Singapore directors Anthony Chen, Boo Junfeng in key Golden Horse Award juries

They will be among the jury members choosing the winners at the 60th Golden Horse Awards, which takes place on Nov 25 in Taipei.

John Lui

John Lui

The Straits Times

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Singapore film-maker Anthony Chen (left) is in the Final Stage jury, while Singapore film-maker Boo Junfeng is in the Shortlist round and Final Stage round juries. PHOTOS: GIRAFFE PICTURES, THE STRAITS TIMES

October 25, 2023

SINGAPORE – For the first time, Singaporeans will be among those sitting on two key juries at the Golden Horse Awards.

Film-maker Boo Junfeng is in the Shortlist round and Final Stage round juries, while film-maker Anthony Chen is in the Final Stage jury.

They will be among the jury members choosing the winners at the 60th Golden Horse Awards, which takes place on Nov 25 in Taipei.

At the Golden Horse Awards in 2018, Singapore film-maker Royston Tan sat in a Preliminary round jury.

In a Facebook post on Monday morning, Boo, 39, said he spent two weeks in September attending 53 film screenings in Taipei.

“This averages to four or five screenings a day. The rigorous process of watching and deliberating over the films gave me a newfound respect for the Golden Horse Awards and what it stands for,” he said.

He added that he is looking forward to the final round of deliberations.

The 2023 jury president is Taiwanese film-maker Ang Lee (martial arts drama Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, 2000; spy thriller Lust, Caution, 2007).

The nominees were announced on Oct 3. They include the historical drama Snow In Midsummer, a Malaysia-Singapore-Taiwan co-production. Directed by Malaysian film-maker Chong Keat Aun, it tells the story of a Chinese family in Kuala Lumpur dealing with the aftermath of the May 13, 1969, race riots. It has bagged nine nominations, the most of any film in 2023.

Boo’s second feature, Apprentice (2016), received the Network for the Promotion of Asia Pacific Cinema (Netpac) award at the Golden Horse Film Festival, which takes place in conjunction with the main awards.

Chen, 39, saw his family drama Ilo Ilo (2013) win four Golden Horse Awards, including for Best Feature. His second feature, the drama Wet Season (2019), earned Malaysian actress Yeo Yann Yann a Best Leading Actress prize at the Golden Horse Awards.

Chen’s two latest feature films will make their Taiwanese premiere at the 2023 Golden Horse Film Festival. They are Drift, his English-language feature debut featuring Oscar-nominated actress Cynthia Erivo, and The Breaking Ice, his Chinese film starring Golden Horse Best Actress winner Zhou Dongyu.

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