Film

In a rollicking 30-minute Q&A which saw an animated Chan spend just as much time out of his seat as in it, the superstar said China should use Hollywood to tell its story.
Stretching the boundaries of traditional documentary to create a "docu-memoir."
One of cinema's best-known brand names reflects on his 46-film partnership with James Ivory, the Urdu language, and more.
"I really wanted to tell this history from a Chinese perspective, not an American one."
"My comedy isn't necessarily always politically correct," star cautions.
Juggling art and activism with India's five-time Best Actress winner.
"None of the studios wanted to do a movie like this," explains Vietnamese American auteur.
"I wanted it to be entertaining first and foremost," writer-director tells Asia Society.