Controversial School Film Wins Best Picture At Awards

"); jQuery("#212 h3").html("

Related News Programmes

"); });

2023-04-17 HKT 11:33

Share this story

facebook

  • Ying Wa Girls' School reiterated in a statement that all the girls featured had agreed to be filmed for the documentary that was named best picture at the Hong Kong Film Awards.

    Ying Wa Girls' School reiterated in a statement that all the girls featured had agreed to be filmed for the documentary that was named best picture at the Hong Kong Film Awards.

A controversial documentary about the lives of six schoolgirls,

To My Nineteen-Year-Old Self

, has been awarded best picture at the Hong Kong Film Awards, even though the school that commissioned the film said it would be withdrawn from the contest.

The documentary was pulled from cinemas at the beginning of this year after one of the six girls featured in it complained she was promised it was only for internal use and would not be screened publicly.

In a statement released after the awards ceremony on Sunday, Ying Wa Girls’ School – which commissioned the film – thanked the contest organisers and reiterated that the children involved all gave their consent to being filmed.

The school also said the girls had had the freedom to pull out anytime they wished.

Mabel Cheung, a co-director of the film, was absent from the awards ceremony. Fellow co-director William Kwok read a statement from Cheung, thanking those who supported her and the film despite all the obstacles.

Kwok also told documentary filmmakers: “Don’t be afraid, don’t worry, and don’t stop rolling. Record, edit, and release the film, then worry about what happens later.”

Meanwhile, Sammi Cheng was crowned best actress – her first time after 10 nominations. She won the award for her role in Lost Love as a woman who provided foster care for children after her own son died from heart disease.

Sean Lau won best actor portraying a police officer in Detective VS Sleuths. It is the third best actor award under his belt.

Veteran actor Bowie Woo, 91, won a standing ovation when he was given a lifetime achievement award for a career spanning seven decades.

The Secretary for Culture, Sports and Tourism, Kevin Yeung, congratulated all the winners.

In a social media post, he thanked filmmakers for their contributions in “using movies to tell a good Hong Kong story”.

He said the government will continue to work with the Hong Kong Film Development Council to support local filmmaking.

RECENT NEWS

EDENA Unveils AI System To Automate Sovereign Asset Settlement

At the DAT Summit Hong Kong, EDENA Capital Partners launched the Autonomic Financial OS. The company describes it as an... Read more

Naver Exposes 15,000 Knowledge IN Users Activity, Moves To Improve Privacy Controls

Naver has announced measures following an incident in which around 15,000 users’ activity histories on Knowledge iN w... Read more

Japans PayPay Files For US IPO, Targets Valuation Above US$10B

SoftBank‘s digital payments unit, PayPay, has filed publicly for a US IPO. The listing could be the largest by a Japa... Read more

Inference Research Launches In Hong Kong With US$20M Seed Funding

Inference Research, an AI-native quantitative trading firm based in Hong Kong, has announced its launch and the expecte... Read more

London-Based Unlimit Appoints Michele Fung To Lead APAC Expansion

London-based fintech company Unlimit, which provides a broad range of financial technology services, has appointed Mich... Read more

SoFi Launches Digital Asset Trading In Hong Kong Through OSL Partnership

SoFi Securities (Hong Kong) (SoFi Hong Kong) and OSL Group have announced a partnership to offer digital asset trading ... Read more