Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Yin-Yang Master: Dream of Eternity (Chinese: 阴阳师: 晴雅集) is a 2020 Chinese fantasy film directed by Guo Jingming and starring Mark Chao and Deng Lun. It is adapted from the Japanese novel Onmyōji, written by Baku Yumemakura. It was filmed in 2019 and released in China on 25 December 2020. [3]
Qing Ming, a Yinyang Master, is a half-human half-demon officer of the Yinyang Bureau guarding demon souls and a supernatural artifact called the Scale Stone.After he is framed for the death of a guard team and his senior, Cimu, he escapes and starts a new life, traveling between the human and demon worlds.
The Kingdom of Dreams and Madness (Japanese: 夢と狂気の王国, Hepburn: Yume to kyōki no ōkoku) is a 2013 Japanese documentary film directed by Mami Sunada. The film follows the routines of those employed at Studio Ghibli, including filmmakers Hayao Miyazaki, Isao Takahata, and Toshio Suzuki as they work to release two films simultaneously, The Wind Rises and The Tale of the Princess ...
The film is set for a major theatrical release in mainland China on Dec. 25. Netflix, which acquired rights excluding China, will release it in the rest of the world on Feb. 5, 2021, shortly ...
Netflix has a fantastic collection of documentaries or docuseries, from gripping true-crime tales to eye-opening environmental exposés to intimate looks into the lives of your favorite musical ...
A Trip to Infinity is a 2022 Netflix documentary film directed by Jonathan Halperin and Drew Takahashi, in their feature length debut, which explores the concept of infinity through interviews with mathematicians, physicists and philosophers around the world.
Nothing makes me cry like a good documentary.There's a new one on Netflix, titled Daughters, that features a father-daughter dance between young girls and their incarcerated loved ones.The film ...
The two-and-a-half-hour-long documentary was made for the bonus disc of the DVD box set of the Star Wars Trilogy, released on September 21, 2004. [1] A shortened version of the documentary premiered on the A&E Network later that fall. The TV version ran at around ninety minutes, cutting out nearly an hour of content.