Fireworks Logo

Trailers...

  • Inside Amir
  • Peter Hujar's Day
  • Captive (The)
  • Weapons
  • Follies
  • I Have Never Been on an Airplane
  • Nova 78'
  • Alexina B. Composing Lives
  • Long Road to the Director's Chair (The)
  • Griffin in Summer
  • Girls & Boys
  • Premiere (The)
  • Unforgivable
  • Wayward
  • Cutaways
  • My Sunnyside
  • Brigitte’s Planet B
  • How Far Does The Dark Go?
  • Brief History of the LGBT+ Press in Brazil (A)
  • Internal Comms
  • Ghost Empire § Mauritius-Chagos
  • Mothers, Lovers and Others
  • Labyrinth of Lost Boys
  • Gunyo Cholo: The Dress
  • Days of August
  • Chica Quinqui
  • After the Hunt
  • Desire Lines
  • History of Two Warriors
  • Oxygen Masks Will (Not) Drop Automatically
  • Einfach machen - She-Punks von 1977 bis heute
  • Couture
  • Out Standing
  • History of Sound (The)
  • Cinema Jazireh
  • Imagine
  • TURA!
  • Flower Girl
  • Maspalomas
  • Old Guys in Bed

Green Snake

Country: Hong Kong, Language: Cantonese, 99 mins

Original Title

Ching se
  • Director: Tsui Hark
  • Writer: Tsui Hark; Pik Wah Lee
  • Producer: Tsui Hark; Benzheng Yu; Lai-San Chan

CGiii Comment

Iconic Hong Kong director Tsui Hark’s lush, mesmerising, and vividly revisionist adaptation of Lillian Lee’s eponymous novel is based on a Chinese folk tale commonly known as Legend of the White Snake. Green Snake, Siu Ching (Maggie Cheung) follows her sister White Snake, Bak Sei Juen (Joey Wang) to the human world, and struggles to understand what it means to be human. While Bak Sei Juan emphasises her own humanity by devoting herself to the relationship she has with her husband, Siu Ching is presented as reckless, innocent and confused about what love and humannes mean to her. At the same time, the sisters are threatened and hunted by an unprincipled Buddhist monk (Vincent Zhao) and a vain Taoist, both of whom are distrustful of the snake spirits and their allegedly evil intentions. As a result of this conflict, Bak Sei Juen and Siu Ching must fight to prove their humanness.

Unlike the original legend, which is told through White's perspective, Hark draws from Lee's novel and employs Green's vantage point to question various facets of Chinese culture and the nature of love, adding a queer dimension that redefines the existential divide between human and nonhuman, this film is a visual treat with alluring performances by Cheung and Wang.


Trailer...

Cast & Characters

Maggie Cheung as Siu Ching (Xiao Qing) / the Green Snake;
Joey Wang as Bak Sei Juen (Bai Suzhen) / White Snake;
Man Cheuk Chiu as Monk Fatt Hoi (Fahai);
Hsing-kuo Wu as Hsui Xien (Xu Xian) / the scholar;
Ma Cheng-miu;
Feng Tien as Spider;
Tung-Mui Chan;
Kong Lau as Blind Monk;
Shun Lau as Old Monk;
Nagma as Bharata Natyam Dancer