Hong Kong Film Archive

Coordinates: 22°17′06″N 114°13′19″E / 22.285087°N 114.221992°E / 22.285087; 114.221992

Hong Kong Film Archive building, opened 2001.
Main entrance.

The Hong Kong Film Archive (Chinese: 香港電影資料館) is a film archive dedicated to the collection, preservation and screening of Hong Kong films and other related materials. The archive was founded in 1993, when its Planning Office was opened by the Urban Council.[1] It joined the International Federation of Film Archives in 1996. The archive has been under the management of the Leisure and Cultural Services Department since 2000.[1]

The film archive building in Sai Wan Ho regularly hosts exhibitions, screenings and seminars showcasing Hong Kong film.[2]

The archive edits the book series Hong Kong Filmography and Monographs of Hong Kong Film Veterans. It also distributes a quarterly Newsletter that reports on the latest developments of the Archive and includes features on certain aspects of film culture.[3]

Collection

On 17 November 2011, TVB handed over about 1,000 film titles from the 1930s to the 1990s to the Hong Kong Film Archive (HKFA) for permanent preservation. About 60 per cent of these archival films are new to the HKFA and will consequently greatly enrich its collection. TVB's collection is distinguished not only by its size but also by the wide variety of genres it covers. About 600 film titles, including 27 Chaozhou and Amoy dialect films, are new to the HKFA's collection. In addition, eight of the films are on the list of the HKFA’s recently recommended "100 Must-See Hong Kong Movies". The handover is an important milestone in the preservation of Hong Kong's film industry.

Films to be handed over include the earliest Chinese film in TVB's library, "Little Heroine" (1939), starring Hu Rongrong and Kung Chiu-hsia; and the earliest Hong Kong film in the library, "Female Spy 76" (1947) starring Wu Lai-chu and Wang Hao. The eight films on the list of HKFA's recommended "100 Must-See Hong Kong Movies" are: "Wong Fei-hung's Whip that Smacks the Candle" (1949), "Wong Fei-hung Burns the Tyrants' Lair" (1949), "Blood-stained Azaleas" (1951), "Mysterious Murderer" (1951) parts one and two, "Butterfly and Red Pear Blossom" (1959), "Father is Back" (1961) and "The Pregnant Maiden" (1968).[4]

Facility

The archive is housed in a 5-storey building at 50 Lei King Road, Sai Wan Ho opened in 2001.[5] Public screenings of archive holdings are routinely held in the 125-seat cinema housed within. The regular ticket price is $40, with concessionary pricing available for students, seniors, and the disabled.

Floorplan

Only the Box Office, Exhibition Hall and Resource Centre are public access facilities.

Transportation

The archive building is approximately a five-minute walk from Exit A of Sai Wan Ho MTR station.

References

  1. 1 2 "Organisational structure". Hong Kong Film Archive. Retrieved 23 March 2014.
  2. DeWolf, Christopher "9 Hong Kong tourist traps -- for better or worse" CNN Go. 27 October 2010. Retrieved 2012-03-03
  3. Hong Kong Film Archive:Editional Section
  4. TVB hands over treasured films to Hong Kong Film Archive Leisure and Cultural Services Department. 17 November 2011.
  5. Hong Kong Film Archive:Archive Function

External links

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