Archive for April 22nd, 2010

Beijing Olympic – Appetite for liberty, love and Hungary

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

Liberty, Love! Hungarian Culture in Focus is part of the Hungarian season in China 2007-2008. The Hungarian embassy in Beijing serves up a selection of mostly recent Hungarian films that have made waves on the international festival circuit. Hungarian cinema has often been forced to tread a precarious and difficult path. Through the failed 1919 revolution to the defeat of the 1956 Uprising and its aftermath, Hungarian filmmakers and their audiences have had to contend with a multiplicity of problems. In the 1960s, Hungary entered into a period of relative stability and increasing cultural relaxation, resulting in an astonishing growth of filmmaking.

Fresh Air

Viola is still a beautiful woman. Angela is ashamed of her mother. Communication between them has become almost impossible. They are together only to watch their favorite television series, and they never miss an episode. Probably, in secret, they are both in love with the protagonist. Viola works where no one else wants to. She is looking for a real man whom she could love. Angela aspires to design fashion. She desires something different. 2006 Cannes’ Critics’ award, 9 pm, November 15.

Paths of Light
This film has two stories running in parallel. One is about a successful model, while the other one is about a goldsmith. Paths of Light shows their decline to hell. The two stories develop in similar ways and interact with each other. It takes a long time for both protagonists to accept their fate. Once they have found peace, the two storylines converge: The goldsmith, who has lost his sight, and the model, who has lost her beauty, meet at the end of the film. 50 yuan , 7:30 pm, November 15.

Just Sex and Nothing Else
What is an attractive, 30-year-old woman to do if she is fed up with dating but desperate to have a child? This dilemma is certainly shared by many single women of Dora’s generation in big cities all over the world. Dora, a literary consultant at a Budapest theater, has had it with men after she finds out that her fianc is married. Listening to her biological clock, Dora decides to get pregnant through a no-strings-attached affair. She tries Internet dating, and there is no shortage of candidates in her immediate environment, either. 7:30pm, November 16.

Hukkle
Using almost no dialogue, the film follows a number of residents, both human and animal, of a small rural community in Hungary. An old man with hiccups, a shepherdess and her sheep, an old woman who may or may not be up to no good, some folk-singers at a wedding, etc. While most of the film is a series of vignettes, there is a sinister and often barely perceptible subplot involving murder. European Discovery of the Year at the 2002 European Film Awards and winner of multiple awards at other festivals. 9pm, November 16.

Bedlam
It is the second Hungarian movie in the Guy Ritchie-style. Director Zsombor Dyga’s first movie Tes was also a remarkable sociological comedy. The story is about a briefcase that is accidentally lost. Every character in the film wants to find the briefcase, some for the money, some to save their lives, and some for other reasons. The movie itself is funny without any cursing or violent scenes. 7:30pm, November 17.

Two films each night for the price of one. Cherry Lane Movies. Kent Center, 29 Liangmaqiao Lu East of Yansha Qiao (Third Ring Road)139 0113 4745

(Source: ebeijing.gov.cn)

Cir – Lesson 666

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

Australia’s education system came under fire on Thursday, as a new report revealed it had failed to prepare students for the modern workforce.

The report by the Center for Skills Development said the education system was too focused on basics like literacy, numeracyand computing, neglecting more complex things such as teamwork and emotional intelligence.

Sheryle Moon, the co-author of the report, said young people needed more complex skills for the modern workforce.

“We live in a globalized world where people need a different set of skills than they needed in the 1970s or the 1980s,” she said.

“It’s less about task focus, or hand skills, it’s more about brain skills and how you interact with other people.”

The paper suggested students needed to develop more sophisticated technology and communication skills at school to find jobs. It noted teachers also needed to be equipped with more advanced technology skills.

“If teachers don’t understand the application of technology — the collaborative environment technology facilitates — and build that into the curriculum, then young Australians will go out into the workforce with an incomplete set of skills,” she said.

(Source: xinhuanet.com)

China Travel – Wulingyuan Scenic and Historic Interest Area(3)

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

Flora and Fauna

Wulingyuan is a green treasure store and natural zoo. It lies in the Central China Botanic Region of the Sino-Japanese Botanic Zone, and was a refuge for many ancient species during the Quaternary Glacial Era. There are over 3000 species of plants, above 700 types of trees, up to 450 kinds of ornamental flowers, and about 116 species of vertebrates falling into 50 families.

Over 97.7% of Zhangjiajie National Forest Park is clad with a vast expanse of primitive sub-tropical forests. There are 191 species of trees, of which many are rare, including ginkgo and spruce. There are quite a few exotic flowers, too, such as the unique lobster flower, giant mountain lotus and various azaleas, iron plum and orchid blooms. Flowers blossom here all the year round, giving the area a beautiful fragrance.

In addition, hundreds of species of animals are found in Wulingyuan. Among them are rare animals such as Chinese giant salamander, Asiatic wild dog, Asiatic black bear, clouded leopard, Chinese water deer, rhesus monkeys, civets and pangolins, and some 20 rare birds such as tragopan, golden pheasant, white-headed duck and red-billed leiothrix.

Historic and Cultural Value

In ancient times, the Wulingyuan area was regarded as remote and inaccessible. Local legends indicate that Zhangliang, a lord in the Han Dynasty (206 BC-220 AD), lived here in seclusion and was buried below Qingyan (now Zhangjiajie) Mountain. Some references to the beauty of the area are made by Liu Zongyuan, a famous Chinese writer of the Tang Dynasty (618-906).

Major inhabitants of Wulingyuan area are ethnic minorities, including the Tujia, Miao and Bai peoples. They still kept their traditional customs and habits. The city of Zhangjiajie (formerly Dayong), close to this area, abounds in relics and places of historic interest.

Places of cultural interest in this area include Puguang Temple–a temple combining Chinese Buddhism and Taoism and the architectural traditions of the Song, Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties; the 200-year-old grotto in the Yuhuang Cave, with a total of 19 stone-carved figures and more than 50 other carvings; Tianmen Mountain (Gateway to Heaven); and the 50 km-long Maoyan River which flows through magnificent scenery.

(Source: chinaculture.org)