HK star Jackie Chan wins 'China's Oscar' (Xinhua) Updated: 2005-11-13 09:17
SANYA, Hainan -- Hong Kong Kungfu movie superstar Jackie Chan pocketed the
Best Leading Actor Award of the 25th Golden Rooster film awards, dubbed "China's
Oscar," organizers announced on Saturday evening.
Hong Kong movie
star Jackie Chan receives the award of best actor on Saturday, Nov. 12,
2005 at the awarding ceremony of the 25th China Golden Rooster awards,
considered as the most important part of the ongoing 14th Golden Rooster
and Full Blossom Film Festival of China that opened on Nov.9, in the
southern coastal city of Sanya, south China's Hainan Province.
[AP] | Jackie Chan was nominated for his role
in the "New Police Story." It was the first time that film artists from Hong
Kong, Macao and Taiwan competed for personal prizes at the Golden Rooster and
Full Blossom Film Festival, which gives out the top honors in China's film
industry.
Chan expressed his gratefulness to the jury with three "thanks" in his speech
at the awarding-ceremony on Saturday evening. "Two years ago, I wanted to make a
breakthrough of my performance by acting a different role. I didn't expect to
win such an important award by the film," he said.
In the "New Police Story," Chan played a tragic hero, something he had never
tried before in his performance career.
Chan is well known for his Kungfu films such as "Drunken Master," "Police
Story" and "Rumble in the Bronx." "Thunderbolt," also starring Chan, was the
first Hong Kong film to be screened at more than 1,000 US cinemas.
The US film "Rush Hour" featuring Chan was among the top 10 movies in the
United States in 1998 in terms of box office revenue.
"Jackie Chan has won the Chinese film an international honor by representing
the righteousness and dignity of the Chinese, with his constant efforts," the
jury said.
In the competition for the other awards, the three films that had got the
most nominations all reaped satisfactory results.
Warfare film "On Mt. Taihang" by Wei Lian, Shen Dong and Chen Jian won the
awards for Best Sound Recording, Best Music and Best Feature Films.
The international-awards-winning "Hoh Xil Mountain Patrol" by Lu Chuan,
reputed as a flagship of the "Sixth Generation" of Chinese directors, also won
the award for Best Feature Films.
The jury, as they had done at previous festivals, again let two films share
one of the most important awards, though they had promised not to do so earlier.
A dark horse for this year's Golden Rooster awards is "You and Me," a small
budget film which grabbed the awards for Best Director and Best Leading Actress.
Xie Tieli and Xie Jin, both the leading figures in the so-called "Third
Generation" of Chinese directors, were granted the Lifetime Achievement
Awards.
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