Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Zhou_XunZhou Xun - Wikipedia

    Zhou Xun ( Chinese: 周迅, born 18 October 1974) is a Chinese actress and singer. She is regarded as one of the Four Dan Actresses of China. She gained international fame for her roles in Suzhou River (2000) and Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress (2002).

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0839008Zhou Sun - IMDb

    Zhou Sun. Director: Zhou Yu's Train. Sun Zhou was born 1954 in Shandong. First he worked in TV and as a cameraman, before he could study at the Beijing Film Academy, 1984-87 in the directors class. 1987 he debuted with the successful comedy "Put Some More Sugar In The Coffee".

  3. Sun Zhou is known as an Director, Actor, and Writer. Some of his work includes Zhou Yu's Train, Impossible, I Do, Breaking the Silence, Crossed Lines, Qiuxi, The Poem for the Oak, and The Human Comedy.

  4. Zhou Sun. Director: Zhou Yu's Train. Sun Zhou was born 1954 in Shandong. First he worked in TV and as a cameraman, before he could study at the Beijing Film Academy, 1984-87 in the directors class. 1987 he debuted with the successful comedy "Put Some More Sugar In The Coffee".

  5. Zhou Yu's Train leans heavily on its central trio of actors. Tony Leung (Ka Fai) and Honglei Sun are both great as the competing guys, but it's Gong Li who pulls most of the attention towards her. She actually has a double role here, although the not-"Zhou Yun" part is considerably smaller.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Zhou_YuZhou Yu - Wikipedia

    Zhou Yu is primarily known for his leading role in defeating the numerically superior forces of the northern warlord Cao Cao at the Battle of Red Cliffs in late 208, and again at the Battle of Jiangling in 209. Zhou Yu's victories served as the bedrock of Sun Quan's regime, which in 222 became Eastern Wu, one of the Three Kingdoms.

  7. Sun Zhou is a fifth generation Chinese film director. In the 1980s, when most directors were devoted to filming deserts and plateaus, Sun Zhou focused his camera on the ordinary people of Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, an area at the very forefront of China’s implementation of reform and opening-up.