Golden Horse Film Project Market Sets Bumper Edition

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Golden Horse Film Project Market Sets Bumper Edition


The 2023 Golden Horse Film Project Promotion, the challenge market that accompanies the Golden Horse movie pageant and awards in Taiwan in November, has laid out an enormous 64-title choice for its 2023 version.

These embody 39 movie tasks at numerous phases of improvement and financing; an extra seven works in progress; and the 18-previously introduced sequence at challenge stage.

The occasion, which runs Nov. 20-22, provides a $31,000 (NT$1 million) first prize and a complete prize pool of $250,000 (NT$8 million) from sponsors and trade sources. All chosen tasks are additionally eligible to use to 2 TAICCA funding initiatives: the Creative Content Development Program and the International Co-funding Program.

Among the Taiwanese filmmakers: Huang Hsin-yao, the director of “The Great Buddha+” and “Classmates Minus,” takes on the legend of Taiwanese treasure hunters in “Super-Reasoning Treasure Hunt”; Tom Lin Shu-yu, director of “Winds of September” and “The Garden of Evening Mists,” groups up with Kimi Hsia for unconventional romance “This Is How I Love You”; Chang Jung-chi (“Touch of the Light,” “We Are Champions”) is pitching “Dangling,” a survival journey by which a window cleaner turns into trapped on a high-rise constructing; Laha Mebow, who gained the Golden Horse Award for finest director with “Gaga,” is that this time pitching a cross-era love story blended with mythology in her new challenge “Sayun’s Dreams.”

Hsu Chih-yen, who rose to fame with “Dear Ex,” tells the story of a washed-up singer who makes use of rap to promote fish in “Straight Outta Fishtown.”

Chinese-language tasks from Hong Kong and Macau embody: Ng Ka-leung, producer and screenwriter of “Ten Years,” with “Mindgration,” a story of a younger immigrant possessed by a British ghost; “Sisterhood” director Tracy Choi pitching “Be Ordinary,” a story of feminine self-growth and discovery; and “It is Just a Summer Thing,” produced by Drifting’s Jun Li and to be directed by Sasha Chuk, exploring the complexities of a younger lady’s coming of age.

More Than Blue filmmaker Gavin Lin turns producer for director Lien Chien-hung who’s pitching “That Year, 162 Rainfalls,” depicting younger love on an archery workforce.

At the extra genre-film finish of the spectrum, Chang Yao-sheng, wh beforehand directed “A Leg,” is pitching psychological thriller “The Haunted Socialite”; Tsai Chia-ying leads the award-winning workforce behind “The Tag-Along” to revisit one other Taiwanese city legend in “Trapped in Yellow.”

Among the cross-border co-productions the workforce behind “The Post-Truth World” collaborates with South Korean producers to pitch “Anomalies,” an exploration of human wickedness; whereas “Geylang” filmmaker Boi Kwong pitches a brand new tackle faculty bullying in “House of the Beast”; and the established duo Huang Ji and Otsuka Ryuji (“Stonewalling”) re-team for “A Woman Builds.”

The WIP choices embody: “Number 2,” a sequel to Ong Kuo Sin’s field workplace hit; “Transamazonia,” being directed by South African Pia Marais; Leung Kin-pong’s “Semi,” which explores the post-protest motion trauma of Hong Kong’s youth; Nelicia Low’s “Pierce,” a portrayal of a fencer from an excessive household; and “Out of Nowhere,” an absurd office comedy from Julian Lee.

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