Yonfan

Yon Fan

Yonfan at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival
Chinese name 楊凡 (Traditional)
Chinese name 杨凡 (Simplified)
Born 14 October 1947 (1947-10-14) (age 64)
Hong Kong

Yonfan (Manshih Yonfan; Traditional Chinese: 楊凡; Simplified Chinese: 杨凡; born 1947 in Wuhan, China) is a Hong Kong film director and photographer.

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Biography

He was born in Wunan province of China. As the Yon family emigrated from the People's Republic, Yonfan spent his childhood first in Hong Kong and then in Taiwan. He returned to Hong Kong as a young man to work as a photographer, but left for the United States in 1968 to study film. After a couple of years travelling through United States, France and Britain, he returned to Hong Kong once again in 1973, and became a famous photographer most noted for his celebrity portraits.

In 1984, he made his box office debut as a director with A Certain Romance. Two years later, Yonfan adapted the much-loved romantic novel The Story of Rose by prolific writer Yi Shu. Starring an up and coming Maggie Cheung, the passionate Lost Romance was a huge commercial success starring a young Chow Yun-fat.

After In Between (1993), Yonfan started to steer away from the mainstream market and began to introduced characters from the marginalised section of the society. With 1998 came another milestone, Bishonen, best known for its romantic cinematography and explicit portrayal of homosexual onscreen passion. Inspired by a real-life scandal in which a Hong Kong playboy was found to possess more than a thousand nude photographs of local police officers, this melodramatic tale of redemption polarized film critics in Hong Kong, but was very well received at film festivals around the globe. It also launched the acting career of heartthrob Daniel Wu.

In 2010, Yonfan was head of the jury at Hong Kong's Asian Film Awards in March and was part of the jury of the Sydney Film Festival in May.[1]

In 2011, Yonfan headed the New Currents jury at the 16th Busan International Film Festival in October.[2] The Festival also hosted a retrospective of the director's films, featuring seven of his restored and re-mastered films from the 1980s through 2000s.[3]

Filmography

See also

References

  1. ^ Hollywood Reporter .Hong Kong Auteur Yonfan Relishes His Role as Talent Scout 6 October 2011. Retrieved 2011-10-15
  2. ^ Hollywood Reporter Chinese Director Yonfan to Head Up Busan New Currents Jury 22 August 2011. Retrieved 2011-10-15
  3. ^ Hollywood Reporter Busan International Film Festival to Feature Yonfan Retrospective 5 September 2011. Retrieved 2011-10-15

"Yonfan Service." Giant Robot Magazine issue 63, 2009.

External links