Xie Fei | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Born | Yan'an, Shaanxi | August 14, 1942||||||
Occupation(s) | Film director, screenwriter | ||||||
Years active | 1980s-present | ||||||
Parent |
| ||||||
Awards | Silver Bear 1990 Black Snow Golden Bear 1993 Woman Sesame Oil Maker Montreal-Best Director 1995 A Mongolian Tale | ||||||
Chinese name | |||||||
Traditional Chinese | 谢飛 | ||||||
Simplified Chinese | 谢飞 | ||||||
|
Xie Fei (Chinese: 谢飞; pinyin: Xiè Fēi; born August 14, 1942) is a Chinese film director, screenwriter, producer, film professor and film critic.[1]
Xie was born August 14 in Yan'an city of Shaanxi Province, China and went to primary school and high school in Beijing. In high school he began to love drama and cinema. He wrote journals after watching films and played roles in school theater group.
In 1960 he was enrolled in Directing Department of Beijing Film Academy, and graduated in 1965.[2]
Xie Fei has taught at his alma mater as an instructor and professor since and was the vice-president of that institution from 1985-1989. Although he has not made many films due to The Great Culture Revolution (1966-1976) and teaching career, most of his works are critics' favorites. Several of them won international film festival awards. His A Girl From Human (1986) and A Mongolian Tale (1995) were commercially distributed American movie theaters.[citation needed]
After Song of Tibet (2000) was censored for 6 month before releasing in few theaters, he stopped making films(at the age of 59). He has worked as producer, film festival juries in China and abroad.[citation needed]
In 2001 he directed 23 episodes of TV drama Sun Rise adapted from a play by noted Chinese playwright Cao YU 曹禺(1910-1996).[3]
On December 15, 2012 Xie Fei posted an open letter on Weibo a popular Chinese Blog calling for changes of film censorship and won great support from film makers.[4]
Year | English Title | Chinese Title | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1983 | Our Farmland | 我们的田野 | Best Cinematopgraphy nomination at the 4th Golden Rooster Film Awards China |
1986 | A Girl from Hunan | 湘女萧萧 | Don Quixote Award at The 34th San Sebastian Internattional Film Festival |
1990 | Black Snow | 本命年 | Silver Bear winner in the 40th Berlin International Film Festival[5] |
1993 | Woman Sesame Oil Maker | 香魂女 | Golden Bear winner in the 43rd Berlin International Film Festival[6] |
1995 | A Mongolian Tale | 黑骏马 | Best Director in the 19th Monteal International Film Festival |
2000 | Song of Tibet | 益西卓玛 | Best Screen Writer Special Award 20th Chinese Golden Rooster Film Awards |