Chinese history and society through literature.

Thursday 15 July – Drifting
Friday 16 July – As We Like It
Saturday 17 July – Love Poem
Monday 19 July – The Two Lives of Ermao
Tuesday 20 July – PTU
Thursday 22 July – Get The Hell Out
Friday 23 July –
Saturday 24 July – Swimming Out Till The Sea Turns Blue
Sunday 25 July – Shadows

Tickets for the 2021 Chinese Visual Festival are on sale now.
Find more details and the full festival schedule visit HERE
Tickets for all screenings at BFI Southbank are available via the BFI website HERE
Tickets for all screenings at Genesis Cinema are available via the Genesis website HERE

About the author

Adriana Rosati

On paper I am an Italian living in London, in reality I was born and bread in a popcorn bucket. I've loved cinema since I was a little child and I’ve always had a passion and interest for Asian (especially Japanese) pop culture, food and traditions, but on the cinema side, my big, first love is Hong Kong Cinema. Then - by a sort of osmosis - I have expanded my love and appreciation to the cinematography of other Asian countries. I like action, heroic bloodshed, wu-xia, Shaw Bros (even if it’s not my specialty), Anime, and also more auteur-ish movies. Anything that is good, really, but I am allergic to rom-com (unless it’s a HK rom-com, possibly featuring Andy Lau in his 20s)"

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

>