Red
Beautiful, bittersweet tale of love, longing and Elvis. Xiao Mei leaves China for marriage in Britain. But her true desire is to find her family.
A beautiful tale of love, loss, new beginnings and the strange adventure taken by migrants to the UK. In 1977, young Xiao Mei leaves China for the UK to enter into an arranged marriage. Speaking no English and feeling distant from her Elvis-obsessed new husband and his stern mother, Xiao Mei dreams of reuniting with her long-lost parents and brother. But old memories of family can be deceptive...
Writer-director Rosa Fong's other work has included documentary, gallery installation and a series of witty short films for Channel Four about Chinese philosophy; she now lectures on film and TV. Red was supported by the BFI's mid-90s New Directors programme, which also funded early films by Lynne Ramsey, Gurinder Chadha and Andrew Kötting.
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Chinese Britain
The dynamic dragon dances of Lunar New Year are an annual fixture on our television screens. Like Carnival or Diwali, this point in the calendar offers regional news crews across the country an opportunity to capture colour and spectacle on our doorstep. The history of Britain's Chinese communities is centuries-long, but the wave of postwar immigration in the 20th century coincided with the rise of television, and over the ensuing decades local news has reported on this community, with a mixture of curiosity and novelty, for an implied majority white British audience.
This collection brings together several of these reports, most of which are anchored in areas where British Chinese communities are most visible: restaurants, supermarkets and, naturally, New Year celebrations. And yet, despite the undeniable contribution that this community has made to the changing landscape of British society, there is a dearth of opportunities for British Chinese talent on our screens – with the likes of Bert Kwouk, Gemma Chan and Benedict Wong serving as few exceptions to the norm. So, to complement the news items in this collection, there are also personal documentaries and short films by British Chinese filmmakers who turn the camera around, and offer their perspective on life in Britain.
20 videos in this collection
Chinese New Year in Leicester
Year of the Ox
Dragon Boats
East Sixteen
Family and Children - Eng Personal Film
Red
Chinese Whispers
From HK to MK
Linear Rhythm A Portrait of Three Artists
Chinatown
Chinese New Year Food
Chinese Restaurants in Plymouth
The First Chinese Shop in Plymouth
Chinese Supermarket in Nottingham
Chinese New Year
The Dragon's Spell
Oriental New Year Celebrations
Chinese Dancers