Taiwanese thriller shines at Golden Horse awards

Taiwanese executive Yang Ya she's spine-chiller "The Intense, the Degenerate, and the Wonderful" overwhelmed the Brilliant Steed grants, named the Chinese "Oscars", winning the pined for best film and two acting honours on Saturday.

The chilling show about a well-off family caught in savage political and business interests was additionally voted the best film by groups of onlookers.

Hong Kong performing artist Kara Wai packed away the best on-screen character gong for her part as the manipulative and ascertaining female authority of the family.

"I need to thank my little girls (in the film) Vicky Chen and Wu Ke-Xi. I couldn't have assumed the part so well without you," Wai said in the wake of accepting the statuette from Oscar-winning chief Ang Lee and Hollywood star Jessica Chastain.

Chen, 14, sobbed tears of bliss after she saw off two previous Brilliant Steed champs to gather the best supporting performer grant for her execution in "The Strong, the Degenerate, and the Delightful".

"I am exceptionally lucky," Chen told the group. "I need to thank the executive ... furthermore, the generation team who energized upheld and thought about me."

The youngster likewise impacted the world forever as the most youthful ever best on-screen character chosen one for her part in Chinese movie producer Vivian Qu's show "Heavenly attendants Wear White", which additionally contended in the current year's Venice film celebration.

In it, Chen plays a runaway who witnesses the rape of two young ladies and is torn between her inner voice and sparing her activity by staying silent.

The movie earned Qu the best coordinating prize at the Brilliant Steed function Saturday.

"This isn't only a story in China. This sort of story is going on around the globe," Qu said.

She said thanks to Chen and other youthful performing artists in the film for "giving a voice to the youngsters who can't talk up for themselves".

- Heart-throbs with hardly a penny -

Chinese performing artist Tu Men beat better-known adversaries, including Taiwanese-Japanese heartthrob Takeshi Kaneshiro and previous Brilliant Steed victor Huang Bo, to assert the best on-screen character title.

"Alternate candidates were named for their gifts and quality. I got the honour in light of good fortune," said a humble Tu, who played a heartless betting someone who is addicted who deserts he wiped out spouse oblivious family show "Old Monster".

Taiwanese executive Huang Hsin-Yao took the best new chief honour for his prominent show "The Incomparable Buddha+", which likewise won best-adjusted screenplay, best cinematography, best unique film score and best unique film melody.

The film, which recounts the narrative of a security monitor at an industrial facility that makes Buddha statues, has inspired an emotional response with Taiwanese gatherings of people as it concentrates on the battles of standard individuals against the setting of an augmenting riches hole.

Taiwan theatre performing artist Bamboo Chen vanquished Hong Kong star Tony Leung Ka-Fai and Taiwanese-American performer Bricklayer Lee, child of Ang Lee, to win best supporting on-screen character for playing a transgender bar proprietor in "Alifu, the Sovereign/ss".

About 50 films are named for the 54th version of the Brilliant Steed Film Honors.

In spite of the fact that the Brilliant Steed is styled on the US Institute Honors, the champs are chosen by a jury, along with the lines of the Cannes film celebration.

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