News

Multiple old-school kung fu movies from the 1970s and 1980s have enough sequels to make for some fun binge-watches.
Locally made movies are again contenders at Hong Kong’s box offices and film awards, but they differ from the crime thrillers and kung fu epics of past decades.
Currently showing at HanartTZ, one of Hong Kong’s finest galleries dealing in Chinese contemporary art, is “Kung Fu in Africa,” an exhibition of 32 colorful, hand-painted martial arts movie ...
The mid-1980s were a strange time for martial arts movies, both in the U.S. and abroad. The broadly termed “kung fu” genre had run amok with wild abandon in Hong Kong cinema in the 1960s and ...
Broken Oath, the somewhat forgotten classic Hong Kong kung fu movie starring Angela Mao, has been given a 2K digital restoration and will be released on Blu-Ray by Eureka Video. Mao plays an ex ...
The appeal of the Kung Fu Panda movies was not only animals doing martial arts. The films embody the martial arts cinema of Hong Kong in animated form, and Kung Fu Panda 4 continues in this tradition.
Legendary Hong Kong movie producer Run Run Shaw died this week at 106. His films, which ranged from kung-fu classics to Blade Runner to Chinese ...
Uber has launched the second chapter of its kung fu-inspired Hong Kong campaign with Special, starring acclaimed actor Nick ...