Beijing Bastards
Beijing Bastards | |
---|---|
Directed by | Zhang Yuan |
Written by | Cui Jian Tang Danian |
Starring | Cui Jian Faye Yu Wu Gang |
Cinematography | |
Edited by | |
Music by | Cui Jian Dou Wei He Yong |
Release date |
|
Running time | 88 minutes |
Country | China |
Language | Mandarin |
Beijing Bastards (simplified Chinese: 北京杂种; traditional Chinese: 北京雜种; pinyin: Běijīng Zázhǒng) is a 1993 drama film by Sixth Generation director Zhang Yuan, and is one of the first independently produced Chinese films.[1]
Cast[]
- Karzi "a rock promoter" - played by Li Wei 李委[2]
- Cui Jian as himself
- Wu Lala (武啦啦, Wu Gang), sound-man[3]
- Tang Danian 唐大年, also screenwriter
- Bian Jing 边境 as himself
- Zang Tianshuo as himself
- 王文丽
- Director: Zhang Yuan 张元
References[]
- ^ World Film Locations: Beijing John Berra, Liu Yang - 2012- Page 26 "in the 1990s, China's rock music scene reached its peak with a list of famous singers and bands, of which Cui Jian and Dou Wei – arguably the celebrated forerunners of Chinese rock – were cast in Zhang Yuan's Beijing Bastards. This film is ."
- ^ Zhen Zhang The Urban Generation: Chinese Cinema and Society at the Turn of ... 2007- Page 268 "Cui is credited as co-producer and co-screenwriter of Beijing Bastards, in which he plays himself.10 The main character, the musician Karzi, is played by Li Wei (aka Xiao Wei), a self- described rock promoter who reappears as himself in ...
- ^ Cinemaya - Issues 58-62 -2003 Page 25 "Dazzling's main character is Wu Gang, a movie theatre usher played by the stocky actor Wu Lala, who appeared previously in Zhang Yuan's Beijing Bastards. He gives the film its title, because an eye disease has made it difficult for him to ..."
External links[]
Categories:
- 1993 films
- Mandarin-language films
- Chinese independent films
- Chinese films
- 1993 drama films
- Films set in China
- Films set in Beijing
- Films directed by Zhang Yuan
- Chinese drama films
- 1993 independent films
- Chinese film stubs
- Independent drama film stubs