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He Qun

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Chinese name
  
何群

Role
  
Filmmaker

Name
  
He Qun

Years active
  
1980s-present

Pinyin
  
He Qun (Mandarin)


He Qun httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediazhbb8He

Origin
  
People's Republic of China

Movies
  
Country Teachers, The Strangers in Beijing

Similar People
  
Li Baotian, Zhang Guoli, Wang Xueqi, Jiali Ding

He Qun (1956 – 31 December 2016) was a Chinese filmmaker. A graduate of the 1982 class of the Beijing Film Academy, he was an inaugural member of China's "Fifth Generation" movement.

Contents

Early life

He was born in 1956 in Beijing. Like many of his generation, his early life was thrown into turmoil by the Cultural Revolution. His father, an artist, was denounced as a rightist, and He was sent to the outskirts of Beijing where he did manual labor as a welder for six years. In 1978, He was admitted to the Beijing Film Academy in its art department, and was assigned to the Guangxi Film Studio when he graduated in 1982.

Career

He's early career was as an art director, where he worked on many important films of the early Fifth Generation movement, including The Big Parade (1986, directed by Chen Kaige) and Widow Village (1988, directed by Wang Jin).

In 1988, he began his career in direction with the war film Mutiny. Since then, he has directed films of several genres, including gangster films (Westbound Convict Train, 1989), comedies (Once Conned, 1992) and mysteries (The Vanished Woman (1992). In 1993, He found critical success with his rural drama Country Teachers, which won the Golden Rooster Award for best picture.

References

He Qun Wikipedia


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