Advertisement
CultureFilm & TV

Hong Kong 2017 Summer International Film Festival programme announced - Wilson Yip thriller Paradox is opener

Packaged as a lighter extension of the city’s main film festival, the Summer IFF offers audiences early opportunities to catch new titles - from Hong Kong, Hollywood and elsewhere - and more besides

2-MIN READ2-MIN
In Paradox, the opening film of the Summer IFF 2017, Louis Koo plays a police negotiator searching for his abducted daughter in Bangkok.
Edmund Lee
This year’s Summer International Film Festival (Summer IFF) is set to open with a bang and close with a quiet trance. The bang comes courtesy of Hong Kong director Wilson Yip Wai-shun’s Paradox – the latest instalment in his martial arts crime thriller series SPL – and the trance in the form of late Iranian auteur Abbas Kiarostami’s meditative final film, 24 Frames. They bookend a programme of 40 new and classic films.
A still from 24 Frames, the posthumous final work of the Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami, to be screened as the closing film of Summer IFF 2017.
A still from 24 Frames, the posthumous final work of the Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami, to be screened as the closing film of Summer IFF 2017.
Among the highlights in the full line-up announced today by the Hong Kong International Film Festival Society (HKIFFS) are two masterclasses led by another prominent Iranian filmmaker, Mohsen Makhmalbaf, who will present his films The Nights of Zayandeh-rood (1990) and Salaam Cinema (1996). This marks a return to Hong Kong for the director, who was a guest at the Hong Kong International Film Festival in 2015.
Advertisement
Anne Hathaway in Colossal.
Anne Hathaway in Colossal.
Packaged as a lighter extension of the main festival, the Summer IFF offers audiences early opportunities to catch a range of new titles expected to open in Hong Kong cinemas in the following year, including the local theatre adaptation Shed Skin Papa, Japanese comedy Survival Family, Godard biopic Redoubtable, Robert Pattinson vehicle Good Time, and the Anne Hathaway monster film Colossal.
Advertisement
A scene from High Noon.
A scene from High Noon.
Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x