Gillian Chung












HONG KONG (AFP) — A Hong Kong pop star contemplated suicide after explicit photos of her with another famous singer were plastered on the Internet last year, a report said Friday.
Gillian Chung, half of Canto-pop duo Twins, said she was devastated when photos of her with actor Edison Chen appeared on the Web, the South China Morning Post reported.
Chung said the idea of killing herself was only fleeting, the newspaper said.
If I died, all my problems will be passed on to the people around me, the people who care about me," she said in a television interview due to be screened on Saturday, according to the Post.
Chung was one of several starlets pictured in compromising positions with Chen, who has told a court the images were posted on the Web after his computer was stolen.
Chung said she lost all her dignity when the photos were released.
"There's no privacy any more," she was quoted as saying.
"I showed everything to everyone, and no matter what I do I'll get the blame. But dignity is the most important."

Images from Chung's tearful interview were plastered across the front pages of Friday's newspapers in celebrity-obsessed but conservative Hong Kong, where the photos caused a storm when they appeared in February last year.
Chung and Chen are hugely popular across Asia, though Chen, one of the region's biggest film and music stars, saw his career destroyed by the scandal.

He was forced into early retirement and fled to Canada, his childhood home.

Chung was the second victim of the scandal to break her silence over the photos, after actress Cecilia Cheung lashed out at Chen last week for not apologising.

"I blame myself for doing such a foolish thing," said Chung, who has kept a low profile over the past year but is hoping to make a comeback in a high-profile ad campaign next week, the report said.

A computer technician in Hong Kong has been charged with illegally posting the photos online.

Enlightenment from 3D movie Titanic's popularity in China (2)

Action movies with ancient costume have passed the zenith and are on the wane since 2011. The spectacular blockbusters are less in the Chinese film market after the 2012 New Year. The rerelease of "Titanic" this time filled the market vacancy of three months and triggered upsurge of seeing a movie in the cinema. It is like the release of the third Transformers in the summer vacation time in China in 2011, which gained the second highest box office revenue, ranking only second to the North American film market.

Let's get back to the story of the movie. The ""Titanic"" and the "Gone with the Wind" before it and the "Avatar" after it are the three most commercially-successful movies in the 100-year movie history. Their stories are also similar. In all the three movies, it is a romantic love story in a turbulent background of a specific era, a bitter and sweet affection involving into a sad farewell, and an artistic combination of the social conflict of a special era and the virtues of universal values.

Their difference is that the "Gone with the Wind" focused on the illusion and mismatch of the love in the background of the war, the "Avatar" re-created the traditional "western movie" plot of a forbidden cross-race love into an environmental protection theme and a space adventure, and the ""Titanic"" gave bright colors to a cross-class love story by putting it in the best-known sea disaster of the modern history of the world.

Different from the "Cinderella" story that many U.S. movies love to tell, the ""Titanic"" is a story of a poor young man and a rich girl, which more accords with Chinese audiences' taste. This kind of plot has a long history in the popular culture of China. Most successful domestic movies of China also cater directly or indirectly Chinese audiences' psychology of a normal male hungering for the touch from a "fairy." The movie "Make it Count" directly by Feng Xiaogang established the basic model! for Chi na's comic affection movies. It started showing in the end of 1997, several months before the ""Titanic"." These two movies, a tragic one and a comic one, echoed each other and some key plots of them were also similar (For example, at the high tide, both heroines did not choose to care about only themselves but instead chose to share whatever it was with their lovers). The two movies jointly reflected a unique psychology of Chinese movie audiences.

The box office of the 3D "Titanic" in China currently is higher than that in the North America, reflecting Chinese movie audiences' desire for "big movies" with amazing audio-visual effects and perfect productions. In China, while "big Chinese movies" are suffering a setback, "small but refreshing" low-cost movies are rising sharply. However, movies makers should never always go with the wind. Chinese "big movies" still need improving a lot. While paying attention to the popular theme, smooth expression and amazing effects, they should pay more attention to James Cameron's professional spirit of pursuing the perfect. Without the professional spirit, technologies will not only be unable to help the art but also ruin it.

Big Trouble

Based on humorist Dave Barry's best-selling first novel, BIG TROUBLE follows the comedic chaos created when a mysterious suitcase that threatens the security of Miami changes the lives of a divorced dad, an unhappy housewife, 2 hit men, a pair of street thugs, 2 love-struck teens, 2 FBI men, and a psychedelic toad. There is something for everyone no matter who is looking for BIG TROUBLE -- and in the end, all-star comedy conquers all.

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Once Upon a Time in China

Winner of the Hong Kong Film Award! China's been infected with a plague known as the Western world,and Wong Fei-hung (Jet Li) refuses to stand by and watch as his country is decimated by the foreign forces. A martial arts expert, Wong collides with the foreigners, their influence and, especially, their firearms. Leading his misfit militia, Wong is determined to stop the immoral slave trade that serves the California gold fields. When his favorite aunt is kidnapped to be sold as a prostitute, Wong must battle his countrymen and the superior firepower of the slave traders, all for the very soul of traditional China.

List Price: $ 9.98 Price: $ 5.30

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