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Saving Face is a 2012 documentary film directed by Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy and Daniel Junge about acid attacks on women in Pakistan. The film won an Emmy Award and the 2012 Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject , making its director, Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, Pakistan's first Oscar winner.
Vietnam has submitted films for the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film since 1993. The award, previously named the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, [a] is presented annually by the U.S. Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) to a feature-length motion picture produced outside the United States that contains primarily non-English dialogue. [2]
won the Motion Picture Sound Editors's 1993 Golden Reel award for "Best Sound Editing — Foreign Feature" 1993 César Award for Best Music Written for a Film: 1993: Mùi đu đủ xanh (The Scent of Green Papaya) Trần Anh Hùng: Official Vietnamese entry for the 66th Academy Awards, nominated for top 5, won at Cannes: 1995: Le Couteau: Xích ...
By Thiều Chửu and Lê Chí Quế's researches, its name Kỳ-anh or Kỳ-la (old) in Hanese text was originated from Malayo-Polynesian name Keluar. It is an ancient word what the gossip indicates the interlaced seaports in the North-central of modern Vietnam .
Dr. Wilhelmina "Wil" Pang is a successful young American surgeon living in New York City. Wil is a lesbian but is closeted to her mother Hwei-Lan and her mother's friends. Wil is forced by her mother to come to a gathering at the restaurant Planet China with family friends where her mother has plans to set her up with a son of a friend, but Wil is drawn to Vivian, the daughter of one of the ...
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Kỳ Anh is a town of Hà Tĩnh Province in the North Central Coast region of Vietnam. The town split from Kỳ Anh District in 2015.
In 2006, Saving Face received a nomination at the GLAAD Media Awards, [23] and it won the Viewer's Choice Award at the Golden Horse Awards, Taiwan's equivalent of The Academy Awards. [3] In 2019, the film was named one of the 20 Best Asian American Films of the Last 20 Years by The Los Angeles Times. [24]