To really understand China, you have to get to know its people! Winston "SerpentZA" Sterzel travels across China’s first tier cities – Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen – meeting the cities’ most fascinating people, including a racy nude photographer, a mosquito breeding scientist and a DIY maker challenging gender and tech stereotypes.
Cao Fei recorded her experiences within the online social platform Second Life. The result is a wist...

In China more people are on death row than the rest of the world combined. The children of the convi...

How do you reconcile a commitment to non-violence when faced with violence? Why do the poor often se...

Director Philip Haas and artist David Hockney invite you to join them on a magical journey through C...

Three farming families in Hanyuan, China, strive to give their children a good life in the midst of ...

As the 'one country two systems' policy in Hong Kong has slowly eroded, resentment among the territo...

Amidst the grand walls of the Forbidden City, the film takes us on a deep journey through the ceremo...

In a quiet village in southern China, Fang Xiuying is sixty-seven years old. Having suffered from Al...

Railroad of Hope consists of interviews and footage collected over three days by Ning Ying of migran...

At the edge of the Yangtze River, not far from the Three Gorges Dam, young men and women take up emp...

MANUFACTURED LANDSCAPES is the striking new documentary on the world and work of renowned artist Edw...

The film uses a documentary approach to tell the stories of 12 Chinese pioneers, chosen from the fie...

An unsettling and eye-opening Wall Street horror story about Chinese companies, the American stock m...

One Country, Two Systems? No Way! say the youth of Taiwan. But China under President Xi Jinping want...
It's a story about post-90 generation in China and how they chasing their dreams through a talent sh...

As a decades-old state-run aeronautics munitions factory in downtown Chengdu, China is being torn do...

As a young missionary, Richard Wilhelm in 1899 to China, which was then exploited by the colonial po...