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Italian actresses Olivia Magnani (L) and Maria Grazia Cucinotta (C) with Chinese film director Jia Zhangke, arrive for the Chinese premier of the movie, L'Ultimo Bacio (The Last Kiss) at the start of the Italian Film Festival in Shanghai, 19 January 2007. Cucinotta is internationally famous for her role in the 1994 movie 'Il Postino' which won an Oscar for Best Original Dramatic Score. AFP PHOTO/Mark RALSTON
Italian actress Maria Grazia Cucinotta and Chinese film director Jia Zhangke, arrive for the Chinese premier of the movie, L'Ultimo Bacio (The Last Kiss) at the start of the Italian Film Festival in Shanghai, 19 January 2007. Cucinotta is internationally famous for her role in the 1994 movie 'Il Postino' which won an Oscar for Best Original Dramatic Score. AFP PHOTO/Mark RALSTON
Chinese director Jia Zhangke listens to reporter's questions during an interview in Hong Kong Saturday, Nov. 11, 2006.Jia's movies don't feature any flashy kung fu moves, Peking Opera or lavish Chinese imperial palaces. Over his 12-year career, Jia has shunned Chinese cultural motifs most familiar to the West, instead making films that portray the struggles of China's working class amid fast economic change. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)
Chinese director Jia Zhangke listens to reporter's questions during an interview in Hong Kong Saturday, Nov. 11, 2006.Jia's movies don't feature any flashy kung fu moves, Peking Opera or lavish Chinese imperial palaces. Over his 12-year career, Jia has shunned Chinese cultural motifs most familiar to the West, instead making films that portray the struggles of China's working class amid fast economic change. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)
Chinese director Jia Zhangke is reflected from a mirror during an interview in Hong Kong Saturday, Nov. 11, 2006. Jia's movies don't feature any flashy kung fu moves, Peking Opera or lavish Chinese imperial palaces. Over his 12-year career, Jia has shunned Chinese cultural motifs most familiar to the West, instead making films that portray the struggles of China's working class amid fast economic change. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)
Chinese director Jia Zhangke looks out of the camera during an interview in Hong Kong Saturday, Nov. 11, 2006. Jia's movies don't feature any flashy kung fu moves, Peking Opera or lavish Chinese imperial palaces. Over his 12-year career, Jia has shunned Chinese cultural motifs most familiar to the West, instead making films that portray the struggles of China's working class amid fast economic change. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)
Chinese director Jia Zhangke looks out of the camera during an interview in Hong Kong Saturday, Nov. 11, 2006. Jia's movies don't feature any flashy kung fu moves, Peking Opera or lavish Chinese imperial palaces. Over his 12-year career, Jia has shunned Chinese cultural motifs most familiar to the West, instead making films that portray the struggles of China's working class amid fast economic change. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)