Liao Fan
8 titles
Filmography
8 results

The Final Master
(2015)In 1930s China, unrest rules the nation. Chen, the last Wing Chun master, arrives in Tianjin to expand his kung fu - but his ambition gets him entangled in a power struggle between Tianjin's martial arts Grandmaster, a dominant underworld Madam, and the town's military leaders.

Black Coal, Thin Ice
(2014)Zhang Zili wasn't always a badly paid security guard. He was once one of the best detectives on the police force. That is until injuries sustained during an investigation into a gruesome and unsolved murder case forced him into early retirement. That was five years ago and the killings have started again.

Ash Is Purest White
(2018)Qiao gets five years in prison for an act of loyalty to a local mobster she is in love with. Upon her release she looks to take up where they left off

Only You
(2015)A young woman who is having second thoughts about her fiancé travels to Italy for a chance at true love without knowing her soul mate’s name.

Savage
(2019)Buried by treacherous conditions at the top of Mt. Baekdu, a policeman must brave the extreme weather until he's relieved from his post. When a group of thieves stumbles into the station in search of safe shelter, both sides must fight for survival in this stylish action-packed thriller.

The Wild Goose Lake
(2019)After winning the Berlinale Golden Bear with Black Coal, Thin Ice, Diao Yinan returns with a hyper-stylised noir set in modern China’s underbelly. Twisting the conventions of the genre, this impressively crafted choreography of violence, moral decay and neon colours is striking, intoxicating cinema.

Armour of God 3: Chinese Zodiac
(2012)Asian Hawk (Jackie Chan) and his team of relic hunters race against time to find the bronze busts of 12 Chinese zodiac animals before the head of a ruthless corporation can destroy them.

Let the Bullets Fly
(2010)Once the darling of the art-film world, Jiang Wen set the local box office ablaze with this rip-roaring action spectacular. With a star-studded cast headlined by Chow Yun Fat, Let the Bullets Fly takes to the boondocks of 1920s China for a gleefully madcap, elaborately political genre mash-up.